5 tips for communications students and graduates
New PR and marketing pros can prepare themselves for a job opportunity with the following ideas.
New PR and marketing pros can prepare themselves for a job opportunity with the following ideas.
These individuals offer tips and tricks about social media, marketing and corporate messaging.
To the contrary, a designated team can ensure substantive conversations up and down the hierarchy so employees stay engaged and execs fully understand how the organization runs.
The skills PR and communications professionals use to do their jobs also come in handy in other areas of life.
Everybody wants a press release. Everybody’s got a great idea how you should spend your time. Here’s how to stay sane.
This executive wants to change corporate culture by making communicators aware that employees talk to customers the way they are talked to. Do you have an “employee voice”?
Internal communications doesn’t have to be boring and stuffy. In fact, it should be the opposite. Use these tactics to add some oomph to your strategy.
Profanity, verbal tics, and generational patois can undermine your credibility and hinder your career growth.
If the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago can host a town hall that looks like a street festival and publish a funny and irreverent newsletter, your organization can too. Here’s how to pull it off.
See the list of entries that are one step closer to the prize.
When you’re scrambling to save face after a disaster, remind your leaders to demonstrate these five behaviors.
Are your leaders’ internal communications scattered and lacking in strategic direction? Try individualized, long-term calendars that map out their meetings, town halls, and other events.
Persistence, forethought, and a little gratitude will take you a long way in your career to come.
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.
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.