12 words to ban at the office
Do platform or holistic stick in your craw? This author never wants to hear them again.
Do platform or holistic stick in your craw? This author never wants to hear them again.
Need help figuring out where the best information for corporate communicators on Twitter is? Here’s a start.
Do platform or holistic stick in your craw? This author never wants to hear them again.
TV production company wins accolades for internal newsletter, ConnectMag.
You’ve crafted a cogent, concise statement about your company. It’s ready to go—until, of course, you get ‘help’ from other departments. Hang on tight; this will NOT be pretty.
Some will miss a great video tool, but most agree it wasn’t irreplaceable in the changing world of internal comms.
There they lurk, camouflaged by the rest of your text, seemingly harmless—and then … zap!
Communicators who have tried using the world’s biggest social networking site for internal comms love accessibility but worry about privacy.
Will the experiment with unchecked commentary blow up in some company’s face?
There’s arguably no industry under more pressure to calm employee fears today than banks.
New graduates possess all the social media skills they need to join your department.
The Times of London put Microsoft’s PR rep Oona Rokyta on her heels with a story that had more legs than legitimacy. Could you have handled the situation better?
Recruiters say the job market for internal comms professionals is sizzling—particularly in Europe—but U.S. recruiters say American demand for comms professionals is just as strong.
As told to Diane Schwartz, CEO, Ragan
A snapshot of CCOs today