British exec: Women are less ‘ambitious’ than men in business
Glencore Chairman Simon Murray’s remarks may have sparked the quickest scandal to threaten a new top executive. Read his lame half-apology.
Glencore Chairman Simon Murray’s remarks may have sparked the quickest scandal to threaten a new top executive. Read his lame half-apology.
This week Facebook launched its Groupon killer. Share your thoughts with PR Daily LinkedIn. Your comment might be featured in a follow-up post!
Another bout of bad press for the state, which is experiencing a budget crisis. Good thing it has such a deep bench of PR talent.
Hub Schlafly Jr. created the device in the 1950s to help soap opera actors remember their lines.
The award-winning film critic has entered the contest since 2006. See which caption landed him the prize.
Don’t worry, Jills—you can apply, too.
Remember the seminal half-hour comedy from the early ’90s? Turns out Zack Morris, Screech, Kelly, and the gang knew a thing or two about PR, sort of.
That figure represents a 29 percent increase from the average pay in 2009, according to a new study. Are you making that much?
Do your colleagues think managing the company’s Twitter feed and Facebook page is a great job? If only they knew. A social media pro explains what the job is really like.
The social network unveils a useful addition that can benefit users and groups; it rolls out the highly anticipated Groupon competitor, and faces down a $1 lawsuit.
You can leave the clown car at home, but do take a lesson from P.T. Barnum when it comes to generating buzz about the next great _____ (fill in the blank).
The elusive Apple founder didn’t hold a press conference or issue a news release, instead he responded to an email—in typical Jobs fashion.
The tool from Advertising Age is intended for advertising firms, but it can work for PR companies, too.
Gamers are miffed that Sony has failed to rebuild its PlayStation Network after an outage last week. See how Sony has responded—and what its competitor is doing in the meantime.
An amusing yet useful website will translate jargon into plain English. Going forward, of course.