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Ego is a creative agency based within the grounds of Elvetham Hotel, Hartley Wintney, North Hampshire, just 40 minutes from London, 35 minutes from Southampton and with easy access to... Well, the whole world, (if you take into account the proximately to Heathrow and Gatwick).
Our services cover every aspect of design and communications, distilled into four service channels, Brand Building, Digital Marketing, Internal Communications and Licensing.
Feel free to browse the site, take a look at some of our work, read some of our recent news or laugh at our witty writing style.
Latest News
Social Media and Employees - a ticking time bomb or a fantastic opportunity?
A hot topic of conversation at the moment appears to be whether companies should either implement an internal social media policy or tweak their external stance for internal usage. Only last week two separate financial organisations asked me to help them with discussions on this issue but both with very different starting positions. So, is getting social media for your staff a great opportunity or an accident waiting to happen?
Read more...Is the annual sales conference dead or does it still have a place?
In times of cost-cutting and tough external market conditions, internal communications budgets are often one of the first to come under the spotlight for cuts. The annual sales/leadership conference is often costly to run and the outcomes potentially ephemeral at best. So is this a fair approach to take or should all heads of internal comms be fighting to keep the annual conference and indeed to grow it into something that adds tangible value and enhances the overall internal plan and ultimately bottom line profit?
Read more...If some of your staff can't access email or intranet, how do you keep them engaged?
A recent client visit sparked off a great debate around how you can engage employees who don't have online access. Whilst this might seem like a minor issue, for some organisations who have multiple branch sites or where they use third party processing centres, this is a real problem and one which is often put on the 'too difficult' pile and therefore not given the full attention it deserves.
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