5 presentation lessons from Toastmasters’ top speaker
Deliver your story with emotion and humor, actively involving the audience, and conclude with a meaningful point.
Deliver your story with emotion and humor, actively involving the audience, and conclude with a meaningful point.
Is your love of writing on the ropes? Here are some fun ways to boost your skills.
Also: How artificial intelligence is changing transcription, Nike chief sidesteps doping scandal, and PR pros’ favored platforms for video.
Glean tips from the finance giant’s savvy approach toward amplifying, humanizing and harmonizing its execs’ voices online.
Well-intended authors can gunk up their prose with repetition, rather than letting the context do the heavy lifting. Consider these examples.
Increase your immediate rewards, make the future more real, and force yourself to start. Go ahead and eat that cookie, too.
Writing for the web poses all sorts of hazards, from an overload of SEO to neglecting proofreading. Here’s how to identify—and avoid—these common missteps.
Also: Nissan’s CEO resigns, Starbucks steps up internal mental health efforts, White Claw demand outpaces supplies, and media correction doozies.
Writing, like any other task, requires practice. Here are some exercises and mindsets that can help you hone your craft and create better content.
Start by identifying the purpose of your presentation. From there, tailor the talk for your audience, and keep it concise.
Also: A lively discussion about the ROI of PR, cheers and jeers for French’s mustard ice cream, and Chick-fil-A beats fast-food competitors.
Journalists use a powerful first sentence to pique interest. Use that same technique to engage your audience—internal or external—and keep them scrolling, all the way to your call to action.
Wrapping up our series on the influential writing gurus’ centennial, we delve into punctuation and the perplexing persistence of purple prose.
That chummy yet authoritative initial post brims with inspiration and wisdom; then the tepid follow-up straggles in nine weeks later. Soon your team will be ghostwriting. Head it off now.
In 1969, a speechwriter had a statement ready for President Nixon in case the astronauts died on the moon. How prepared are you for a fatal crisis?