Largest PR paychecks found in coastal cities, mostly
Major companies and big media bring financial rewards to pros in the Northeast and on the Pacific Coast, a PR Daily survey shows.
Major companies and big media bring financial rewards to pros in the Northeast and on the Pacific Coast, a PR Daily survey shows.
A guide to getting legitimate search engine traction in your online posts and updates.
Community manager salaries will go up, but work/life balance will not improve, this PR pro predicts.
Take some cues on how to engage your customer base from the omnipresent coffee retailer.
Fans of these organizations are more likely to recommend the brand to their friends, according to a recent survey.
A survey found that many online daters consider lousy grammar a turnoff and more than a third consider good grammar ‘sexy.’
How many of these apply to you? Read one of PR Daily‘s most popular story—ever.
It’s one thing for your cousin to divulge the effects of that mega-burrito on his system. It’s quite another for an executive to reveal a company secret or spew tasteless humor.
Most millennials don’t feel entitled or unwilling to pay their dues. In fact, most have the makings of great leaders.
A recent survey of teenage and young-adult social media users found that people in those age groups prefer Tumblr to Facebook or Twitter.
The search giant remains the best place to work for the second straight year by constantly evolving. Find out which companies rounded out the top five, and the role internal communication plays.
That’s equal to a book about the length of “The Great Gatsby.” And you think you can’t write a novel. Plus, the illnesses that killed famous authors, working on a tablet, writing in the morning, and more.
The CEO of a marketing firm takes issue with a PR Daily story insisting public relations should handle social media for organizations. She insists everyone owns social. Do you agree with the author?
This doesn’t bode well for all you social media managers out there. Here’s what you need to know.
In 2013, public relations will win the battle over which department ‘owns’ social media. Here’s why.