Mike Cronin and Mark Duncan’s new book Revolutionary Times looks at the revolutionary period in Ireland. In this podcast he talks to Dion Fanning about the stories we tell ourselves, the problem with reunification and why Irish history remains such a hot topic to debate.
Brand strategy and design business Zero-G has worked with everyone from global multinationals to governments to ambitious start-ups on their brand and identity. Think Smurfit Kappa, LetsGetChecked, Bord na Móna and the Irish government. In this episode of Brand Matters, its founding partner and managing director Ciarán ÓGaora talks about the creative process that underpins his company’s award-winning work, what brands and branding actually mean - and how they can resonate. The series is sponsored by the law firm Whitney Moore.
Environmental, social, governance. ESG. Just three letters. But those three letters can have a major impact on businesses – from their engagement with staff to customers to investors. David McGee, ESG leader for PwC in Ireland, joins Ian Kehoe in the podcast studio to discuss how companies can ensure they are doing the right thing at the right time to deliver the right outcomes.
McGee talks about how companies can embed ESG into their business, offers advice for businesses striving to achieve net zero, and explains obligations under the new Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).
This podcast is sponsored by PwC.
Tom Keogh and his family have done something few others have done – build an international brand around their name and their land. In this episode of Brand Matters, a podcast series sponsored by the law firm Whitney Moore, the man behind Keogh’s Crisps tells Alison Cowzer about creating the product from scratch, and why they decided to build the brand about the family name and the family farm. He also talks about innovation, international expansion, and building a lasting family legacy.
As a co-founder and the creative director of Boys + Girls, Rory Hamilton has left his fingerprints on some of the best-known ad campaigns in recent years. But just where do the ideas come from? And how does a creative agency transform the wants and needs of a client into a campaign that can be rolled across multiple media forms? These are just some of the areas Hamilton discusses in this edition of Brand Matters with Alison Cowzer, a podcast series sponsored by the law firm Whitney Moore.
Debbie Byrne has two key roles within An Post. As managing director of its retail business, she is responsible for rolling out its suite of financial products. But she also has responsibility for An Post’s strategic brand development. In this episode of Brand Matters, she explains to Alison Cowzer the symbiotic relationship between the two roles. She also talks about transitioning the An Post brand, stakeholder capitalism, and the importance of doing the right thing for the right reason. Brand Matters is sponsored by the law firm Whitney Moore.
Michael Lynn was once the poster boy for the Celtic Tiger. He went on the Late Late Show and gave away an apartment. But as his story unravelled, he became, as Michael O'Farrell puts it in this interview, "the canary in the coalmine" for the crash.
O'Farrell talks to Dion Fanning in this podcast about his new book on Lynn and his journalistic pursuit of Michael Lynn since 2008.
In his book, Stakeknife’s Dirty War, the former H-Block prisoner, Richard O’Rawe, provides the inside story on Freddie Scappaticci. In an interview with Dion Fanning, he explores the many lives of Scappaticci, his own experience as a prisoner during the hunger strikes, and his views on Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams as they pursued peace, viewed as “treachery in a pristine sense” by many republicans.
Northern Ireland journalist Eamonn Mallie has just released a memoir, Eyewitness to War and Peace, and his interview with Dion Fanning explores the upheaval he has witnessed through a career covering the Troubles and the peace process, as well as the process of reporting on it. "With Michelle O’Neill and Emma Little-Pengelly at the helm, I’m hopeful that we’re on the right track again," Mallie says, and he explains why.
Graham Cawley co-founded Santiago Capital after three decades in corporate finance. In conversation with Thomas Hubert, he explains how the firm is carving out a niche by directing funds from wealthy clients and international institutional investors to traditional Irish property developers, and why it is expanding unsecured lending to small businesses.
“We have a shelf off the west coast of Ireland on which we can deploy offshore wind resources. Rather than taking raw energy out of our wind turbines and shipping it either through hydrogen or through large interconnectors into Europe – why would we not build the industry here where it’s close to the energy, and get the benefit from that?” KPMG’s Colm O’Neill tells Sean Keyes why he thinks it's finally time Ireland makes a pitch for heavy industry.