4 unwritten commandments of the corporate communicator
Corporate communicators need observe only four commandments, not 10, to do a superlative job. But those four are inviolable. Here they are.
Corporate communicators need observe only four commandments, not 10, to do a superlative job. But those four are inviolable. Here they are.
A disease running rampant in West Africa reaches the U.S. The public is alarmed, and misinformation is spreading. Time to lie low? These organizations say no.
A disease running rampant in West Africa reaches the U.S. The public is alarmed, and misinformation is spreading. Time to lie low? These organizations say no.
Enhancing the good will (and productivity) in your workplace is exceedingly important, but it doesn’t have to be excessively expensive.
Email remains a daily tool for communicators, despite the popularity of social media, a survey reveals. Specifically, email is the preferred way to deliver crucial information to employees.
Counting opens isn’t enough, respondents say in a Ragan/PoliteMail survey. But many find it hard to measure whether they’re making a difference—and most aren’t measuring at all.
Most organizations measure internal communications, but most are dissatisfied with the results, a new survey reveals. Why is that?
Enhancing the good will (and productivity) in your workplace is exceedingly important, but it doesn’t have to be excessively expensive.
If you have a worse one—and we find that hard to believe—send it in and you can win a terrific prize!
The industry alliance should focus on raising the confidence in the value of business communication rather than the competence of its members, this author asserts.
Grace under fire is a top characteristic for both men and women, the research shows, but women get less slack on behavior and are more likely to be judged by appearance.
The International Association of Business Communicators’ mission and business model is at the heart of its current crisis. Here’s a new model to consider.
Marketers pilot the social media efforts, with PR a close second, reports a new survey. On an encouraging note, most say the departments involved in social media work together well or very well.
In its statement regarding a highly damaging judge’s report, the university took ‘full responsibility’ for administrators’ roles in covering up the Jerry Sandusky scandal. But words may not be enough.
Need help figuring out where the best information for corporate communicators on Twitter is? Here’s a start.