Ann Gibbon Communications

 

home

Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Successful organizations know that capturing the attention of the media depends on their ability to tell compelling stories about their products, services and important issues.

Communicating stories to those who matter is Ann Gibbon Communications’ specialty. Whether developing communications plans, crafting and positioning stories so they get noticed by key audiences, or connecting organizations to media that make a difference, Ann Gibbon Communications gets results.

With years of journalism experience at Canada's top national media outlets, including the Globe and Mail, CanWest and the CBC, founder Ann Gibbon knows who’s who in the country’s newsrooms. She knows how reporters operate, what they need, and when they need it. She has secured media coverage for clients throughout North America.

Ann’s media training sessions prepare clients for the tough questions. The sessions demystify how the media work and help transform interviews from encounters to be feared into opportunities in which to shine. With her crisis communications experience, she provides clients with the tools to prepare for tough situations and land on their feet.

Any organization that wants to raise its profile through effective strategic communications, media/public relations or issues management, but lacks the time, contacts and expertise to do so will benefit from Ann Gibbon Communications’ range of services.

Ann Gibbon Communications is an independent consulting firm based in Vancouver and connected to newsrooms across North America.

 

 

LinkedIn Profile
Bookmark this Site
Email this Site




Clients In The News

CBC TV Vancouver's Theresa Lalonde tries out The Dailey Method:

August 7, 2011
Client: The Dailey Method
More clients in the news here.


News Release Writing Tip

A news release should read like a mini news story. To ensure yours has a conversational, easy-to-understand tone, read it out loud before you send it off. You'll identify leaden prose along with any gaps in logic.