
Our agency has taken on a major public health challenge. Cardiovascular diseases pose significant health risks across Europe and Hungary, accounting for 37% of all deaths in Europe and an alarming 49% in Hungary. Despite these high mortality rates, recent research reveals that too few people undergo preventive screenings—yet early detection and timely treatment can be life-saving.

Hungarians are talking more and more about financial self-care, yet they remain hesitant to take action—this is one of the key findings of the 2023 OTP Self-Care Index (ÖI). As in previous years, we presented the latest results in collaboration with OTP Bank at a dedicated press event. Developed and managed jointly with OTP Bank experts for the past 12 years, the ÖI has become a valuable tool for gaining insights into the financial planning habits of Hungarians while also raising awareness about the importance of financial self-care.

Within the framework of our mini-campaign 25 years, 25 stories, we recall the decisive campaigns of two and a half decades of FleishmanHillard - Budapest - solutions that were not only effective, but also showed something new professionally. These include our campaign “Work cannot wait” implemented in 2017 for the OTP Health Fund.

One of the tasks of our 25 years of professional heritage is far from ordinary: a project where communication not only informed, but also re-established a link between the city and the Danube.

When employees feel they are the last to know, they start looking for the exit. In our latest study, 61 % of people thinking about changing jobs said poor internal communication was a leading factor. At the same time, only 23 % of the global workforce is engaged at work, while the productivity drag from disengagement costs a typical S&P 500 company up to US $355 million every year.

If the text is alive, it affects you, it captivates you. If it creates a world, like Árpád Göncz did in The Lord of the Rings. If you want to read it again, underline it, note down one of its masterfully striking sentences, like in Zoltán Pék's translation of Moon Palace (Paul Auster), for example. Or if it is so brilliant that it surpasses even the original, like Mici Mackó by Karinthy.