Scheduling social media posts? Better take these precautions
Many social media manages schedule their Twitter and Facebook posts ahead of time. It’s convenient, but the practice also has its dangers. Avoid them by following these steps.
Many social media manages schedule their Twitter and Facebook posts ahead of time. It’s convenient, but the practice also has its dangers. Avoid them by following these steps.
From the 10 most-useful social media tools of the year to the reasons millennials should run a company’s social media account, here are this week’s most read stories.
A bevy of options covering a range of services—from monitoring social mentions to indexing real-time photos—to help you excel at the social media game.
These tools will help communicators monitor websites, keep track of pitches, set reminders, and more.
Still not sure about this social network? Give these tips a try to help build your audience on the site.
Don’t waste your day on social media. By referring to this list you’ll actually save yourself time in the long run.
Your audience craves visual content. These free tools will help you create the kind of images that will nourish those cravings.
When ITT Corp. split up into three parts last year, communicators told the story from the inside out.
You can’t grow your followers and fans on social media, if you’re not telling people about it. Here are some ways to spread the word.
The 25 things young professionals should know, the five ways to clean up a Twitter stream, the reason PR is such a hard job to explain, and more.
Remember when IT hated marketing, and marketing thought IT was full of guys that said, ‘That can’t be done’? Those days are over; we need to know more.
From sharing content for your client or company to learning about tomorrow’s weather, these tools will save you time and—because they’re free—money.
Despite efforts to define the public relations profession, it remains difficult for practitioners to explain their jobs. The author takes a crack at explaining why this is so, and what it means to be a PR pro.
Patrick Sandusky, the chief communications officer at the U.S. Olympic Committee, spoke to PR Daily about the recent PR crisis that gripped the organization.
At a loss for what to share on Twitter? Consult this handy guide.