Stressed out? Relax with these 10 tips
Public relations is a fast and tough industry. It’s easy to reach your freak-out point. To avoid doing so, follow this advice.
Public relations is a fast and tough industry. It’s easy to reach your freak-out point. To avoid doing so, follow this advice.
Seems there’s more to planking than we gave it credit. Plus, a happy belated birthday to GIFs, why the ‘B-word’ should be stricken from you vocabulary (not that ‘B-word’), the people of NYC want their own Twitter handle, Cannes Lions, and more.
A Boston-area English teacher reaped the social media whirlwind—and praise nationwide—by telling students they’re just ordinary folks. Should other speakers use the same approach?
Verbiage, decimate, and epic are among the words that PR Daily readers cited as commonly misused words. Find out why—and which other terms made the cut.
Tide’s follow up to a satirical article in The Onion proved the brand can give as well as it takes. Watch its video response.
From usual suspects to obscure gems, from grammar guides to usage resources, here are some websites of great value to writers.
From Scrabble and Balderdash to Words with Friends and the Times’ crossword puzzle, these games sharpen your skills and relax you at the same time.
Follow these tips to avoid angering your office mates and business contacts.
You know that agonizing objective statement you just spent hours trying to perfect? Drop it.
In memoriam, landlines. Plus, the neighborhood social network, Mark Zuckerberg turns 28, Newsweek’s Obama cover gives Time a run for its money, Ron Swanson for vice president, ‘Fifty Shade of Grey’ in under four minutes, and more.
From humor to grace, these are the habits that will make you a valued employee and a trusted colleague.
Is your work environment hampering your ability to flourish? Plus, Amsterdam holds a peeing contest, a guy legally changes his name to a dinosaur, go inside a fortune cookie factory, world’s happiest moms, ‘Daily Show’ ruffles some Catholic feathers, and more.
How many of these traits also belong to you and your clients?
The author—a victim of Internet trolls—offers advice for bloggers and reps of brands that become the target of destructive commenters.
A spate of recent examples shows how not to say you’re sorry.