How Twitter lists can make you a better PR pro
Twitter lists are an easy way to keep track of and build relationships with the journalists and bloggers who can give your client coverage.
Twitter lists are an easy way to keep track of and build relationships with the journalists and bloggers who can give your client coverage.
Use of the word for a photograph taken of oneself, by oneself, has had a ‘phenomenal upward trend’ this year, according to Oxford’s editorial director.
These (mostly) free Web-based mechanisms enable brand managers to find people with a particular type of expertise in specific parts of the world.
Stay classy, Emerson.
Just because language on a website is boilerplate, that doesn’t mean you can copy it from somewhere else. Yet, that seems to be the approach some agencies are taking.
A Forbes article posits that the public relations field still abides by the notion that its practitioners know better than the public at large. But haven’t we changed?
A group of Walmart associates advocating for higher pay posted an image to Facebook of a sign for the food drive. A Walmart spokesman said the drive is a positive.
Though the notion of an abundance of novices sounds scary, it also presents a world of opportunity to the public relations field.
First off, spell the name of the person to whom you’re pitching correctly. Then follow the example of a top-notch pitcher who got everything right.
Inspired by an article asserting 23-year-olds shouldn’t run social media for companies, the author—age 23—offers five reasons millennials are well suited to the job.
An anti-street-harassment group accumulated more than 2,000 signatures to an online petition urging the company to change the label on one of its moisturizer brands.
An interview isn’t a conversation with another person, though that’s what it seems to be at the time. It’s a public statement to a wide audience. Always keep that in mind.
A baker’s dozen arguments to tap into when someone accuses you of oversimplifying your writing—along with one common retort you probably should skip.
Serving as proof that nothing on the Internet ever really dies, a photo of a racially charged sign at a BK restaurant is making the rounds again.
People’s waistlines might not be able to afford the extra slices of pumpkin pie, but new projections show it should be less of a concern for customers’ checkbooks.