7 speechwriting techniques to grab audiences—and call them to action
A speechwriting pro offers tips to open and close with: Look to the Cowardly Lion and Malcolm X.
A speechwriting pro offers tips to open and close with: Look to the Cowardly Lion and Malcolm X.
With the C-suite’s blessing, Concur Technologies relies on microblogs and other social media, along with audio/video tools, to reach its far-flung staff in real time.
The Balsams hotel in New Hampshire lets online observers see what a stay is like through text posts and videos from ‘Inn-Bedded’ guests.
Ragan founder’s journey from typist to communicator offers lessons for us all.
Twitter, Facebook, and text messaging offer conduits for donations, as well as providing an online forum for concerned people everywhere.
Are you a storyteller or a reporter? Witty or buttoned up? Doesn’t matter—as long as you connect with your audience.
The Facebook-like platform called The Hub turns global co-workers into true colleagues, sharing professional information and personal interests.
Intranet Benchmarking Forum holds contest to find the most aesthetically pleasing internal sites.
At a Ragan conference, Wells Fargo VP offered techniques for assuaging critics and garnering fans and followers. First and foremost: Listen.
Here’s a novel idea: Start with the truth, and avoid four banal, annoying phrases.
Don’t let mundane or meandering quotations spoil your story—or your publication.
A key first step, the report says, is determining your social media maturity level; there will be a quiz.
Start with the consumer’s needs when you’re designing for hand-held devices.
Cutting through the employee profile to find more C.R.A.P.
The North Carolina-based software firm is the Great Place to Work Institute’s crème-de-la-crème two years running; communication key to its ongoing success.