17 job openings in the PR and marketing world
Though you donut want to miss out on a great opportunity to join Krispy Kreme’s social media team, quirkier applicants might eye a different prospect. That, and more, in this week’s roundup.
Though you donut want to miss out on a great opportunity to join Krispy Kreme’s social media team, quirkier applicants might eye a different prospect. That, and more, in this week’s roundup.
The Syrian Electronic Army claimed responsibility. The Times offers a brief explanation on its home page and turns to Facebook for continued posting. Twitter users said their backgrounds changed.
The slow-talking actors in the ad apparently had to talk that way so they could be overdubbed in Korean. As for the histrionics …
Generational gaps amid the workplace can present a difficult challenge for colleagues, particularly when our sprightly, younger peers are the ones in charge.
Swimming in the ‘shark tank’ isn’t everybody’s cup of chum. This checklist might have you reconsidering you chosen field—or at least polishing up certain aspects of your workday.
Blink and you’ll miss this Vine offering an abridged look at the life of a PR pro.
Use this graphic as a checklist to determine whether your content marketing is helping the company’s bottom line.
Where Microsoft fleetingly fails from a technical standpoint, it prospers in its corporate handling of the incident.
The arresting advertisement on the paper’s homepage harkened to the days of abundant pop-up ads.
To showcase its personality, HORN held a contest in which reporters squared off in an online DJ competition. The effort raised $10,000 for One Laptop Per Child.
Hiding your head in the sand at the first sign of trouble will do far more damage to your reputation than addressing it directly with a crisis plan.
Alabama’s Hoover High Buccaneers didn’t want to be held “responsable” for “ruffled feathers,” but they’ve got some culpability in this misspelling.
As more and more people choose to read their news via their smartphones and tablets, it’s to your benefit to create content that’s easy and compelling for mobile users.
Beginning Sept. 12, the social site for professionals is expanding to allow kids as young as 13 years of age to sign up. Get ready for an invite from your niece.
Two professors from Penn State University, one male and one female, discuss the lack of young men in public relations courses.