Social media risks: What you should know
What are the liabilities governing blogs and other social media vehicles? Does the risk mean you should prohibit blogging by corporate officers?
What are the liabilities governing blogs and other social media vehicles? Does the risk mean you should prohibit blogging by corporate officers?
Facebook CEO reassures users; the president’s address rouses the economy; why overpaid CEOs and bankrupt companies don’t mix; an Oscar-worthy line.
Employers, candidates in nonprofit sector are holding their breath.
Detroit asks nicely for more cash; British bankers apologize (sort of) to Parliament; and the winner for the first annual Theodore C. Sorensen Speechwriting Award.
Bloggers blame Tribune Co. owner, Sam Zell, for the company’s bankruptcy. Is this the death knell for newspapers?
The once little-used site now draws one million page views a year.
There’s arguably no industry under more pressure to calm employee fears today than banks.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Office of Emergency Services credits its crisis plan for a successful response to a fatal commuter train crash.
Giuliani’s speechwriter/biographer stays out of the limelight, Google launches video site for corporate communications, Stanford gets new exec comms chief, and tips on adding effective pauses to speeches.
Money, mortgages and kids account for the age difference between political speechwriters and executive communicators.
Growth of internal social networks creates a management tug-of-war
Here are three ways to start RSS feeds on your intranet
Write to impress, not inform, says B.S. Reiter, the nom de plume of a recovering corporate editor.
The Times of London put Microsoft’s PR rep Oona Rokyta on her heels with a story that had more legs than legitimacy. Could you have handled the situation better?
Author and management guru Bob Prosen wrote a book in which he spent a great deal of time imploring managers to communicate. But he never once mentioned corporate communicators. Why?