
On May 15, 2025, FleishmanHillard Budapest played a pivotalrole in organizing a high-impact press briefing for Invest Hong Kong (InvestHK),demonstrating the agency’s dynamic capabilities in international investmentpromotion and media relations.

One of the most important yet often underestimated keys to successful corporate communication is insight. But what exactly does this term mean, and how can it make our communication relevant, credible and motivating for the target audience?

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.

The purpose of tenders is to support the selection of the right partner based on a validated professional background, competencies, and limited trial tasks. However, current practice often looks different: clients request complete strategies, detailed action plans, and creative solutions without remuneration, with tight deadlines and incomplete briefs. This is not only detrimental to agencies, but also impairs the quality of clients' decisions, ultimately hindering the selection of the most suitable agency partner. This problem is not unique to Hungary; it has been discussed internationally for years.

2026 is a watershed moment for corporate communications: reputation has never been more valuable, trust has never been more fragile, and artificial intelligence has never had such a profound impact on what information consumers and decision-makers see first. In this complex environment, PR is no longer just a complementary tactic—it is a strategic business function that directly impacts growth, risk management, and long-term competitiveness.