What’s more powerful: People or numbers?
We’re always saying that we need hard data to convince executives to communicate better … but what we really need is hard people.
We’re always saying that we need hard data to convince executives to communicate better … but what we really need is hard people.
When you’re not expecting it, a healthy dose of the stinky stuff can almost knock you out cold.
It’s time for editors to decide what they want more: readers who like them, or executives who respect them.
Video is back with a vengeance—but the vast majority of it is utter rubbish. What are we going to do about it?
Thinking of helping the CEO start a blog? Do yourself a favor: Read this first.
Suspending judgment in organizational journalism is not only impossible, but it will wreck your prose.
Blogger X reveals how he ghostwrites blogs for a large national association.
It’s free, it’s cool, it’s viral. And it’s a PR opportunity.
Veteran communicator Holland notifies Burke Stinson that employee communication has become incredibly complex and intellectually stimulating in the years since Stinson stopped paying attention.
Dow CEO Andrew Liveris gets thousands of hits, dozens of comments and has just the right tone for a blog.
No, this platitude is a gross misuse of language that makes outsiders (and many insiders) suspicious of all corporate rhetoric.