Has social media made us share too much?
Technological advancement has made communication easy and open, but have communicators made too much information public?
Technological advancement has made communication easy and open, but have communicators made too much information public?
The author of Thank You for Arguing tells us why so many corporate speeches fail to persuade.
Bic’s corporate site appeals to the eye and is well-organized, but its poor compatibility nearly sinks the lovely aesthetics.
Communicators remain as passionate as ever about social media and Web 2.0—but they continue to struggle with skittish bosses and nagging questions about matching the right tool with the right strategy.
Portfolio magazine’s new PR commentator replies to our query, plus bloggers sued, politicians riled, fake CEOs abound and nuns (finally) join the blogosphere.
By identifying blogs that call the shots, Northlich PR landed posts that drove a swarm of traffic to the client’s Web site.
Recent tragedies prompted us to wonder if public apologies are worth a damn, the president coins a new phrase, and a roundup of the latest speechwriting news you can use.
Market research expert Chris Gwinner shares his secrets on the right way to do employee surveys.
CEOs and communicators should ask themselves: Can a blog begin to replace the persuasive power of face-to-face communication?
An Illinois payroll firm formed an employee advisory board to cut its impact on the environment—and boosted morale in the process.
You’d think the rise of social media would’ve brought the corporate intranet into its own, but it’s just the opposite, according to noted consultant Shel Holtz.
How to disparage without disparaging, joke without jokes, use vulgarity with gentility and ‘commit PowerPoint’ without boring the audience.