Posts Tagged ‘PNE’

ECONOMIC RECOVERY, A TORY GOVERNMENT AND PNE FOR THE PREMIERSHIP

Friday, January 8th, 2010

The start of a New Year is always a good time to gaze into the crystal ball and predict what the next twelve months has in store.

Politically we know that there will be a General Election. Despite recent rumours to the contrary, May is still the most likely election date with Gordon Brown hoping for continuing signs of economic ‘green shoots’ as the months tick by. Although there has been an upturn in Labour support according to recent polls, the Tories are still on course for victory, albeit with a smaller majority than many anticipated. Expect David Cameron to form a Government with around 40 seats in hand.

This will mean a new Leader for the Labour Party and David Milliband will be crowned as the official Leader of the Opposition at its conference in September.

No sooner will we have recovered from the ‘excitement’ of what will have been the longest election campaign in UK history (it started the day after Brown was elevated from Chancellor to Prime Minister two years ago) than the greatest sporting tournament on earth will be underway.

England go to the World Cup Finals in South Africa with a relatively easy group to negotiate and Fabio Cappello will lead his side to the last four, before watching his charges miss out on a place in the Final as some overpaid Premiership Muppet misses a spot kick in the inevitable penalty shoot out.

Domestically, Burnley will defy all the odds by retaining their place in the Premiership; Blackburn will do likewise by getting to Wembley in the League Cup; and PNE will get to the Championship Play-Off’s for the 99th time – but this time win promotion!

Back to business, and 2010 will be a big year for the recently appointed Chief Executive of Preston Vision Eliot Ward, as he sets out a business plan that must transform the town into a city. Downtown Preston and its partners will be contributing to that particular agenda through our ‘City Thinking’ campaign.

Meanwhile, the Chief Executive of the Northwest Development Agency, Steven Broomhead, and Business Link boss Peter Watson, will remain at the forefront of economic and business support across the region as we slowly move out of recession. These two individuals deserve enormous credit for the way they have led their respective organizations during the economic downturn.

Steve Jackson and his Recycling Lives initiative will continue to make the news for all the right reasons; and look out for a Preston based energy company GB Energy and its MD Luke Watson who will be doing some great things this year.

Other eye catching happenings during 2010 include: X Factor stars Jedward replacing Sir Alan Sugar as ‘Enterprise Czar’; Katie Price and Peter Andre presenting to Downtown’s Business Week on ‘how to fool the media all of the time’; and Preston City Council announcing an extension, rather than the demolition, of its huge carbuncle of a bus station.

Have a great 2010. Let’s hope it’s a good one.

COCKS OF THE NORTH

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

The new Premier League Football Season gets under way this weekend, and the North West is healthily represented with nine clubs competing in the top division following the promotion of Burnley.

And it is fair to say that at least three of those nine, Liverpool, Man United and moneybags Man City, will all expect to be challenging for the title.

It may be a bit too soon for City, but with the massive investment they have benefitted from over the past twelve months, and the prospect of that investment continuing for the foreseeable future, there is little doubt that it is a question of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’ they will gatecrash the top four.

Traditionalists, of which I include myself, may not like the astronomical sums that City are having to spend to meet that objective, but there has been an awful lot of hypocrisy spouted over the Eastland’s club and its activities in the transfer market.

Would anyone have turned a hair if United had spent over £100 million during pre season? Did Benitez not very publicly pursue Gareth Barry last season in the same way Mark Hughes is pursuing Joleon Lescott this season?

City are guilty of one thing and one thing only. They are upsetting the ‘establishment’. And good luck to them I say. If they do get Lescott, and their other new signings can gel quickly, expect them to push Arsenal hard for fourth spot.

Having lost Ronaldo and Tevez, I don’t think United have enough to retain the title. Chelsea, under new management again, have failed to make significant additions to an aging squad, and Arsenal are skint. This opens the door for Liverpool to win the Premiership for the first time, and, as an Evertonian it grieves me to say it, but I sadly think they will do so.

Of the other North West teams, I predict that Everton will once more have a decent season, with a top six finish and good cup runs under the superb stewardship of David Moyes. Bolton and Blackburn will have comfortable mid table finishes and Burnley supporters will have a great time, even though their club will be all but relegated by Christmas. Wigan will be lucky not to join them after the departure of Steve Bruce to Sunderland. However, the fact that Hull, Wolves and Birmingham are worse than them should mean that they survive at least one more season in the top flight.

Whoever you support, enjoy the new season. And good luck to PNE in the Championship.

BUCKING THE TREND

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

They say that when the going gets tough, the tough get going, and certainly in the current economic climate, businesses that survive and thrive will be the ones that come from sterner stuff than their peers.

So, it is no surprise to me that Preston entrepreneur Steve Jackson, and his ‘Recycling Lives’ team, are making some impressive strides with their new business venture, despite the overall gloomy economic picture.

His social enterprise (Jackson will not allow the ‘not for profit’ term to be used) is a unique project that enables individuals who have fallen on hard times for a variety of reasons to get back on their own two feet, by helping themselves.

It is an innovative and dynamic, some may say risky, approach to the social exclusion agenda that many have tried, and failed, to address.

I noted this week that he is starting to attract support from a number of public agencies from across the region. I hope the local public sector follows suit sooner rather than later.

Jackson’s track record is excellent, from PNE through to his scrap businesses. I back him to make this latest venture equally successful.

Go to http://www.recyclinglives.org/ for further information. Or better still, arrange to go down and see the fantastic training facilities and business incubators on Essex Street.

COME ON YOU WHITES!

Friday, June 12th, 2009

About eighteen months ago, one of DPIB’s corporate sponsors, Moore & Smalley, ran a poll asking ‘Would Premiership football for PNE make any difference to business in Preston?’

The answer came back a big fat NO, with 80% or so of businesses that responded to their question saying that it would make no difference at all.

I could not disagree with them more.

Aside from the increased number of visitors the city would attract when PNE were hosting a home fixture, bringing spin offs for local bars, restaurants and hotels – not to mention a much needed boost to visitor numbers for the excellent national football museum – such is the media coverage of Premiership football nowadays all around the globe, that the Preston brand would get a marketing boom that would be worth millions.

The more recognition Preston gets, the more local business can trade on the name.

Across the North West there are firms who maximise the opportunity of having a Premier League football club on their doorstep. Not just in Manchester and Liverpool, but in Bolton and Blackburn too.

So, not only for football reasons, but for business too, we should all be hoping and praying that PNE can sneak into the Play Off’s this weekend.

Good luck to Alan Irvine and his team.