Friday 28 September 2012

PR Agency Thrilled That Public Relations Study Says PR Industry to Grow

Veronis Suhler Stevenson, an investment firm that works in communications released a report today that the PR and word-of-mouth marketing spend grew 12.4 percent to $6.41 billion in 2011, and they project further growth for the industry.

Public Relations is projected to increase 8.3 percent to $4.22 billion.
In general, the U.S. Communications Industry spending grew 4.4% in 2011 to $1.129 trillion despite a sluggish economy in which nominal Gross Domestic Product expanded 3.9%. According to the growth pace that the VSS Communications Industry study projects, the Communications Industry will be the fifth-largest industry sector by 2016.

All of this is good news to the entire public relations industry, and certainly 5wpr is feeling the growth effects. We project 2012 to be our highest revenue years ever, and remain very excited about the future.

Ronn Torossian

Source: http://ronntorossian.com/pr-agency-thrilled-that-public-relations-study-says-pr-industry-to-grow-2

Thursday 27 September 2012

Reflections from My 20-Year Stuyvesant High School Graduation Reunion

This weekend I thoroughly enjoyed attending the 20 year Stuyvesant HS reunion party for the Class of 1992. Mothers, fathers and old friends – today, professionals ranging from Internal medicine specialists to Ford Motor Executives living in Mexico City, Producers for Good Morning America to California restaurant owners, employment attorneys at a white-shoe midtown NYC firm to a toy distributor attended and it was just great. I really enjoyed attending and reconnecting with people whom I graduated high school with.

Of course it was very interesting to see who and what people have become (everyone had on those cheesy name tags), and attending what was (and is) considered as one of the best public academic high schools in the nation in the last ‘80’s and early 90’s was a truly enjoyable experience. (Albeit one I have to thank my mother for as I didn’t want to travel 1.5 hours each way, but did and eventually preferred it over my local zoned high school.)

I played varsity basketball, which shaped a lot of my experience – and rarely attended class (as I was reminded of again last nite). Seeing half of the team show up was fun as we shared war stories about our aching backs, knees and stories which today would be qualified as hazing and have arrests made. We relived a lot of humor, shared and laughed about stories which I didn’t remember – and all in all was so nice seeing old familiar faces.

New York City was a different city then – graffiti ridden subways, at times dangerous but I wouldn’t have traded attending Stuyvesant for anything. On so many levels it was really such a special place and for this boy from the Bronx it really opened up my eyes to so many things, places and opportunities.

And now, I am off to prepare my kids to be the best they can academically so when the time comes in a few years they will also get into Stuyvesant High School.

Ronn Torossian

5WPR
  
Source:http://ronntorossian.com/reflections-from-my-20-year-stuyvesant-high-school-graduation-reunion

Tuesday 25 September 2012

Big Brands Trim Ad Budgets—More Room for PR$$?

Advertisers Trim Budgets—More Room for PR? Half of the biggest advertisers in the U.S. trimmed their budgets during the last quarter, including behemoths like Procter & Gamble, AT&T and Verizon.

According to Kantar Media, Procter & Gamble witnessed a 13.2% slide in the second quarter to $577 million. AT&T claimed second place in Q2 2011, but cut back by 21% to $376m in Q2 2012.

The drop in ad spending could free up budgets for increased communications efforts, known to be a less expensive and effective alternative to advertising.

Other findings include:


  • Verizon logged a 14.7% contraction to $327 million. Time Warner, the media owner, was similarly down by 12.9% to $298 million. News Corp., from the same sector, was also at $298 million, representing a 6.8% decrease in spending.

  • In automotive, General Motors recorded an even larger decline, of 30.1%, to $292 million. Toyota, its rival, posted a 22.7% leap to $285 million.

  • Unilever was up 48.6% to $278 million. It thus replaced Pfizer in the top 10. The pharmaceutical firm slashed its ad spending by 15.9% in Q1 year on year to $301 million, and delivered a further dip in Q2.

  • Retail was up by 0.9% to $3.8 billion, while automotive grew by 7.7% to $3.3 billion. Telecoms lodged a 2.4% decrease to $2 billion and financial services brands were down by 3.4%, coming in at just over $1.9 billion.

  • As a group, the top 10 advertisers registered a 5.5% drop in advertising expenditure, to $3.6 billion. The top 100 marketers, together accounting for 40% of revenues, boosted their outgoings by 1.1%.
  • Source:http://www.5wpr.net/?p=7203

    Friday 21 September 2012

    Study: How Facebook could impact the next election

    A recent study suggests that a special nonpartisan “get out and vote” message on Facebook, which included pictures of friends who said they already voted, generated more than 340,000 additional votes nationwide on Election Day 2010. However, the study did not determine which party these posts were affiliated with, The New York Times reports.

    While the number of votes that the messages spawned was small compared to the overall turnout (about 90.7 million people), it could still impact individual races: Less than 0.01 percent of the vote in Florida decided that 2000 presidential election.

    The study, conducted by scientists from Facebook and the University of California, San Diego, was published on Wednesday by the journal Nature. Experts believe that this is the first to show that social networks could have at least some impact on elections, and the findings could have implications that extend beyond voting.

    Also, the study found that “patterns of influence were much more likely to be demonstrated among close friends,” the Times reports, suggesting that strong ties in cyberspace are more prone to influence behavior. And the message had indirect impact on friends of friends.

    In what researchers call the “social contagion” effect, the Facebook message that displayed pictures of friends who voted was directly responsible for significantly more votes nationwide than the same message presented without pictures.

    “What we have shown here, is that the online world and the real world affect one another,” said James H. Fowler, a professor of medical genetics and political science at the university. — Kyra Auffermann

    http://www.prsa.org/SearchResults/view/9925/105/Study_How_Facebook_could_impact_the_next_election

    Wednesday 19 September 2012

    5WPR - Knows all the Ws’ of Public Relations

    The world is a place where everyone needs to reside with co-existence. You cannot live your life away from others. Therefore it is impossible for a business or someone in the public image, to keep under wraps at all times. Public Relations is a very important part of any business, and this is why, there is a great need for a good PR firm that will take care of such needs and requirements, so that the business will flourish. When it comes to public image, it is essential that people get to know the facts about a person from a direct and reliable source.


    5WPR is one of the best PR firms in the entire world; they can provide such effective strategies and plans in public relations. Not only they have been involved for many years in the business of helping to build the right image of so many businesses, but they also have made a mark for themselves in the industry, which has made them the leaders in their field.

    The founder of the company Mr. Ronn Torossian has led the firm to become one of the most sought after PR firms in recent times. They have been ranked one of the 25 fastest developing PR firms in the industry. This is due to the highly trained and experienced professionals, who can easily deliver the most efficient and authentic solutions in Public Relations

    They boast of dealing with high-end clients such as; McDonalds, MSN, XM Radio and so on. This has been possible due to their dedicated hard work in this field as a team. This makes them one of the best in their business, and their ever-increasing client base is due to the sort of transparency in the services that they offer.

    There are people who have spent a lot of money on PR services, without any positive results. Knowing your game is important in the industry, the effective services rendered by 5wpr will definitely lead to success.

    Friday 14 September 2012

    5WPR - Bringing Upon a New Era of Modern Global Oneness

    PR companies are essential for the growth and advancement of any major brand, and this depends a lot upon the sort of publicity that they will receive.

    This is what decides the kind of image people will have about a particular brand.

    This is why it is really essential for a company to choose a PR firm that has safe and time tested solutions in this regard, so that the company can flourish with a positive outlook.

    5wpr is a company that has been working in this field for a long time. They have high profile clients such as; McDonald's, Born Free, and 1800 tequila and many more.

    This reveals a lot about the working structure of the company, and how it is a firm that works not just for making clients and money; but for leaving a good and lasting impression on the minds of its clients for years to come.

    Thursday 13 September 2012

    The Rise & Fall & Rise (Again) of David Steinberg – INC Magazine

    He rose to the top of the Inc. 500, then failed spectacularly. Now he’s back with another fast-growing company–no less ambitious but a lot wiser.

    http://www.inc.com/magazine/201209/leigh-buchanan/rise-and-fall-of-david-steinberg.html

    Momentum is like cholesterol. There’s a good kind and a bad kind.
    In the mid-2000s, David Steinberg grappled with the bad kind. InPhonic, his seller of mobile phones and services, was No. 1 on the Inc. 500 in 2004. It went public that year. But as Steinberg pounded furiously toward revenue of $400 million, the company started to sway beneath him like a rope bridge on a windy day. Ultimately, it collapsed, filing for Chapter 11 in November 2007 to facilitate the sale of its assets to an investment firm.

    Within 30 days of resigning as CEO–not long before the filing–Steinberg had moved the furniture out of his old office in Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown neighborhood and into his new office in a building right next door. While InPhonic expired nearby, David Steinberg was giving birth to a new company, which he holds up as an exemplar of good momentum. XL Marketing provides lead-generation and customer-acquisition services for companies in several industries and for big brands; Steinberg projects it will do $100 million this year.

    The business, now based in New York City, is growing so fast that had Steinberg launched six months earlier and thus qualified for the 2011 Inc. 500, he would have become the first founder ever to land two companies in the top spot. (Why isn’t XL Marketing on this year’s list? Steinberg chose not to apply. The company wouldn’t be No. 1, and so really, what would be the point?)
    F. Scott Fitzgerald was wrong: There are second acts in American lives. And the most resilient entrepreneurs don’t even require intermissions.

    We are sitting in Steinberg’s sparsely decorated Manhattan office, our conversation occasionally drowned out by the banshee shriek of sirens tearing down Madison Avenue below. Loose limbed and genial, Steinberg is giving his first substantial interview in more than three years. With so much going right, he is, understandably, not eager to revisit InPhonic’s last days. But we cannot talk about the sanguine present without acknowledging the sanguinary past.

    So Steinberg answers–more or less patiently–questions about the series of unfortunate events that commenced in 2006, two years after InPhonic’s IPO. In relatively short order, the District of Columbia attorney general’s office and the Federal Trade Commission, or FTC, filed lawsuits over InPhonic’s rebate programs; accounting errors forced the company to restate several quarters’ worth of earnings; a strategic partnership collapsed; and shareholders filed a class action (later dismissed). In November 2007, InPhonic filed for Chapter 11, and its assets were sold to Versa Capital Management, which relaunched it as Simplexity. (Simplexity still operates Wirefly, the popular wireless-services retailer that Steinberg built inside InPhonic.)

    Steinberg’s take on all of this squares with that of most commentators. Growth: too fast. Focus on profit: insufficient. “I wouldn’t say we didn’t care about profit,” says David Steinberg. “We did. But we were more focused on growing the business.” Unfortunately, infrastructure wasn’t scaling as fast as sales. “We had effectively the same finance team as a $20 million company as we had as a $400 million company,” he says. “We were processing millions of transactions. And quite frankly, we had not built the internal controls and systems.”

    The company also carried too much debt. When a deal that would have given InPhonic some cash and allowed it to spin off distribution fell apart, the bank called its loan. “We had the wrong balance sheet,” says Steinberg. “And in August 2007, there was no refinancing of anything.”

    Steinberg also blames InPhonic’s status as a public company for inflating the problems. “Had we not been public when a lot of that stuff happened, it would have been no big deal at all,” he says. “But we were a sizable public company and attracted the attention of certain lawyers who like to sue sizable public companies.” (Both the FTC’s and the D.C. attorney general’s lawsuits were settled.)

    But Steinberg never stopped believing that with InPhonic, he had built a great company. “When I left I was, if not the largest shareholder, in the top three,” he says. “Nobody lost more money than me. I’m a believer. And I don’t regret that.
    “The guys who bought it got an incredible deal.”

    Steinberg is the quintessential analytic leader, his reliance on metrics in part a consequence of his dyslexia. Four years ago, he studied the trends at private equity firms and saw that fewer partners were investing more dollars. That translated into the pursuit of ever-larger deals: a feast of capital for bigger companies and famine for smaller ones. Steinberg saw an opportunity for a whole-is-greater-than-the-sum-of-its-parts play. He planned to build a holding company to acquire, consolidate, and invest in those left-behind firms, focusing on his specialty–Internet marketing.

    Steinberg named the original version of the business Caivis Acquisition. (XL Marketing is technically a spinoff.) For funding, he called on two InPhonic investors: his longtime mentor, the former Apple and Pepsi CEO John Sculley, and Bill Landman, a partner in Philadelphia-based Renovus Capital. Both now sit on XL Marketing’s board. (A fourth board member is Robert Niehaus, chairman of Greenhill Capital Partners, one of two firms that invested a total of $70 million in XL Marketing this summer.) “You always have a fond memory of a CEO that made you such a high multiple of your dollars invested,” says Landman, an early InPhonic investor who profited handsomely from the IPO.

    Maybe it’s age; maybe it’s maturity and experience. For whatever reason, Steinberg finds the prospect of starting companies from scratch less appealing than he did when he launched InPhonic and two smaller businesses in the ’90s. That change in attitude, as well as market insight, guides XL Marketing’s growth strategy. Although more than 90 percent of InPhonic’s growth was organic, at XL Marketing that number is below 30 percent. “I like this idea of buying businesses where the management teams have taken it as far as they can go and taking those businesses to the next level,” says Steinberg. “I’m really good at that.”

    XL Marketing–which specializes in the education, insurance, financial-services, and health care sectors–targets companies in the $10 million to $20 million range. To date, it has acquired and combined an education-industry call-center business, an e-mail and affiliate marketing business, a social-media-marketing business, an e-mail service provider, and a few much smaller companies. It also built a search business from scratch and picked up the assets of a defunct $2.5 million call center in Florida for $50,000. XL Marketing’s beating heart is a 121-million-record database of consumers who have opted in for marketing messages.

    Steinberg isn’t just shopping for client rosters and technology platforms. He is shopping for entrepreneurs as well. To lure founders on board and anchor them there, he offers a mix of cash, stock in the parent company, and earn-outs for making their numbers. Perhaps more important, he runs XL Marketing like a collective, letting the founders continue to run their own businesses within the larger company. At a weekly management meeting, Steinberg lobs a few pointed questions but otherwise sits back munching cheese cubes and pretzels while his division heads update and debate one another. “It’s very difficult to hire an entrepreneur,” he says, “but they’re the guys I love to work with.”
    Mike DiMaio became co-vice chairman and executive vice president of sales after selling his e-mail business, Spire Vision, to XL Marketing in 2009. DiMaio and his co-founder–now XL’s chief strategy officer–weren’t planning to sell so soon, DiMaio says. But Steinberg’s vision, experience, and connections persuaded them. “David lets us keep doing what we’ve been doing to get to this point of success, and then rolls our energy and enthusiasm into the overall company,” says DiMaio.

    Steinberg wants to expand XL Marketing to $250 million to $300 million over the next three to five years while maintaining or improving margins. Although he doesn’t rule out another IPO, the bad taste from InPhonic lingers. As a public-company CEO, he says, “I ended up having not enough time to run my company and had to focus most of my time on dealing with Wall Street and analysts and a lot of different shareholders. That’s not something I’m anxious to run back and do again.”

    Sculley says that whatever XL Marketing’s status, it will “continue to look better and better. This is a business with legs.” As for what happened at InPhonic, he believes the experience made his mentee only stronger.

    “That’s the great thing about America,” says Sculley. “There’s permission to fail. You pick yourself back up and people say, ‘OK, what did you learn? And why don’t you go try again?’ ”

    Bigger and Better

    “The best thing about InPhonic for me,” says David Steinberg about his failed company, “was that I learned so much about how to build something, what can hurt you, and how you take lessons from what causes pain.” Here are some of Steinberg’s lessons from InPhonic and how he is applying them at XL Marketing.
    1. Focus on profit Steinberg sometimes sacrificed gross profit for mere growth at InPhonic. No more. He now buys only companies that are profitable or that he can get to profitability very quickly. “We’re growing these businesses by 106 percent top line and 244 percent on the bottom line within six months of buying them,” he says.
    2.  Hire big brains In the early stages of InPhonic, Steinberg was able to keep a close eye on the hiring process and assure himself that only first-rate people came on board. But as the company grew, “we didn’t have a program to make sure new people were keeping with the same intelligence and aptitude level,” he says. That affected the quality of his leadership bench. All candidates at XL Marketing are subject to intelligence and problem-solving tests so rigorous that only slightly more than 10 percent qualify.
    3. Replace people Steinberg says some managers’ job responsibilities outgrew their skills and experience at InPhonic. The financial function, in particular, suffered. Steinberg says he now continually reviews his management to make sure it is “expert in what you’re currently doing, not what you were doing two years ago.”
    4.  Keep the board small The 12-member board at InPhonic was a veritable constellation, lit up by stars like former senator and vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp. XL Marketing’s board consists of just four people, including Steinberg—and he wants to keep it that way. “I have the contractual right to add two more anytime I want. But I don’t want to do it,” he says.
    5.  Get a life At InPhonic, Steinberg’s 100-hour weeks had a corrosive effect on his family life. Even though he now splits his week between New York and Washington, D.C., where his children live, he spends more time with them than he did back then. “I love XL Marketing, and I love what we do,” he says. “But it’s not my life. It’s not my entire makeup. At InPhonic, at one point, it really was.”

    Source: http://www.5wpr.net/?p=7178

    Tuesday 11 September 2012

    Ronn Torossian Says: Have Fashion Night Out On Another Night And Get Big Media Attention

    Fashion Night Out is being held this year on Thursday, September 6th – it’s the same day in NYC as Back to School. While scheduling in New York City is never easy, one wonders if there was a consideration for all the mothers who will be dealing with their kids’ on the first day of school. If Fashion Night Out wants an older, more diverse audience, I’d think they wouldn’t schedule it on the first day kids’ start school again.

    So, what brand is going to step up to the plate on and host a Moms’ Fashion Night Out another evening ? Big PR opportunity for whoever would host such an event. Food for thought.

    Ronn Torossian

    5WPR

    Source: http://ronntorossian.com/

    Friday 7 September 2012

    5WPR - a Good Choice for PR Solutions

    We all know how important PR services are for various sectors in the world. It can be for the health, beauty, politics, consumer or sports industry, there is dire need for a proper publicity partner, than can effectively bring a clear picture of the client in front of the audiences.

    5wpr is one of the best companies for Public Relation Services, which works with a large number of clients, and works towards developing excellent public relations between the people and the companies or celebrity clients

    They have been delivering authentic solutions for all types of PR needs. They are being ranked as one of the best companies in the PR industry, and this is why they deal with many high profile companies for PR solutions.

    "Aggressive in a way that clearly resonates with clients looking for a firm staffed with type a-plus personalities and with positive results from day one”; this is why 5 WPR is making it big in the PR business.

    Thursday 6 September 2012

    Habits: Ronn Torossian, CEO and founder, 5W Public Relations

    Morning ritual

    Ronn Torossian: I usually wake up at 5am and spend 15 minutes checking up on my email and the news. I then work out until 7am, have breakfast with my kids, and walk to work by 8am.

    Required reading

    Ronn Torossian: I read The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and New York Post every day.

    First PR job

    Ronn Torossian: I worked for the Likud Party in Israel, where I first discovered what it was like to be in the eye of the media storm 24/7.

    Best career advice you've ever received

    Ronn Torossian: My mother taught me that the only limits in life are those you set for yourself.

    Favorite city to travel to on business

    Ronn Torossian: Chicago. It's a beautiful city full of good people. It's also a great place for PR business.

    Proudest career achievement

    Ronn Torossian: Being placed on the Inc. 500 list of fastest-growing American companies in 2007 and 2008 and being chosen as a semifinalist for Ernst & Young's Entrepreneur of the Year.

    Most regrettable career moment

    Ronn Torossian: Nothing I'll admit to. Every single day I make mistakes.

    Most distinct aspect of your office

    Ronn Torossian: I'm a voracious reader and have a number of bookshelves in my office where I stock books that I enjoy giving away to people – marketing books, business books, and even religion books. Of course, the most meaningful items are the framed photos of my children.

    Person to call in a crisis

    Ronn Torossian: When I need immediate advice, I call my best friend, who is also a self-made entrepreneur. As my rabbi taught me, when seeking an adviser, the most important questions to ask are: “Do you like them? Do you respect them? Do they really care about you?” If the answer to those questions is “yes,” then take their counsel and advice seriously.

    Mentor

    Ronn Torossian: My mother is my mentor. She taught me the value of hard work without taking shortcuts, the importance of believing in myself, and the will to never stop aspiring to be better, wiser, and to do more. She taught me more than anyone ever could.

    Ideal job, if not in PR

    Ronn Torossian: If I couldn't work in PR, I'd want to be in politics, making a difference in the civic world, or a rabbi, making a difference in the spiritual world.

    Source:http://ronntorossian.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2012-03-30T16:18:00-07:00

    The 24/7 Rolling Press Conference by Ronn Torossian

    This is a book excerpt from “For Immediate Release: Shape Minds, Build Brands, and Deliver Results with Game-Changing Public Relations” by Ronn Torossian, and is available online on amazon.com.

    The 24/7 Rolling Press Conference

    Times have changed drastically. When people ask me what my next few days will look like, I often ask them if they know what the top headline in the newspapers or the most popular Google search result will be tomorrow or next week. Since they can’t predict either, I can’t tell them what I’ll be doing. The digital age has created a 24/7 rolling press conference that has changed the face of PR forever (marketing and advertising, too). Around-the-clock cable news stations, social networks, newswires, bloggers, tweeters, and “Diggers”—everyone is in PR these days.

    Whether they realize it or not, anyone commenting on the Internet or participating in social media is doing PR. They’re creating trends if they are commenting on stories, tweeting, and making videos that are spread quickly and able to reach millions within hours. Pros are competing with or reacting to mommy bloggers, self-styled political pundits writing from their basements, and anyone in the street with a smartphone sending live messages and uploading videos.

    Want proof? The world’s most wanted man, Osama bin Laden, was killed in a top-secret mission. Who broke the news of his death first? It wasn’t CNN or Fox News. An individual on Twitter got the news out before any of the major networks. Keith Urbahn, chief of staff to former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, tweeted the following: “So I’m told by a reputable person they have killed Osama bin Laden. Hot damn.”

    Businesspeople with brands to protect or build can never leave the “podium” (those who know me know that my BlackBerry and cell phone rarely leave my hand). In fact, for many years I kept my BlackBerry by my side all night. In an ADD world, everyone expects instant responses and immediate satisfaction. Try not calling back or e-mailing your best friend for 24 hours; he’ll probably think you died. Getting a “couldn’t be reached for comment” mention in a newswire story that runs on 80 websites, simply because a reporter didn’t get a call back within the hour, is not a result you want. Businesses are required to continuously keep on top of what’s going on and to have the ability to give quick but thoughtful responses. This has made the world of professional PR even more complicated to navigate.

    Owning a PR Agency, I realize that times have changed forever – and it’s not just because of the relatively recent rise of social media.

    Source: http://ronntorossian.blogspot.com

    Tuesday 4 September 2012

    Crisis Public Relations: Chris Brown & Drake Fight, Ronn Torossian

    Whether raising a corporate profile or creating initiatives designed to garner the attention of decision makers and influencers, 5WPR and Ronn Torossian have a strategic know-how to successfully position food & beverage pr in the public eye. From facilitating the launch of new products to developing long-term creative strategies that ensure maximum media coverage, our experience and results are unparalleled.




     







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    HINT Water


    HINT, whose mantra is Drink Water, Not Sugar® is the brainchild of Kara Goldin, a San Francisco mother of four who was seeking a refreshing, unsweetened and no calorie beverage to give her family. Her simple solution – HINT Essence Water. Launched in 2005, Kara developed HINT in response to the growing wall of sugary juices and sodas. HINT is at the heart of a healthy lifestyle™, and is available in many delicious flavors including Blackberry, Watermelon, Pomegranate-Tangerine, Mango-Grapefruit, Strawberry-Kiwi and Raspberry-Lime. HINT Essence Water can be found in fine grocery stores and retailers all over the United States or purchased online at www.drinkhint.com. The latest addition, HINT FIZZ is available nationwide at specialty grocery stores. More information is also available at www.facebook.com/drinkhint.


















    HINT FIZZ (Sparkling version of HINT) HINT, whose mantra is Drink Water, Not Sugar® is the brainchild of Kara Goldin, a San Francisco mother of four who was seeking a refreshing, unsweetened and no calorie beverage to give her family. Her simple solution – HINT Essence Water. Launched in 2005, Kara developed HINT in response to the growing wall of sugary juices and sodas. HINT is at the heart of a healthy lifestyle™, and is available in many delicious flavors including Blackberry, Watermelon, Pomegranate-Tangerine, Mango-Grapefruit, Strawberry-Kiwi and Raspberry-Lime. HINT Essence Water can be found in fine grocery stores and retailers all over the United States or purchased online at www.drinkhint.com. The latest addition, HINT FIZZ is available nationwide at specialty grocery stores.More information is also available at www.facebook.com/drinkhint.


    Source: http://ronntorossian.blogspot.com

    5W Public Relations Hired For Western Kentucky University’s “Instruments of American Excellence” Museum Collection Launch

    5W Public Relations, a top 25 U.S. PR Agency proudly announced today that it will be the agency of record for the launch of Western Kentucky University’s “Instruments of American Excellence” Museum Collection.

    This marks the beginning of a new era at the Kentucky Museum, which will house the collection. The museum welcomes more than 50,000 visitors every year. The Kentucky Building, the grand facility that houses the Museum, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Museum is currently seeking accreditation by the American Association of Museums. Museum staffers are also working toward affiliation with other local and national museums, which will provide additional benefits for its members.

    “We are very excited to be working with Western Kentucky University on their newest museum collection,” said Ronn Torossian, CEO of 5WPR. “The Instruments of American Excellence collection is inspiring, and features iconic items from the people who made and continue to make America great. We look forward to spreading the word about the collection widely to the media.”

    5wpr (www.5wpr.com) is a New York based PR agency ranked as one of the 25 largest PR firms in the U.S. The agency works in a variety of disciplines.

    Contact:
    Ronn Torossian
     212-999-5585

     SOURCE:5WPR

    5WPR CEO on Rupert Murdoch & Start-up Nation

    Interesting event being held this week in NYC which hasn’t received much media attention.  An Israel Investment, Innovation and Trade Forum entitled “Invest. Innovate. Israel will be held in New York City on September 10th.  This event will discuss Israel’s global impact on the economy and status as a leading business and technology hub.

    Speakers will include: Rupert Murdoch, Chairman & CEO of News Corporation, Dr. Yuval Steinitz, Israeli Minister of Finance, Lewis B. Kaden, Vice Chairman, Citigroup, Shai Agassi, Founder, Better Place, Ester Levanon, CEO, Tel-Aviv Stock Exchange, Ed Finn, Editor & President, and Bret Stephens, Global View Columnist, The Wall Street Journal.

    In the past 10 years, Israel’s stock market has produced better risk adjusted returns than all other developed stock markets in the past decade.  The Tel Aviv TA-25 returned 161 percent over the past 10 years – and this conference will review economic opportunities in Israel.

    Interesting speakers and interesting story about a booming foreign economy.

    Ronn Torossian is CEO of 5WPR, and author of “For Immediate Release.”

    Publish At:http://www.jewocity.com/blog/5wpr-ceo-on-rupert-murdoch-start-up-nation/4157