23 great digital tools for PR pros
You’ve probably heard of a few of these tools; others may be new to you. They’re all useful.
You’ve probably heard of a few of these tools; others may be new to you. They’re all useful.
Feeling creativity’s cold shoulder? These activities can help get ideas cooking for your team.
A firm’s top executives offer their insights into what really makes the gears of day-to-day PR keep turning.
Whether your brand sells classroom supplies, apparel, or other seasonal items, there’s still time to get going with one of these online tools.
The definitive guide to etiquette extends far beyond proper invitations for various occasions and knowing how to use a finger bowl.
Connections, making the print version of a publication and getting things right are all great, but obsessing over those things can hurt more than it helps.
Big paychecks, drinks on a Tuesday night, exciting projects, a decent night’s sleep. Yeah, right. Not in the real world.
A major online player says the microblog’s real-time nature provides its staff job security and that the Gray Lady staff is ‘not guaranteed a future.’
The publisher of this website tells how one freshly minted, just-out-of-school candidate did everything dead wrong.
We’re used to showers in April, but the storm of news blunders this past month made selecting a top gaffe all the more difficult. Somehow, we weathered through.
Two high-profile companies recently halted their work-from-home programs, but data show that employees perceive the practice as boosting productivity—and their sense of freedom.
Several major news outlets blew it on Wednesday, falsely reporting that a suspect had been arrested in the Boston bombing. Here are more famous flubs.
The explosions at the Boston Marathon on Monday remind people who handle communications to keep the following things in mind.
There’s an entire website dedicated to real-time marketing fails—and it’s only a burgeoning field. Here’s how to make sure you don’t make the site.
Monday was a busy day on the Web, as a number of companies spoofed their audience with holiday hoaxes.