Google slams the door on ‘low-quality sites’: What does it mean?
The change presumably affects so-called content farms, but it’s also a reminder of how Google ranks press releases.
The change presumably affects so-called content farms, but it’s also a reminder of how Google ranks press releases.
The organization sent e-mails to its members with fake (but real-looking) news stories about seniors being forced from their homes. Yeah. The story gets worse.
We have the pictures to prove it.
We’d like you to make a date with PR Daily—we’re only a mouse click away.
Is that because the retailer “took pains to vet the new logo,” or simply because no one cares?
Women hold only 25 percent of all computing-related positions—but they account for fewer failures than average in the tech industry.
Is Twitter setting a dangerous precedent of PR professionals’ using passive aggression to thwart the media?
A former female employee of the company alleges ‘systemic, company-wide discrimination against its female PR employees in the U.S.’
There’s something very gratifying about tickling your olfactory senses with rich, titillating vanilla bean latte and buttercream incense. Imagine getting paid to wake up to a whole factory of it each day.
Studies can prove an effective way to win coverage in print and online, but first you need to know what the media—and consumers—want to read about and discuss.
The media isn’t dead yet.
Some advice that will quickly bring a media relations pro up to speed before he or she meets with a reporter.
Scott Walker revealed intimate details to a prank caller pretending to be a billionaire Tea Party supporter. How did Walker respond—and is it enough?
For instance, the short video says that 71 percent of U.S. Web users are on Facebook.
Remember the viral videos featuring a Coke machine that gives out prizes (flowers, pizzas, free soda, etc.)? Well, the company has released a follow up called “Happiness Truck.”