Authorities, eyewitnesses and reporters turn to Twitter during UCC shooting
After a gunman opened fire on a community college in Oregon on Thursday morning, many took to the social media platform to share—and learn—details.
After a gunman opened fire on a community college in Oregon on Thursday morning, many took to the social media platform to share—and learn—details.
After run-ins with Univision’s Jorge Ramos and Fox News’ Megyn Kelly Tuesday, the presidential candidate simply said, ‘They’re not nice people.’
Though it’s often maligned as a crap shoot, cold pitching can, in fact, work.
Use these ideas to network with journalists, which will make your media relations efforts—and story pitches—more effective.
The New York Times and The Washington Post shared a blog that was supposedly written by the gunman, and Fox News gave false information about a tweet.
You may think you’re ready to hire an agency, but are you really? Test yourself with these queries. (PR pros, show this to your clients.)
Someone miscommunicated or made a mistake. The reporter got mad. Someone may have cried. What comes next?
Small businesses can greatly benefit from a public relations team, but entrepreneurs first need to make sure their companies are ready for one.
According to this PR pro, telling people that PR is something that can be knocked out in no time is misleading.
Phillippe Reines started a chain of heated emails between himself and several journalists Tuesday. Was the reaction justified?
Tired of the same old corporate stories? Looking for something new for the intranet or the Web? Put on your press hat and borrow ideas from local journalists.
Seeking a correction about wrong or garbled information is perfectly fine. How you go about it, though, makes all the difference in the ongoing relationship with your media contact.
Even the most unglamorous of companies has stories. Brand managers can uncover these tales with these considerations.
A few things you might see as helpful suggestions may actually come off as combative or just plain confusing.
The bureau’s director said the portrayal of a journalist was within legal and appropriate boundaries in the 2007 case. The news organization disagreed.