The finest ‘Occupy Wall Street’ posters we’ve seen
Hashtags, Internet memes, and good ol’ fashion posters have helped protesters draw attention to their presence on Wall Street this week.
Hashtags, Internet memes, and good ol’ fashion posters have helped protesters draw attention to their presence on Wall Street this week.
The U.S. Postal Service has launched a campaign encouraging people to mail stuff, but the organization insists it’s not made up of Luddites.
Don’t let ‘hover hand’ ruin your snapshots anymore. Plus, bloggers are writers; News Corp. hacks an ad agency; Bank of America doesn’t believe in the freedom of debit cards; and how do you handle accidentally confusing someone for being pregnant?
Officials from 27 European nations plan to investigate the social network after changes it made last month.
Follow this 6-step protocol to maximize your online branding and networking efforts.
Forget how much Klout you have. We’re more concerned with our online Kred. Plus, there’s Hearsay one new tool might help you find more trusted news. That, and more.
This delightful Web video for Carlsberg beer has notched more than 2.5 million views on YouTube—and it’s barely a week old.
Amazon reviews are shaping our views of great literature; the great literature in ‘The Simpsons’; the plight of the desperate writer’s wife, and more.
A journalist turned crisis communication expert shares his advice for helping the farm responsible for the outbreak handle the media onslaught.
Dunkin’ Donuts and CareerBuilder ranked the top 15 professions that most need coffee. PR is No. 2; writer/editor is No. 4.
It was International Coffee Day this week, and a story about PR professional’s love of java ranked among the most-popular stories on the site. Find out what else made it.
I see you really going places.
Quite a bit, as this public relations professional explains. And you know what? Reading this story could help you expense the cost of the movie ticket this weekend. Just sayin’.
Nearly half have connected with customers via social media compared with 28 percent of large companies. I believe that’s David, one; Goliath, zero.
A story in The Los Angeles Times details the increase in hiring of social media workers.