5 essential tips for quitting your job
Heading to greener pastures? Heed this advice or your next job might be your last (good) one in the industry.
Heading to greener pastures? Heed this advice or your next job might be your last (good) one in the industry.
But the Accenture report says most of them aren’t going to do anything about it. Sound familiar?
Whether you’re actively looking for a new career or just considering one, starting a blog is one of the best things you can do. The author explains why.
If you’re never supposed to argue with the person who buys ink by the barrel, then we doubt anyone would mess with this agency. It has a whole house of the stuff.
The author, who has worked in human resources for major public relations firms, offers some important job-hunting advice for the new year.
A reporter turned PR pro recalls the famous author, the advice Thompson offered, and the times they shared.
From the Chrysler F-Bomb to a fake migraine exposed on Facebook, here are a dozen cautionary tales on the professional dangers of social media.
We imagine the competition for this one will be anything but simple.
That’s the crux of a new book that offers compelling stats about why it’s a good time to work in public relations.
Good news is there are loads of free resources for job seekers; bad news is that finding them can be time-consuming and stressful. Good thing we’ve found them for you.
From how to make your résumé standout after you’ve submitted it online to the No. 1 thing every job-seeker needs to do now.
The job market may seem grim. (A recent study says 85 percent of this year’s grads will return home.) But, don’t fret; here are some tips to help you find that first job.
Quaint. Small. Picturesque. Small. Warm. Small. Cozy. Really small. Now that we’ve cracked that code, it’s your turn to sell us.
Your clothes don’t conform to your body; your body conforms to your clothes. At least in the case of hipsters. How else do you explain all the suspenders and nonprescription eyewear?
Big story in Chicago last week: a fan at Wrigley Field threw a full beer cup at Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Shane Victorino as he caught a fly ball. The beer tosser, 21-year-old Johnny Macchione, slipped out of the ballpark, which sparked a ridiculous manhunt. He turned himself in and apologized on camera. Gary Dunlap, senior vice president and head of the crisis and issues management group at Edelman, thinks Macchione did a pretty good job on camera. “He seemed sincere, which made him very credible…