7 habits of highly successful PR people
Listen up, PR pros. Here’s how Stephen Covey’s tips can help you become even better at what you do.
Listen up, PR pros. Here’s how Stephen Covey’s tips can help you become even better at what you do.
It’s easy to join the #CMAD festivities online and in person.
You think all PR pros are Type A? Think again.
It’s time to sound off, PR pros. Does the main character in the ABC drama accurately depict what it’s like to work in PR?
It’s more than just a flashy appendage or a plus on a CV. An MBA provides context for your work in the short and long terms.
The best way to raise your co-workers’ blood pressure is to send emails with red exclamation points. Empty subject lines, reply-all threads and unsolicited jokes work well, too.
That’s one spot below its place on last year’s CareerCast list of the most stressful jobs. Newspaper reporters remain in the No. 8 spot.
Persistence, forethought, and a little gratitude will take you a long way in your career to come.
Setting an objective and crafting a strategy to achieve it form a solid foundation. Then the fun begins.
From headlines to deadlines, news folk understand the fundamentals and nuances of delivering top-quality content that engages and enlightens an audience.
By 2015, the press release will be a thing of the past at Coke, thanks to its new brand journalism website, which replaced its home page.
Thinking about tweeting during the Super Bowl—or the next terrorist attack? Slow down and pick up some tips from Shel Holtz.
Thinking about tweeting during the Super Bowl—or the next terrorist attack? Slow down and pick up some tips from Shel Holtz.
Are TV stations ignoring your pitches? Producers are swamped. Get to the point. Call at the right time. And pitch with video.
With employees monitoring devices and fielding work calls 24 hours a day, stress is taking its toll. Some firms are making it OK to leave the job behind or take a real holiday.