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She is best known in the UK as the face of the Scottish Widows advertising campaign from 1986 to 1995 when she was replaced by Amanda Lamb. [3] She later took on the name Deborah Moore. She has twice made appearances in James Bond –related productions.
In 1994, she took over the role of the "Scottish Widow" from Deborah Moore in a long-running series of advertisements for the investment company, Scottish Widows Fund and Life Assurance Society. [2] David Bailey once asked Lamb to glide across the screen wearing roller skates in a scene which never made the final cut. Lamb's final advert and ...
Scottish Widows is a life insurance and pensions company located in Edinburgh, Scotland, and is a subsidiary of Lloyds Banking Group. Its product range includes life assurance and pensions . The company has been providing financial services to the UK market since 1815.
Tom Cruise in ‘Collateral’, ‘Mission: Impossible: Dead Reckoning’ and ‘Tropic Thunder’ (iStock/Paramount)
Nothing is certain but death and taxes, and where those two intersect -- wills and the estates people leave behind when they pass -- there's supposed to be some certainty as well.
It does indeed look like advertising - I deleted the section "The Brand" which was content-free, and badly written anyway. Some of the other claims - "won numerous awards..." - and so on are pretty vacuous. Also, every online reference is an address on the company's own website.
"The woman who made up her mind" was a political advertisement opposing Scottish independence from the United Kingdom, created by Better Together, the main group opposing independence. The advert aired on Scottish television and ran online during the 2014 referendum campaign .
Benefits realization management (BRM), also benefits management, benefits realisation or project benefits management, is a project management methodology, often visual, addressing how time and resources are invested into making desirable changes.