I was taken to task recently for not writing about A4e on a blog devoted to A4e. As I said at the time, there is no news about A4e. But, when you think about it, that in itself is noteworthy.
I started the original website (which A4e got closed down) and then this blog because A4e had a very high profile, and I believed, drawing on my own experience, that the reality didn't match the hype. And the reality needed to be out there. Others obviously agreed. But the tide of publicity rolled on, as did the number of contracts scooped up by the company. Allegations of fraud had little impact, except to raise the profile even higher. Emma Harrison revelled in all the publicity, basking in the glow of her own celebrity, collecting her CBE and being appointed adviser to government. Her fall from grace came suddenly and unexpectedly, and the new bosses had to pick up the pieces. That meant seeking as little publicity as possible, a strategy that was common sense as well as, surely, the advice of the PR person brought in to help, George Bridges of Quiller.
It worked for a while. But then Harrison was lured back into the limelight by Channel 4 News, and gave that car crash of an interview. Less spectacular, but of no help at all, was the behaviour of Jonty Olliff-Cooper, with his offensive tweets. But the publicity dies down, and no one apparently cares any more.
But it's a different world out there for A4e. The competition is much fiercer in those sectors they used to find most profitable. The contracts aren't just handed to them any more. Companies have come in from overseas, and the really big guns here - Serco, G4S, Capita - have spread their tentacles into what was once A4e's core business. The smaller-scale stuff from local councils has dried up. The last financial results available, as of March 2012, showed A4e in trouble.
So we carry on watching A4e, wondering if the company will even survive.
Showing posts with label George Bridges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Bridges. Show all posts
Monday, 26 August 2013
Still watching
Labels:
A4e,
Capita,
Channel 4 News,
Emma Harrison,
G4S,
George Bridges,
Jonty Olliff-Cooper,
Serco
Thursday, 31 May 2012
"It's who you know" - networking and A4e
The unemployed are increasingly being lectured about the benefits of networking. For most people this is irrelevant. Our networks don't include anyone who could give us a job. But for outsourcing companies like A4e networks are vital to the business.
This is a simplified version of the A4e network. Top left, David Blunkett, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions when the w2w contracts were privatised; after ceasing to be a minister he became a paid "advisor" to A4e (and still is). But with Labour out of power it was useful to get a Tory on board; Jonty Oliff Cooper used to be an aide to David Cameron's strategy director Steve Hilton and was taken on by A4e as their director of policy and strategy. He is not now listed as part of A4e's senior team. Moving clockwise, we get to David Cameron. He was sufficiently persuaded of Emma Harrison's capacities that he made her his "family champion". And then there's Chancellor George Osborne who brings us to George Bridges of Quiller Consultants. Bridges is a personal friend of Osborne and helped him run the Tories' election campaign in 2010. So the network helped in the appointment of Bridges and his firm to help A4e revamp its image after the meltdown. Private Eye points out that the firm, Quiller Consultants, is owned by Lord Chadlington, the Tory peer who is also Cameron's constituency chairman.
The new chairman of A4e is Sir Robin Young, a retired career civil servant whose last government job was as a Permanent Secretary. The link between him and Robert Devereux, Permanent Secretary at the DWP, was referred to by Margaret Hodge last week when she described them both as, "A whole lot of good chaps - I understand that the Chairman is an ex-Permanent Secretary, whom, no doubt, you have conversations with."
It's a network that has made millions for Emma Harrison. What a pity that we can't all do it.
The new chairman of A4e is Sir Robin Young, a retired career civil servant whose last government job was as a Permanent Secretary. The link between him and Robert Devereux, Permanent Secretary at the DWP, was referred to by Margaret Hodge last week when she described them both as, "A whole lot of good chaps - I understand that the Chairman is an ex-Permanent Secretary, whom, no doubt, you have conversations with."
It's a network that has made millions for Emma Harrison. What a pity that we can't all do it.
Sunday, 8 April 2012
Reputations
The Daily Mail has "updated" its article about A4e being the preferred bidder for the EHRC helpline contract. The amendment seems to consist of the insertion of: "A Home Office spokesman said: ‘A4e have no contracts with the Home Office or its executive agencies. The procurement process for the Equality Advisory and Support service is ongoing and A4e have not been made the preferred bidder for this contract.’" So the Home Office is denying the whole story. It will be interesting to see what happens in the end.
At the same time a Labour MP, Bill Esterson, has used his own website to call A4e "a Victorian workhouse scam". His constituent, 50-year-old Philip Hammond, has been with A4e for 14 months. He says: "A4e is bullying people at a time when they need support. They run a campaign of intimidation and undermine any self confidence you may have in yourself." He is particularly incensed by the 50-page contract people have to sign which gives A4e the right to monitor them for two years. He regards this as forcing people to sign away their human rights. The MP supports all this.
Okay, this is politics, and somewhat over the top. But an article in the Telegraph yesterday shows that the government is squirming about the whole subject of fraud in the W2W field. Margaret Hodge, chair of the PAC, is pursuing the fact that Cameron had announced that there had been 125 cases of "alleged wrongdoing". Only 11 of those related to A4e. She wants the details of the others disclosed, and a Tory MP has supported her. Chris Grayling has said that most of the 125 cases were not really fraud, but a few of them were down to "employee malpractice". The DWP is still deciding whether to publish the details. Meanwhile, reports the Telegraph, "the National Audit Office is conducting an internal inquiry into the DWP’s approach to investigating allegations of fraud across providers in the back-to-work sector. The findings of that inquiry will feed into a PAC evidence session on May 23."
At the same time a Labour MP, Bill Esterson, has used his own website to call A4e "a Victorian workhouse scam". His constituent, 50-year-old Philip Hammond, has been with A4e for 14 months. He says: "A4e is bullying people at a time when they need support. They run a campaign of intimidation and undermine any self confidence you may have in yourself." He is particularly incensed by the 50-page contract people have to sign which gives A4e the right to monitor them for two years. He regards this as forcing people to sign away their human rights. The MP supports all this.
Okay, this is politics, and somewhat over the top. But an article in the Telegraph yesterday shows that the government is squirming about the whole subject of fraud in the W2W field. Margaret Hodge, chair of the PAC, is pursuing the fact that Cameron had announced that there had been 125 cases of "alleged wrongdoing". Only 11 of those related to A4e. She wants the details of the others disclosed, and a Tory MP has supported her. Chris Grayling has said that most of the 125 cases were not really fraud, but a few of them were down to "employee malpractice". The DWP is still deciding whether to publish the details. Meanwhile, reports the Telegraph, "the National Audit Office is conducting an internal inquiry into the DWP’s approach to investigating allegations of fraud across providers in the back-to-work sector. The findings of that inquiry will feed into a PAC evidence session on May 23."
It's against this background that A4e's new PR people are trying to rehabilitate the company's reputation. I suspect it won't be about planting more of the good news stories in the local press. George Bridges and his colleagues from Quiller Consultants are more likely to be lobbying politicians. Disclosures of wrongdoing by other companies are helpful.
Labels:
A4e,
Bill Esterson,
Chris Grayling,
Daily Mail,
DWP,
EHRC,
George Bridges,
Margaret Hodge MP,
Quiller Consultants,
Telegraph
Wednesday, 28 March 2012
Attack and defence
Our attention was drawn (thanks, Solomon) to a post on the businesszone site which has the quote of the week from Peter Holbrook, chief executive of Social Enterprise UK: "Speaking at the opening of Social Enterprise Exchange in Glasgow, he went on to say that at a recent event, his chair, Claire Dove, 'almost decked' Emma Harrison, the 'infamous' founder of A4e." He also said that A4e was about "pure profiteering and greed". Holbrook's organisation is not alone in distancing itself from A4e. It defines a social enterprise in the usual way, and specifically excludes any company which exists to make profits for shareholders or to "make its owners very wealthy". Not so an organisation called ClearlySo, which says that it "connect(s) social enterprises with investors & the corporate world". Their definition of a social enterprise is so elastic that they talk loosely of a "social business" which aims "to do good by doing well" (which is an inversion of one of Emma Harrison's little sayings) and A4e qualified to be in their directory. The recent scandal got them seriously debating whether the company ought to stay in it, and now they've decided that it shouldn't. The logic of their reasoning is beyond me.
Among those who really don't like A4e and all it represents are a lot of "voluntary sector" organisations. This is another area where definitions are a bit blurred. But on the Third Sector website someone called Debra Allcock Tyler tells us that "Charities should be running services because they care for people, not profit." On the subject of the A4e scandal, she says: "I've been particularly amused by the moral outrage expressed by some of our politicians about the size of the salaries and bonuses paid to its directors." Why should they be surprised when that's what businesses are for? But her conclusion is that all the contracts should be given to charities. "Our sector isn't in it for the money. We will do whatever it takes to continue to serve our beneficiaries, none of the money given to us will be distributed in profits and we do not walk away when the money dries up. So for me it's a no-brainer. Use charities to deliver services to vulnerable people." I disagree. The answer is a public sector which is properly valued, and actually pays people to do the front line work rather than just the management.
A4e, of course, are fighting back, with yet more PR. They have now engaged "support from the Conservative Party's former campaign director", according to PRWeek. "A small number of senior employees at Quiller Consultants, led by George Bridges, are working on what sources have described as a ‘crisis comms brief’......... A senior public affairs figure commented: ‘Bridges has very senior connections, and his crisis management role will be to help A4e get through its present mess.’" Those "very senior connections" again; Bridges apparently ran George Osborne's 2010 election campaign. But will they pull A4e out of the mess? The company already employs at least 4 PR companies and has recently worked with another three. Is the current need really for friends in high places?
Among those who really don't like A4e and all it represents are a lot of "voluntary sector" organisations. This is another area where definitions are a bit blurred. But on the Third Sector website someone called Debra Allcock Tyler tells us that "Charities should be running services because they care for people, not profit." On the subject of the A4e scandal, she says: "I've been particularly amused by the moral outrage expressed by some of our politicians about the size of the salaries and bonuses paid to its directors." Why should they be surprised when that's what businesses are for? But her conclusion is that all the contracts should be given to charities. "Our sector isn't in it for the money. We will do whatever it takes to continue to serve our beneficiaries, none of the money given to us will be distributed in profits and we do not walk away when the money dries up. So for me it's a no-brainer. Use charities to deliver services to vulnerable people." I disagree. The answer is a public sector which is properly valued, and actually pays people to do the front line work rather than just the management.
A4e, of course, are fighting back, with yet more PR. They have now engaged "support from the Conservative Party's former campaign director", according to PRWeek. "A small number of senior employees at Quiller Consultants, led by George Bridges, are working on what sources have described as a ‘crisis comms brief’......... A senior public affairs figure commented: ‘Bridges has very senior connections, and his crisis management role will be to help A4e get through its present mess.’" Those "very senior connections" again; Bridges apparently ran George Osborne's 2010 election campaign. But will they pull A4e out of the mess? The company already employs at least 4 PR companies and has recently worked with another three. Is the current need really for friends in high places?
Labels:
A4e,
Emma Harrison,
George Bridges,
Peter Holbrook,
Quiller Consultants
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