Partner Article
Foundry is the natural choice for nutrition brand
Manchester agency, The Foundry, has been selected to develop an educational website for Higher Nature, one of the country’s leading, independent, health supplement brands. A British owned business, Higher Nature provides unique, ethical and effective nutritional supplements. Using active ingredients at levels dictated by scientific evidence for safety and efficacy, the Company aims to make a significant contribution to its customers’ health and wellbeing and strives to be pioneers in nutrition solutions. In 2012, Higher Nature approached the Foundry to help them build on the success of their current website – www.nutripeople.com - a free online resource offering nutrition advice to consumers, trade and practitioners. Working as an independent health guide, the site allows people to search for information about health conditions and nutrients, seeking professional advice where necessary. The new, educational website, Higher Nature Academy, due to launch in June 2013, will be supported by a panel of expert nutritionists and offers a range of education and advice on health matters including CPD training modules. All with the aim of nurturing nutritional knowledge at any level. The Foundry’s Kevin Murphy said, “We’re really thrilled to be working with this highly respected nutrition brand and have some exciting plans afoot to help grow Higher Nature online”. For more information please contact Kate Williams on 0161 8391986 or kate@smokinggunpr.co.uk
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Ben Ormsby .
Zero per cent - but maximum brand exposure
We don’t talk about money stress enough
A year of resilience, growth and collaboration
Apprenticeships: Lower standards risk safety
Keeping it reel: Creating video in an authenticity era
Budget: Creating a more vibrant market economy
Celebrating excellence and community support
The value of nurturing homegrown innovation
A dynamic, fair and innovative economy
Navigating the property investment market
Have stock markets peaked? Tune out the noise
Will the Employment Rights Bill cost too much?