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.
Streamline the process of creating slides for your executive.
Fifteen lessons from the longest and most expensive presidential campaign in U.S. history.
Software exec finds inspiration in candidly talking about his cancer journey.
Speechwriters from both parties agree Hillary Clinton delivered a knockout speech at Tuesday’s Democratic National Convention.
When design destroys the message.
User feedback shaped concepts for new site.
A profile of McCain’s speechwriter, The New York Times rejects a McCain op-ed, and Mashable picks the best corporate blogs.
In your writing, any cluster of run-on adjectives and nouns totaling three (or more) likely means you’re talking like a vice president or a CEO, and you’re jabbering in a foreign tongue: German.
Jerry Tarver talks with Ragan.com about his other professional passion: quietly collecting 19th-century books and memorabilia on rhetoric and elocution.
Delivery company boss chats, blogs with managers who reach supervisors who talk to truckers who make or break the company.
Here’s a look at four of this year’s graduation speeches that merit some distinction, if perhaps dubious.
So you think you want to become the human face of your corporation? Look before you launch.
Three crucial communication lessons, drawn from the three top winners of Vital Speeches of the days ’ first annual Cicero Speechwriting Awards.
Told her help would not be needed, Cassandra listened and learned as a senior speaker fumbled his way through a presentation