3 things communicators need to know in 2013
Consider this advice before you map out your communications plan for next year. It could make or break your success.
Consider this advice before you map out your communications plan for next year. It could make or break your success.
A dirty magnet is a link that promises everything, but doesn’t deliver. FAQ, are you listening?
Beyond the trend of ‘writing like you talk,’ texting and other online shorthand have diminished literacy in corporate communication.
Some of them you probably already possess, others you’ll have to work on if you hope to thrive in the PR industry in the future.
Premier Global Services consolidates email newsletters into one online magazine packed with social features, increasing readership from around 30 percent to nearly 75 percent.
Irdeto, a content management and security company, eschewed individual desks—and desktop debris—for an open environment where people actually (egad!) talk to one another.
As the online face of your company, you put a lot of time, sweat, and tears into your work. Here are four ways to keep from wearing out.
According to three of the companies that the Nielsen Norman Group named to its list of the 10 best intranets, culture trumps technology.
From gamification to Google Wallet, what to consider now for your strategy next year.
Workers spend far more time searching for information they need than they do browsing social media, according to a new white paper.
Top-ranked Chicago-area health care system enables patients to crowdsource information and talk about treatment while they’re checking out their medical records.
Whether you need apps to make meetings run more smoothly or a way to access and send files on your phone, this list has it all.
OhioHealth gets its message out through tweeting physicians, microsites and a maternity ward gig with Lifetime TV.
In this month’s IBF live broadcast, experts debated whether it’s OK to run Microsoft’s collaboration platform ‘out of the box.’
Intranet managers at some small businesses say they prefer the free content management platform often used for blogs over Microsoft’s collaboration software.