5 questions to ask when taking the temperature of your corporate comms
A little self-assessment can do a world of good, especially when executive pressure to show results is building.
A little self-assessment can do a world of good, especially when executive pressure to show results is building.
This week’s featured employment listings highlight agency work and offer several positions at the world’s largest PR firm, Edelman.
Carly Fiorina also announced her presidential aspirations on ‘Good Morning America’ on Monday and said she’d take questions via Periscope.
Are you wasting characters on fluff or, worse, defaulting to a basic job title—one that might not align with current industry nomenclature? Follow these tips to stand out from the crowd.
What happens within the walls of an office or break room doesn’t always stay there. Here’s how PR and marketing pros can use that transparency to a company’s advantage.
The primary decision is whether to work with an in-house employee or outsource the duties to an agency or specialist. That’s just the start, though. Read on.
This week’s featured position gives one communications pro the opportunity to work with the Global Fund for Women.
New PR and marketing pros can prepare themselves for a job opportunity with the following ideas.
The desired collaboration can take a back seat to staffers’ loss of focus and even the spread of colds and other diseases. There are ways to handle this setup properly, though.
The mobile dating app not only can help you achieve your romantic goals, but it can provide an example of what a great content experience should look like for your employees.
One year removed from his newsroom days, the author shares tips for other reporters and editors making the transition ‘to the dark side.’
What is small, innocent-looking, and causes you to wake up at 3 a.m. screaming? Answer: Their it is! I mean, they’re it is! I mean, there it is! Out, damned typo! Will these proofs ne’er be clean?
MSNBC and NowThis are teaming up on morning and late-day programs with breaking and quirky stories intended to elicit online conversation and buzz. Can this model work for brands?
Experts often tell us we should “break all the rules.” But how do we do this wisely? How far can we go? Here’s timely marketing advice for would-be social-media rule-flouters.
The male old-boy network is alive, well, and not only surviving, but thriving in PR’s upper management ranks, according to this salary survey. PR owner Gini Dietrich has started to do something about it.