Should speechwriters stop fighting PowerPoint?
Someone who’s long defended speechwriters’ right to focus solely on writing great words is starting to have serious doubts.
Someone who’s long defended speechwriters’ right to focus solely on writing great words is starting to have serious doubts.
New technology allows employees to hear directly from CEO Gary Kelly each week.
Follow the University of Pennsylvania’s lead and draw on your company’s “intellectual capital” to create compelling podcast content—and earn a few extra bucks.
Keeping up with the endless possibilities of social media both excites and exhausts communicators.
Paul Vogelzang shows us that adding this social media tool to Web sites isn’t just for the cool kids in Silicon Valley.
Communicators remain as passionate as ever about social media and Web 2.0—but they continue to struggle with skittish bosses and nagging questions about matching the right tool with the right strategy.
We spoke with one brave editor who is doing everything she can to not only ensure her print publication stays relevant and fresh, but also stays alive.
Ragan.com interviews Larry Genkin, publisher of the newly launched Blogger & Podcaster magazine—the first (and so far only) trade publication geared solely for this marketplace of nearly 100 million.
At two rhetoric conferences in Copenhagen last week, the author picked up communication wisdom and a Machiavellian trick for managing approvals.
One communicator single-handedly conceived, created and implemented how the nonprofit uses social media nationwide.
We learned a lot last week: The Department of Homeland Security has a blog, mediasnackers are changing the world and even the mighty Facebook is at the mercy of the blogosphere.
Ragan’s ‘unconference’ yielded a consensus and a few good ideas on using social media in organizational communication.
This year marked the summer of social networking—learn why people are flocking to these sites and how you can harness their power
Roger D’Aprix, the Godfather of internal communication, warns communicators that mindlessly embracing social media means risking crucial credibility.
Communicators eager to adopt social media next year even as execs guffaw over its benefits.