8 annoying phrases in PR pitches
On her personal blog, an assistant editor at Mashable explained what’s bugging her about your pitches. How many of these phrases do you use?
On her personal blog, an assistant editor at Mashable explained what’s bugging her about your pitches. How many of these phrases do you use?
A PR Daily contributor, who slammed a PR pro for a lousy email pitch, highlights one that worked well, including lessons that you can apply to your job.
In a blog post, the CEO of Radian6 explained what the deal means for customers of the social media monitoring company.
Some good news for PR pros: The Harris Interactive report says sentiment toward consumer brand is steadily improving.
GE’s public affairs Twitter account tweeted journalists to redirect the discussion. Spoiler alert: This doesn’t end well for GE.
Justin Bieber dominates this list, but there are a couple of surprises. (Like ‘Charlie bit my finger—again.’ Come on! That’s adorable.)
Guess what’s sweeping the tech media? That’s right; Apple may delay the iPhone 5. Please. Apple dangles this bait again and again—and each time the media bites.
A public relations professional wonders if his peers should hold themselves to a higher standard than other bloggers.
The show’s fifth season won’t premiere until 2012; AMC blamed the delay on ‘non-cast negotiations.’ Maybe. Or maybe it’s due to one of these five reasons.
After a negative CNN report, one company has pulled the PR equivalent of taking its ball and going home. Smart move—or will it backfire?
Facebook made the list—but it’s at the bottom. Who beat the behemoth?
The title of the brand may suggest masculine city dwellers, but suburban soccer moms can still apply—especially if they speak Spanish.
“The Role of Social Media in Engaging Patients, Employees and the Media,” will reveal case studies and best practices that may change forever the way you do PR and marketing.
A column in the Ottawa Citizen allays the claim that Canada’s May 2 election is the ‘social media election.’
Marketers have reduced the volume of foodstuffs in numerous grocery store items, shrunk the packaging, and raised the price. Here are four examples.