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Company Name:
Charlotte Tolhurst Photographer
Website:
www.charlottetolhurst.com
Industry Sectors:
Freelance photographer
SEE Listing Publication Date:
16 December 2009

SEE Questionnaire Summary

Business Introduction

Description of business

I am a freelance photographer who will take on any commissions. However I specialise in food, people and event photography in particular.

As a freelance photographer, I bring with me many years of industry experience. Years which have not only honed my artistic skills, but also given me an in-depth knowledge of the technical and production sides of the profession.

I enjoy being client focused and meeting a brief as much as contributing my own passion and creative ideas to a project. I have an easygoing though professional approach and will always strive for the best possible results.

Business vision

To be one of the top food photographers in the UK.

Business aims

To provide my clients with consistently excellent, creative and technical imagery.

Business philosophies and beliefs

To offer a service which delivers value for money and meets and exceeds the needs of my clients.

Business Values

Professionalism, excellence, integrity, honesty, openness, efficiency, cooperation.

Business mission

To provide my clients with consistently excellent, creative and technical imagery.

Business Information

Date established:
December 2006
Contact details
Charlotte Tolhurst Director charlotte@charlottetolhurst.com 07960613638
Business structure
Sole Trader
Address of company headquarters
2/24 Sutherland Street London SW1V 4LA
Countries of operations
UK
Countries where goods and/or services are sold
UK
Size of workforce
1
Financial year
1 April - 31 March
Market capitalisation
n/a
Turnover (last financial year)
£45,000
Profit (last financial year)
£35,000
Details of owners
n/a
Directors' other business interests
none

Goods and Services

I specialise in food photography as this allows me to combine my two great passions: delicious food and the creation of beautiful imagery.

I work to commissions from magazines, PR companies and directly for clients. This work ranges from creative images of prepared recipes to more technical ones of packaging and products.

I am happy to discuss work of any photographic nature as I also do portraits, events and interiors.

Business Responses

Jump to:

Marketplace Ethics

Has your company, or a representative association, pushed for protection against imports from developing countries?

Question developed with ActionAid

Rationale for question

International trade and investment can have a strong positive impact on developing nations. It can promote economic benefits such as employment and wealth creation, provide goods and services otherwise unavailable and encourage enterprise, innovation and creativity.

Business has the ability to positively use the tools of trade to increase wealth in developing countries. Alternatively, it can exacerbate poverty and increase vulnerability through the negative use of trade muscle. A company may act independently, through its trade associations, or in conjunction with its home government or a trading bloc. Certain bodies can exert undue influence when lobbying in the development of particular rules governing major international trade treaties which allow for more protectionist measures, for example in agricultural or industrial production or in professional services. In international negotiations, developing countries generally lack the negotiating capacity of wealthier ones.

Lobbying against imports by businesses in the industrial countries prevents people from developing countries gaining access to markets. However, it is generally not the small, domestic businesses that are pushing for these policies or particularly stand to benefit from them. In limited situations and in certain industry sectors, some forms of protectionist lobbying may be a reasonable response to particular market conditions or to environmental imperatives.

Conversely, aggressive corporate lobbying to open up developing countries' economies, particularly in sensitive sectors such as retail, utilities and finance, can be as damaging as import protectionism. Greater market liberalisation can prevent developing countries from developing, promoting and protecting fragile, new industries. Protectionism and trade policy are controversial and complex subjects. There are no easy answers.

Defining Terms

'Developing countries' are defined by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) as 'low- and middle-income countries in which most people have a lower standard of living with access to fewer goods and services than do most people in high-income countries'.

'Protection' is defined as regulations designed to restrict and/or discourage imports. Such policies include tariffs on imported goods to increase the price of foreign competitor goods; quotas to prevent the influx of certain goods into the market; and subsidies to protect existing businesses in the face of industry change.

Primary and Secondary answer requirements

ANSWERING YES

Companies must:

  1. state the industry, business sector or trade commodity at issue;
  2. explain why they, or any organisations acting on their behalf, have lobbied for protection, such as tariffs or quotas on imports; and
  3. detail the effects of the lobbying.

ANSWERING NO

Companies may:

  1. state their business sector; and
  2. state any efforts to grow trade to the benefit of developing countries.

DON'T KNOW is not a permissible answer to this question.


NOT APPLICABLE is not a permissible answer to this question.


NO ANSWER YET is only permissible under extraordinary circumstances and then for only a limited period.

NO

As my business sector is photography and I do not trade with developing countries or their goods, I have not pushed for protection against imports from developing countries nor do I intend to do so in future.

Submit a comment and/or challenge the accuracy of this information:

(1 = v poor, 2 = poor, 3 = ok, 4 = good, 5 = v good)

If you believe the information provided in this answer is inaccurate, misleading or incomplete, please use this form to say so and an investigation will be initiated. You will need to tick the box below and provide an email address. Your challenge will be sent directly to SEE Ltd. Your email address will not be passed on or made known to the company without your permission.

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Yes No Don't know No answer yet Not applicable