Does the smiley face have a place in the PR workplace?
Emoticons have become commonplace in our daily correspondence, even creeping into business communications. Not everyone’s happy about it. 🙁
Emoticons have become commonplace in our daily correspondence, even creeping into business communications. Not everyone’s happy about it. 🙁
Authority figures demanded 18-year-old Emma Sullivan say she’s sorry for tweeting negatively about Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback. A social media firestorm ensued and now Brownback is the one saying he’s sorry.
For the first time, the Oxford English Dictionaries in the U.S. and U.K. chose the same word—phrase, really—for its annual honor. Hint: It has to do with belt-tightening.
Your company’s general counsel isn’t the enemy. Here are tips for working with the lawyers instead of against them.
From a clever news gathering tool to a new bookmarking site for images, these are the social media platforms you can’t miss.
Reporters and editors may change careers, but they forever retain the hard-earned skills learned in a newsroom. And that’s good for PR firms.
Want people to share your video? Make them 15 seconds or less and don’t include a celebrity.
Welcome to Jack in the Box. Would you like to try our new internship?
How was your Thanksgiving? If this infographic on conglomerates is any indication, it was probably a whole lot like ours. Plus, Black Friday winners, mac ‘n cheese dumbfounds Pat Robertson, Dunder Mifflin is brought to life, and more.
Kristien Vermoesen, owner of the agency Finn, said marketers are thinking like PR professionals.
‘The events of the past week have shaken us,’ Syracuse Chancellor Nancy Cantor says in the wake of new evidence against longtime assistant basketball coach Bernie Fine.
Major media outlets use tweets primarily to broadcast their stories, and many journalists are no different, a study says. But you can still connect with and pitch to them through Twitter.
A new year is almost upon us. Is your company as prepared as it should be?
Audience members like to take notes on your handouts, but they might be competing for the audience’s attention while you speak.
You know someone who owns an iPhone—you may even have one of these devices. So, which type of user are you? What about your friends?