In Chicago, the sky is crying for Oprah’s final show (and so are small businesses)
The queen of talk is trending on social media today as her farewell episode airs. Will it leave a void for small businesses seeking national exposure?
The queen of talk is trending on social media today as her farewell episode airs. Will it leave a void for small businesses seeking national exposure?
Mistakes happen to everyone, but when you make them in an online network, you might never live them down.
In an industry where pleasing the client is key, do yourself a favor and be a little less me-me-me. Here are some tips for doing just that.
Are you exposing too much of yourself online? A former FBI agent explains how to cover up a little to showcase your best features.
His statements have kicked up a little controversy in the industry, prompting one blogger to issue a post encouraging everyone to hire a social media expert.
The page belonged to employees of the German-based automaker; they were criticizing the company’s management, describing the CEO as ‘head of a pack of liars.’
Rob Lowe’s character on the NBC show ‘Parks and Recreation’ loves the word ‘literally’ as this video shows. Question is: How many times does he correctly use it?
What a bunch of potty mouths. The company behind this study explains what it means for businesses.
He said the world would end in 1994. He made the same prediction last week. Now, he’s back at it—and the news media are still covering him. Who’s crazy now?
You can’t appreciate the epic breach until you’ve seen this fascinating timeline of the ‘most significant digital theft in history.’
A high school student in Kansas took a rather nontraditional approach to this staid speech, and it’s grabbed hundreds of thousands of viewers on YouTube.
It’s like a secret society of PR professionals—except it’s not a secret.
Canon has said it will register .canon for its Web presence. You could do the same for your brand—but it will cost you, and the application deadline is coming up soon.
But it’s still valued at roughly $8 billion—or about 22 times its 2011 revenue. Sound like a new bubble to anyone else?
Ah, to be a fly on the wall at this meeting of the Ruling Class. Plus, what social media looked like in the ’90s, the Rapture 2.0, and much more.