Learn from TED: 4 presentation pitfalls
Speeches don’t have to be boring. Avoid these common presentation killers to move and inspire audiences.
Speeches don’t have to be boring. Avoid these common presentation killers to move and inspire audiences.
Your workday is fraught with stress and challenges, but help and empathy can be found in online communities. Check out these options for sage advice—and a shoulder to kvetch on.
The White House comms director is caught in a PR maelstrom of his own making. An offer from Ragan Communications can help turn things around.
Event sponsors make lasting connections with target audiences at Ragan’s popular PR, marketing and corporate communications conferences.
If working for a company voted best place to work appeals to you, this week’s featured job is right up your alley.
CEOs and others are learning to show a human face, whether a birthday greeting or a bicycle accident. The results are a more engaging presence, Burson-Marsteller states.
A former White House speechwriter offers tips on finding stories and considers the upside of audiences with smartphones.
Ads from Airbnb, Coca-Cola, 84 Lumber and Anheuser Busch took on controversial political and social issues to become the focus of online buzz last night and watercooler talk today.
Today only: Get a $400 discount on a one-year subscription to Ragan Training in Ragan’s 12 Days of Savings.
The retail giant’s CEO has been live-casting parts of meetings, intros to speeches and other events. Who ever thought Geena Davis would be thrilled to sit for an interview in Sam Walton’s old office?
Would your senior leaders want to speculate on which actor might play them in a movie? At the clothing maker, staffers are free to ask—and invited to offer their two cents in group meetings.
Doing certain things can undermine the authority you command as you step up to the lectern. You needn’t be haughty; simply sidestep these common pitfalls.
The breezy nature of the video platform enables senior leaders to present a more human face to staffers and to the general public. But would your CEO take a pie in the face for the cause?
Bringing expertise is important, but it’s not everything. Here’s how to prepare for a memorable stint as a revered, yet personable, source of information.
The first lady’s speech makes ‘shock waves’ for her condemnation of the New York billionaire, who, isolated in his party, is finding his own surrogates to champion his cause.