30 jobs in the PR and marketing world
This week’s featured listing gives one PR or marketing pro the opportunity to work for UNICEF.
This week’s featured listing gives one PR or marketing pro the opportunity to work for UNICEF.
These tips will help you navigate the rocky road of less-than-ideal business relationships.
Let Mark Ragan and Jim Ylisela visit your HQ and train your communicators in writing, editing, storytelling, content marketing and brand journalism—for free.
Unsure of how best to use social media for your brand? These tips will help keep you from embarrassing yourself.
Many clients consider an agency’s reputation when deciding on a safe choice, but perhaps they should dig deeper into the agency’s track record of making judgments.
You’ve gotten the budget approval, selected a measurement tool and started gathering data, so you’re all set, right? Not so fast, Sherlock. It’s not all that elementary.
Avoid giving away junk, be creative and try your best to make the contents of the bags memorable without being offensive.
Chad Shanks’ Twitter apology and statement to the Houston Chronicle after his controversial tweet on the team’s behalf serves as a model for people who get let go for gaffes.
In a heroic competition that saw top seeds such as ‘unicorn’ and ‘The Uber for X’ fall, ‘ideate’ dominates the magazine’s basketball-inspired cliché competition.
Believe it or not, working in an agency office can feel a lot like running up and down the pitch.
Lynda.com’s training library will become a part of LinkedIn’s offerings, while Twitter is attempting to improve searches. YouTube is putting forth new advertising choices.
Is yours outdated and rife with security risks? Here are a few tips for bringing it up to speed in the mobile era.
‘Christmas comes early’ as Ragan Communications expands training webinars, and PR University members get access to an extensive video training platform.
Did Robert Durst incriminate himself because he forgot he was wearing a wireless microphone when he went to the men’s room? Even if the answer is “No,” his life will never be the same.
Critics have blasted the coffee chain for using race relations as a marketing gimmick.