LinkedIn drives more website traffic than any other social network
Forget Facebook and Twitter. If your company wants website traffic, your social media strategy should focus on LinkedIn.
Forget Facebook and Twitter. If your company wants website traffic, your social media strategy should focus on LinkedIn.
The U.S. Health and Human Services Department is touting its achievements while promising to make signing up at healthcare.gov less frustrating.
The platform is image-centric, of course, but setting strategy first and then offering compelling photos and video that highlight your brand is the way to go. Check out these terrific ideas.
Employees will doubt you, you’ll run out of ideas for posts, and you’ll want to quit. But fear not. Your blog will survive.
Using a PressPage platform, Hackney grabs news coverage and offers a splashy site for tourists.
Alerts can do a lot more than just help you find mentions of your company or firm. You can keep tabs on almost anything.
Take your company or client to viral fame with these tips.
Do your employees delete email messages unread? A billion-dollar (and growing) industry grabs eyeballs in cafeterias, elevator banks, and break rooms.
Almost 90 percent of companies say they create original content, but only 31 percent can tie content marketing efforts to sales and revenue.
With a mix of print, online, social media, and in-store content, the apparel chain is giving its biggest fans everything they want.
Levinson, who coined the term ‘guerrilla marketing,’ passed away on Thursday. Here’s a look at how his marketing concept evolved over the years.
Have you ever sent someone a note explaining why you don’t want to be Facebook friends? Do you ignore your website’s aesthetics? If so, stop. You’re only hurting yourself.
The nonprofit explains how it is building a social media presence using Vine and Instagram Video. Its experience offers lessons for other organizations.
Enticing a journalist or blogger to write about your company or client remains an achievement in the PR business. So make sure you’re doing it right.
A research project examined images featuring people, no people, and portions of people. The results will probably surprise you.