The 5 most popular stories on PR Daily this week
PR Daily readers were interested in what coffee preference says about their PR style, social media trends to watch, Adidas’ Boston Marathon apology and more.
PR Daily readers were interested in what coffee preference says about their PR style, social media trends to watch, Adidas’ Boston Marathon apology and more.
Though you should take care to avoid jargon in your pitches, press releases and other copy, you will probably encounter many of these business abbreviations.
As with common gaffes of usage and punctuation, botched syntax can distort a writer’s intended message—often with humorous consequences.
You could work under the golden arches in this week’s featured job listing at McDonald’s.
Grammarly analyzed writing from those who penned their prose in the daytime, versus night-owl efforts. They found that the earlier, the better, in terms of copy’s quality.
Coming up with fresh posts and maintaining a consistent publishing schedule can be daunting. Here are apps and websites to help PR and marketing pros gain inspiration.
More than a show about monsters, this popular Netflix series is filled with quips and gems of dialogue. Consider these—and suggest your own favorites.
This week, readers gleaned takeaways from Cheerios’ social media backlash and learned how to hone their video creation, pitching, storytelling and social media skills.
Don’t have time to attend conferences? Sharpen your skills with Ragan Training!
If you’re a female communications student or practicing PR pro, embrace the new digital media landscape with a few tech-savvy tips—and these featured job openings.
Apostrophe errors drive us all nuts. The BBC unmasks a hero who’s doing something about it.
Writers can always benefit from new sources of inspiration. Old photos, names on headstones, even simple people-watching can ignite a narrative. Here is some literary kindling.
Join us in Chicago for this free panel event!
Logophiles, do you know how to spell (or use) terms such as “pococurante,” “antipyretic” and “vivisepulture?” They’re a few of the winners from the past several decades of the famous spelling competition.
Writers rely too much on the tired verb “to be.” Here’s how to eliminate it and put more zing in your stories.