Communications Week 2023: List of events
Communications Week is coming.
Communications Week is coming.
The group of 27 industry experts will guide the editorial focus and programming for this year’s events, taking place Nov. 1-4.
Also: W Hotel launches Pride book club, Honda announces electric SUV, and SiriusXM responds to DE&I report card.
Also: McCann wins PR Cannes Lions Grand Prix, Southwest’s new CEO defends culture, and Peloton eliminates free running feature.
Also: Companies take firm stance on vaccines for customers and employees, Starbucks brings back reusable cups, Press Secretary Jen Psaki mixes metaphors, the cicada news cycle, and more.
Also: the latest tech offers new horizons for accessibility, Instagram adds pronouns, and Ohio creates lottery to reward vaccinated residents.
Also: More tech companies announce partially reopening offices, communicators distance themselves from oil and gas companies, PR pros want more measurement and less staff on agency calls, and more.
Growing pains are part of the deal, of course, but miring yourself in tech details eats up time and money—and often your patience. Try these approaches to ease your workweek.
Also: Innocent Drinks gives Twitter users a peek behind the scenes of content creation, Waffle House’s first-ever beer, 67% of customers will buy again at brands focused on DE&I, and more.
Also: Amazon Music launches podcast offerings, Vitaminwater’s social media manager embraces memes, Mayo Clinic announces interactive COVID-19 tracker, and more.
Companies keen on maintaining engagement and productivity should bend over backward to provide support and create a sense of community.
No one wants to deal with an atrocity—nor the media madhouse—like that of the Boston Marathon bombing. Or to fend off foreign spammers. But are you preparing for the worst?
From the obvious things like smartphones to some less-intuitive avenues (print, anyone?), these are the trends communications pros should keep on their radar as we cruise into 2014.
Not so quickly, it turns out. A company tweeted customer service questions and complaints at 14 major companies. Guess which ones respond—and which ones didn’t.
The networking giant lines up mainstream media contributors and opens up new website for social interaction—and even dissent.