Igor Mintusov

Igor Mintusov (born 1958) is a Russian political consultant, public relations manager and professional manager of election campaigns. Mintusov is Chairman of the Board of directors of Niccolo M, a public relations company which he established in 1992[1] with business partner Yekaterina Yegorova.[2]

Throughout twenty years of work, Mintusov has supervised over one hundred Russian and foreign election campaigns. He took a part in the preparation for the Russian parliamentary elections in 1993, 1995, 1999, 2003, 2007 and the presidential elections in 1991, 1996, 2000 and 2004. He has worked in parliamentary elections in Poland (1997), Ukraine (2002, 2003, 2007), Mongolia (2004, 2008), USA congressional elections in Florida and Connecticut (1998), parliamentary elections in Latvia (1998), Slovakia (2002), presidential elections in Mongolia (2001, 2005), Nicaragua (2001), Lithuania (2002).

During the Russian presidential election in 1996 he was a personal image consultant to the then President of the Russian Federation, Boris Yeltsin.[3] Mintusov was the first in Russia to use applied qualitative sociological methods in marketing and political studies.[4]

Mintusov served as advisor on the Fair Russia merger.[5]

Education

Publications

Books

Articles

Non-political projects

Support to the campaign the CENTRAL bank of the RUSSIAN federation on the ruble denomination (1998), the settlement of the conflict of the French bank "Credit Agricole" and "National reserve bank" (2003), promotion of the Bulgarian company "BRK cosmetics", promotion of the image of the Republic of Cyprus, development of concepts for promoting the brand of the Saratov, Samara, and Tver regions etc.

Membership of associations

A member of the:

Member of the jury of IABC's biggest international competition on public relations of Gold Quill Awards

References

  1. Astrid Wendlandt, "Political Group Looks To 'The Prince' for Inspiration", Moscow Times, 18 March 1997.
  2. Colton, Timothy J., & Michael McFaul (2003), Popular Choice and Managed Democracy: the Russian elections of 1999 and 2000, Brookings Institution Press, p. 33. ISBN 0-8157-1535-8.
  3. Alessandra Stanley, "THE RUSSIAN VOTE: ELECTION EVE; From Yeltsin, A Reminder Of Stalin And Terror", The New York Times, 16 June 1996.
  4. Donovan, John C. (1993), People, Power, and Politics: an introduction to political science, Rowman & Littlefield, p. 83. ISBN 0-8226-3025-7.
  5. Henry Meyer, "Putin to hang on to power, analysts say", Seattle Times, 3 November 2006.
  6. Cited: McFaul, Michael (2002), Russia's Unfinished Revolution: political change from Gorbachev to Putin, Cornell University Press, p. 66. ISBN 0-8014-8814-1.
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