The 7 (or 12) deadly sins of blogging
Time to repent your weblog’s transgressions and make it a light amid the darkness, online evangelists say.
Time to repent your weblog’s transgressions and make it a light amid the darkness, online evangelists say.
These days, the word ‘friend’ means more than simply the person you hang out with. It’s a digital acquaintance, a verb, an ‘un-verb’…
A 58-member consortium is seeking to reach the public by producing its own content to counter the decline in mainstream media coverage of science research.
One wordsmith details how witty copy has benefitted what Forbes calls ‘the fastest growing company ever.’
Perceptive Software’s magazine, InContext, is filled with informational—not sales—pieces.
Its use is widespread, but many find the usage unacceptable.
Whether you’re sharing your presentation online or need to energize an audience, here are four tools every speaker should know about.
Readers of our sister site, PR Daily, had a lot to say about this question. Does reading ‘Regards’ or ‘Best’ at an email’s end irk you? Weigh in now.
Does the word connote a positive or a negative? Depends how you use it.
It’s not the fault of those who can’t get it right, say a band of reformers who insist the oft-misplaced punctuation mark is just silly.
A flood of media reports that the world’s last typewriter factory was shutting down prove to be false.
Four keys to avoiding typos for meticulous editors.
Speechwriters—and other wordsmiths—can find inspiration in a book about techniques that have driven the message home for great speakers over the centuries.
What reading Cosmo taught one reporter about the value of must-read, gotta-have headline essentials.
For many retail businesses and manufacturing plants, floor employees can’t tap into the company’s intranet. The Intranet Benchmarking Forum asks: Could they do so in their time off?