Infographic: 75 percent of Americans receive work email on holidays
Will you check your email this Thanksgiving? If so, you’ll be among a majority of Americans. Guess which gender is most likely to check in.
Will you check your email this Thanksgiving? If so, you’ll be among a majority of Americans. Guess which gender is most likely to check in.
Carlos Dominguez, a senior vice president at Cisco Systems, offers seven important ideas about the future workforce, particularly its keen interest in social media.
You’ll be talking to loved ones this Thursday instead of communicating with the public. That calls for a drink—and some advice.
If you experience any of these emotions when you have to send an email, step away from the send button. That email can wait until later.
A new study suggests PR pros need to fight harder for control of social media.
Take the advice of Philip Pullman, who says writer’s block is ‘a lot of howling nonsense.’
And by attractive we don’t mean good looking. The study by Universum compiled a list of the companies for which young people want to work.
The retailer has taken flak for opening at midnight on the day after Thanksgiving. If the company follows these steps, it can avoid a full-blown public relations fiasco.
Twitter is one of the least common activities. Find out what tops the list.
You might not realize it, but the holiday favorite provides some useful lessons for communicators on how to respond when disaster hits.
Pay attention, Kevin Bacon. Plus, what scribes are thankful for this holiday, what your social media influence has to do with your job search, why Spirit Airlines was fined for its tweets, and more.
We imagine the competition for this one will be anything but simple.
The popular media blogger is emailing PR professionals in search of answers. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.
The author, who owns a PR agency, recently went through the hiring process and came away with this advice for Generation Y job-seekers.
The best-informed people read daily newspapers, listen to NPR, and watch Sunday morning programs. However, one journalist has called the study ‘deeply flawed.’