Bring back e-mail etiquette
With an inbox plagued with off-target pitches and clogged with huge PDFs, our editor laments the state of electronic PR.
With an inbox plagued with off-target pitches and clogged with huge PDFs, our editor laments the state of electronic PR.
For an internal communicator, writing a blog for employees would seem the most natural thing in the world; it’s also the hardest.
A stirring lesson on the power of a memorable and logical opening argument.
Gates says goodbye, Yahoo! CEO needs to give a “band of brothers” speech, Mark Gill gets brownie points while Chicago Mayor Richard Daley’s speech disappoints.
Clean up gobbledygook and other mishaps to improve the state of press releases.
A look at what communicators are doing to combat negative Google results and other damaging posts
What is irony, why is it abused and how can corporate communicators benefit from it?
Communicators find real unity in all that crap.
Speechwriting expert James F. Fox gives the inside scoop on using humor successfully.
Rob Patey’s e-mail newsletter doesn’t have cool graphics or splashy color. The only thing it does have is readers … lots of them.
If you aren’t reading Gawker, you aren’t doing your job.
A social media service that lets you tell people whether you got the frappuccino or the decaf latte, or how you’re passing time at the airport—what could be more useless?
Web writing must inspire immediate interest or you’ll lose your readers. Here’s a quick guide to attracting—and keeping—them.
When AAA Northern California, Nevada & Utah, opened up its doors to two-way communication with a ‘feedback string,’ it strengthened culture change at this AAA club in a big way.