Editors: Don’t drop your standards for the holidays
The holidays are a terrible time for writers and editors. Don’t succumb to stories you never would have considered before.
The holidays are a terrible time for writers and editors. Don’t succumb to stories you never would have considered before.
What communicators can do to gain management’s respect.
Government puts a new spin on the traditional press conference by fielding questions from the public and posting the briefing online.
The nonprofit for 50-plus demographic redesigns site based on user feedback.
Communicators at the University of Michigan-Flint encourage students to create videos, use YouTube.
Firm launches “One Book, One Firm” to get workers talking about diversity.
A look at how the two divisions focus on their commonalities and work together.
Employee communicators created a video contest to reinforce the company’s brand.
New Zealand minister disses speechwriters, Web site collects campaign videos, celebs embarrass themselves, long-winded Olympics speeches, and new SEC rules about blogs.
A nonprofit Chicago TV station uses media relations and advocacy in its battle for survival against heavyweight AT&T.
Humor and sarcasm are tricky for any speech. Jon Stewart delivered one dripping in sarcasm, but did he pull it off?
What steps you can take right now—and without asking anyone’s permission.
When AAA Northern California, Nevada & Utah, opened up its doors to two-way communication with a ‘feedback string,’ it strengthened culture change at this AAA club in a big way.
Steve Crescenzo spells out the difference between strategic employee publications and embarassing ones.
Don’t skip PR fundamentals when pitching social media.