20 tips for PR students
Some of the best lessons about PR come from experience rather than a classroom.
Some of the best lessons about PR come from experience rather than a classroom.
The crayon brand’s Facebook page was overtaken by hackers with a juvenile sense of humor over the weekend.
Maryland politician Kirby Delauter demanded that the Frederick News-Post no longer use his name. The paper turned around and printed his name 27 times in one editorial. (Updated)
It’s time to stop using those cheesy images of smiling colleagues leaning over a laptop. Check out these eight much cooler image resources.
Looking for some additional online reading related to the PR industry? Look no further than these blogs.
This not-safe-for-work conversation was work for one very patient social media manager in the United Kingdom.
Spanning politics and pop culture, business mavens and sports idols, these tandem lists highlight the silver-tongued and cast a harsh glare on the tongue-tied.
The agency’s often-jokey Twitter account cut out the levity Tuesday and directed people to an online fact sheet about the detention program detailed in the report.
Pop culture slang such as “xlnt” and food terms like “al desko” were also recently added, to readers’ joy (or chagrin).
The superstar golfer is the latest victim of the so-called “Streisand effect” after he complained about a Golf Digest column.
From cost to copyright, PR pros have valid reasons for keeping images out of their content. Some other reasons aren’t so valid. None of them should be a roadblock.
These takeaways from the beer brand show pros how to tell stories, relate with consumers, and be responsible.
The cosmetics brand unknowingly featured a picture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in its advertisements and said the choice was made “for his hair, not terrorism.”
Author Ann Patchett dogs the Gray Lady with a lighthearted scolding about punctuation—and provides an object lesson in the curious nature of viral tweets. But is she right?
After dealers started cancelling their subscriptions, the president of the car shopping site admitted the ads may have “missed the mark.”