So, it’s been a hectic week in the Manifest office. Fresh from making headlines everywhere with the launch of BrewDog’s The End of History, we stripped to our pants in Piccadilly Circus to donate our clothes to Oxfam on behalf of Arkº. In fact – it’s a bit too hectic – which is why we’re trying to hire some more people on the PR team in London! The positions we need to fill as soon as possible are:
Senior Account Executive / Account Manager (London)
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“It’s not every day you run through London in your pants…” is what one participant said. Something I thought was a bit of an understatement. But then again, the other week we were launching a 55%ABV beer served from dead squirrels, so right now filming a flashmob (with the emphasis on the ‘flash’) running around Piccadilly Circus in their underwear seemed like a normal day for the Manifest PR team.
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Yeah, we know. But we couldn't resist.
Do you have what it takes to be a genius, rocking and rolling PR consultant, but you’re not being given the chance to get your foot in the door? With the Manifest internship, you make your own luck.
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You may have seen here that Manifest recently won the PR account for BrewDog – a barnstorming beer brand that is shaking the dust from the UK beer market. I don’t think we’ve ever enjoyed putting together a proposal so much – so we thought we’d share with you some pics we took of the proposal being put together at the Manifest offices before being dispatched to Scotland. At Manifest, we all get involved with every brief – so designers help bring PR concepts to life and the PR team provides the required wordsmithery for design projects.
BrewDog is not a shy and retiring brand by any stretch of the imagination – and we knew it was going to be a pretty competitive pitch process – so we decided to go out all guns blazing in terms of both design and content…

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The great British election is a funny beast. Set in it’s battleship-grey suit and mismatched tie, it plods onwards with a familiar gait – boring everyone into submission through dire party election broadcasts utterly devoid of creativity (and usually, policy).
2010, however, was going to be different. 2010, it was said by many, ‘will be the first social media election’. ‘We’ll do an Obama’ was the battle-cry of the pallid campaign men.
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