The John Thomson Report

Rumours of my retirement have been greatly exaggerated.

John Thomson

[downloads category="current-issue" columns="1" excerpt="no"]

Story and photo by Deborah Greaves

john-thompson-okanagan-business“Rumours of my retirement have been greatly exaggerated,” says long-time business communicator John Thomson.

Thomson loves his work, and his print-media documentation of the comings, goings and achievements of Okanagan business and industry is just a portion of what he does. He’s known throughout the Okanagan Valley for his ongoing and consistent quest to promote the region as a great place to live and do business.

John Thomson’s career as a business writer began here in this publication, on the pages of Okanagan Business magazine. He arrived in Kelowna in 1989, not as a journalist, but as a public relations representative for B.C. Tree Fruits and Sun-Rype. Though he’d been in public relations and advertising for years, he’d long wanted to write. He started with Paul Byrne in the early days of the magazine as a business columnist, then as editor of Okanagan Business.

Later, Thomson began writing “The Thomson Report” for the Kelowna Daily Courier, commencing a lengthy and positive relationship with the Okanagan business community that became part of the fabric of the Valley. Included in the tantalizing weekly dialogue was a column segment called “Rumours and Things.”

“Ironically, I built up trust with those rumours,” Thomson says. “In reality, those rumours were hints of activities or events to come that were just a step away from official announcement. People could trust me to wait until the right time to let the community know.”

A young-at-heart 70, Thomson has plenty of energy and is anticipating new projects.

He manages the John Thomson Group, the Media Marketing Club, and John Thomson Presents, which started in 1995 and organizes eight events a year with high-profile guest speakers. The Media Marketing Club, now 229 strong, hosts regular working luncheons with guests from the fields of marketing, and P.R., and costs just $35 per year to join. Another enterprise is an Executive Round Table, a once-a-month breakfast group of 16 execs who enjoy in-depth discussions with specially invited guests.

“I’ve always worked at taking the positive approach,” Thomson says. “I’ve found the positives even in the negative issues and situations. There are plenty of ups and downs in business as in life, and you have to be prepared always for that challenge. There is nothing in this world of ours today that will not change.”

Thomson thoroughly enjoys mentoring and looks forward to adding more business-related projects to his slate. Not only are the rumours of his retirement exaggerated, he says, but the R-word is not in his vocabulary.

“I plan to keep right on going,” John Thomson says. “Why stop working when you enjoy yourself as much as I do?”

Deborah Greaves is our Westside contributing editor.

Read more of the original stories celebrated in our 30th-anniversary issue.

Kelowna recreation opens registration for Winter programs

Kelowna recreation opens registration for Winter programs

Get out and get active this winter! The City of Kelowna 2019 Winter Activity & Program Guide is full with fitness, art and music classes, sports leagues, and a variety of activities for all ages and abilities at over 25 locations across Kelowna. From fitness and...

read more
Digital media menace

Digital media menace

Is screen time affecting children’s mental and physical well-being? Does technology use impact elementary, middle and high school students differently? These questions are behind an extensive research project led by two UBCO professors. 

read more
Cellar Talk: Winter 2018

Cellar Talk: Winter 2018

As seen in [downloads ids="156027" columns="1"][downloads category="bc-wine-awards" columns="1" number="1"] Judgement of BC Okanagan winemakers were put to the test this fall as 12 BC wines faced-off against 12 global benchmarks. Taking top...

read more
Beautiful blends

Beautiful blends

Even a blend of one or two percent can make a significant difference in wine, says sommelier Mike Lee.

read more

Dané & Julie Le Roux

Dané & Julie Le Roux

Dané le Roux sits in bed and for a moment the then 12-year-old thinks before she picks up her ballpoint pen and notebook. After filling three pages of whatever comes to mind, she hands the notebook to her mirror image sister. Julie scans through the words. “Well, this is good…”

Lori Mairs

Lori Mairs

Lori Mairs is an Okanagan artist who truly embraces the saying “go big or go home.” She spent the first 24 years of her adult life in service to people with developmental disabilities. But one snowy night near Christmas, at exactly midnight, she quit her job. After some discussion with her great aunt…