Who We Are

CharityComms was founded by a combination of sector specialists and charities. The organisation is run by a management team with support from a board representing some of the UK's leading charity communicators. For a list of members see our Members page.


*Management team*


Vicky Browning

Vicky became CharityComms Director in March 2010. Her role is to drive CharityComms' operations, increase membership and awareness of the organisation and help to fulfill its mission of improving communications standards and practice in the third sector.Vicky Browning

Alongside this, Vicky works as a freelance publishing consultant, and has done since 2006. She has worked for a variety of clients on projects including management consultancy, product development, market research, PR and marketing.

Before going freelance, Vicky spent sixteen years at Haymarket Publishing, working her way through the ranks from journalist to board-level publishing director. Here, she worked mainly on business-to-business titles, including Third Sector, Campaign, Horticulture Week and Revolution.

She also volunteers with Contact the Elderly, and has recently helped them to set up a local group in Brent.

Emma Wickenden

Emma_Wickenden_copy.jpgEmma joined CharityComms as Coordinator, in January 2008, to help develop, run and promote CharityComms services.

Before this she was Communications Assistant at the Voluntary Action Media Unit (VAMU), a project which aimed to improve the relationship between charities and the media. At VAMU Emma helped to organise, develop and promote activities such as: Snapshots - a networking event introducing charity workers to journalists; VolunteerGenie - a website designed to support charities interested in using the media to recruit volunteers, and askCHARITY.org.uk - an online charity contacts book for journalists.Emma also contributed to the Clever Communications book published by VAMU, and ran a series of events for international charities to help them in their work with the media.

Previous to this Emma worked for a media monitoring agency in Scotland, where she held positions in media research and parliamentary monitoring. During this time Emma volunteered at the press offices of the Scottish Green Party and National Trust for Scotland. Emma currently volunteers for a small international charity called World In Need, where she provides advice and support on anything from media relations to recruitment.

Emma graduated from Edinburgh’s Napier University with a First-Class Honours degree in journalism and was the first in her school to have her undergraduate research published in an international, scholarly journal- Journalism Studies.



style="WIDTH:Lally Pearson

Lally joined CharityComms as Membership Officer in December 2008. Her role is to develop and manage the CharityComms membership scheme.

Before this Lally worked as Marketing and Membership Co-ordinator at photojournalism organisation, Foto8. She has also worked freelance on research projects for nfpSynergy, including writing chapters for a report titled ‘Sending out an SMS, the potential of mobile phones and text messaging for charities and non-profit organisations’.

Lally is a graduate from the Univesity of Sussex, where she studied American history, sociology and literature. A year of her degree was spent at the University of California, Berkeley.

Lally works part-time at CharityComms (Monday – Wednesday), and the rest of her time is spent working as a yoga teacher.
 

*Board members*

 

Joe Saxton

joe_saxton.jpgJoe is chair and founder of CharityComms. He has worked with a team of people to take CharityComms from a gleam in a few people’s eyes in 2005 to delivering the website, seminars and range of other activities that CharityComms is now making happen.

In his day job Joe is driver of ideas and co-founder of a specialist research consultancy for not for profit organisations. Over 45 out of the top 50 charities are its clients. Joe has authored reports on volunteering, impact evaluation, mission & visions, branding and socio-economic change.

He is chair of the Institute of Fundraising as well as the student environment and development campaign group People & Planet.

In 2006 he was named by public affairs agency AS Biss one of ten 'Stars of tomorrow' in politics for the next ten years, and one of only two people from the charity sector. In 2005, 2006 and 2007 he was voted the most influential person on UK fundraising. In 2003 the Guardian named him as one of the 100 most influential people on social policy.

 

Judith BarnardJBarnard4.jpg

Judith’s recent achievements include the renaming and rebranding of Leonard Cheshire Disability,where she was Communications & Campaigns Director and a member of their executive board. She also launched the award-winning Creature Discomforts campaign, which aimed to change the way people see disability. See the first and second series at www.CreatureDiscomforts.org.

Previously Judith was the Director of Policy & Public Affairs at the National Autistic Society and continues to champion this cause through her trusteeship of TreeHouse, the national charity for autism education. She is also a governor of a secondary special needs school, Garratt Park, in Wandsworth.

Prior to joining the voluntary sector Judith worked in local government communications in London, Cambridgeshire and Surrey.

In the little remaining spare time she has Judith enjoys reading novels, listening to opera (particularly Wagner) and unwinds by watching thrillers and soaps on TV. She also dotes on her gorgeous cat Big Mog - as well as her partner Jeremy!

 

 

Carolan Davidge

carolandavidge2.jpg
Carolan Davidge is Director of Brand and PR at Cancer Research UK, the world’s leading charity dedicated to cancer research. She has led award-winning PR campaigns, including helping to make Britain smokefree in public places. In her current role she is responsible for the charity’s press and PR activities, brand management and advertising, corporate publications and celebrity and patient liaison.

Prior to Cancer Research UK, she held a variety of senior PR roles in the voluntary and publicsectors including Chief Press Officer at the Medical Research Council, Head of PR at Macmillan Cancer Support and Head of Press at Shelter. Before PR, she worked in journalism and edited the Adviser magazine, now published by the Citizens Advice service. Her other professional interests include Board membership of the Science Media Centre.

The 2008 PR Week Power Book named her one of the most influential people in PR.



Rob Dyson

Rob_Dyson_2.jpgA graduate of the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies in 1999, Rob has spent over seven years in the third sector; the last five in public relations.

During his time as a public relations officer at disability charity Scope, he secured key spots on BBC Radio 4's Today programme and ghost-wrote comment pieces around the controversial US ‘AshleyX’ human rights debate.

He also managed the PR re-launch of 'Disability Now' magazine via a full page interview with the new editor in The Independent, and DN's first and only appearance in 'Heat'.

Through Scope, he has held lectures for undergraduate journalism students on depicting disability in the media, and in May 2007 founded the ‘Third Sector PR and Communications network’ on social networking site Facebook. The group allows public relations officers, journalists, fundraisers and other media agencies to network, has been mentioned in PR Week, and was a partner of Charity Communications conference 08.


Penelope Gibbs

Penelope GibbsPenelope Gibbs is Director of a Prison Reform Trust campaign to reduce the number of children and young people in custody. This five year project is funded by the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund.

Before joining the Prison Reform Trust, Penelope was Director of the Voluntary Action Media Unit, a lottery funded project which aimed to improve the relationship between charities and the media.

Since VAMU started in January 2005, the team produced research on the relationship between the two sectors; set up www.askcharity.org.uka research resource for journalists; encouraged charity personnel to experience media life though Media Connections 2006 and attempted to engage the interest of media students in charities.

Penelope started her career in advertising as a "suit", shuttling between clients and creatives. She joined BBC Radio in 1990 to produce programmes including Woman's Hour, the Learning Curve and Excess Baggage. More recently in the BBC she worked for the Central Strategy Unit researching how the Corporation meets the needs of its Disabled Audiences.

 

John Grounds

John Grounds is Director of Child Protection Policy for the NSPCC.John_Grounds_2.jpg

John's career has included both commercial and charity roles. Prior to the NSPCC he was director of campaigns and communications at medical charity Action Medical Research. His last task at Action Research was to launch the charity's 50th anniversary year, with the help of its long-time mascot, Paddington Bear.

Past roles include responsibility for Communications at Barnardo's, five years at The Body Shop as international PR manager and a PR and campaigning role alongside Bruce Kent at the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

John is also the author of a book, London: A Living Guide.

Born in Braintree, Essex, John went to university in Cambridge and Reading before moving to London, where he lived until moving to his current home in Horsham, West Sussex, after the birth of his son, Tom in 1990.

Outside work, music is a consuming passion, as well as a love of film, art and literature and a 41-year devotion to Arsenal FC.


Betty McBride

Bety_McBride2.jpg
Betty McBride, the BHF’s Director of Policy and Communications, joined the charity in 2000. She was previously Head of Press and PR at development aid charity Voluntary Service Overseas and then Help the Aged. Before moving to the voluntary sector she was a newspaper journalist and documentary maker at BBC TV.

She leads the Press, Communications, Policy and Public Affairs teams at the BHF, promoting the work of the charity and campaigning for heart health improvements. Her team is responsible for the BHF website and its brand.

Betty chairs the 33–strong Cardio-Vascular Coalition of charities and sits on the Council of the Association of Medical Research Charities (AMRC). She chairs the Animals in Research Group of the AMRC.



Ben Matthews
Vicky Browning
Ben is the founder of Bright One, a volunteer-run communications agency for the third sector. Bright One aims to deliver high quality communications for charities, social enterprises and not-for-profit organisations by developing the comms experience and expertise of volunteers through training and support from industry professionals.

Ben currently works at 33 Digital, an international digital PR and marketing agency. Ben’s expertise lies in using online and social communications to provide visible and measurable value to clients.

Ben is also a founding member of Twestival, a series of fundraising events using the social network Twitter, which has raised over $1.1 million in a little over a year.