Remove 2005 Remove Communications Remove Crisis Remove Leadership
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Why Now Is the Time to Eliminate Jargon and Buzzwords

PRSay

As employees look for answers during the COVID-19 crisis, they need simple, straightforward language. For communicators, that means eliminating hype, jargon, buzzwords and corporate-speak. These contrived communications are the exact opposite of the natural conversations employees engage in everywhere else,” the authors noted.

Employee 197
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World Communicators Want Your Questions

Landis PR

By Sean Dowdall Landis Communications is proud to be hosting the Public Relations Global Network’s (PRGN) international membership conference, representing more than 50 communications agencies from around the world in San Francisco from October 18 – 20. Below is a list of some of the topics we’ll be discussing.

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World Communicators Want Your Questions

Landis PR

By Sean Dowdall Landis Communications is proud to be hosting the Public Relations Global Network’s (PRGN) international membership conference, representing more than 50 communications agencies from around the world in San Francisco from October 18 – 20. Below is a list of some of the topics we’ll be discussing.

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PR Has Evolved Since First ‘Public Relations Handbook’ in 1967, but Some Values Are Timeless

PRSay

About 2,200 local print newspapers have closed since 2005, cutting the number of newspaper journalists by more than half between 2008 and 2020. Rereading our original chapter on crisis communications underscores the changes that have taken place in corporate America and public relations since then. Communication is 24/7.

Handbook 192
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When A Founder Does PR Damage

ImPRessions - Crenshaw Communications

Elon Musk also made waves with a self-inflicted PR crisis this week — this one on a more global scale. Munster advises Musk to ignore short sellers and reminds him that the perception of “think-skinned and short-tempered” leadership is not helpful to his company. It starts with an apology. The red flags were there.

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Carbon bandwagon

Stephen Waddington

Public relations must take responsibility for its role in the climate crisis. The public relations industry is falling over itself to help businesses get to grips with the climate crisis. The climate crisis is in plain view. Agency initiatives and new roles appear daily in industry publications. This is the carbon bandwagon.

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Maxim Behar: Social media has made the world better and more understandable, don't be afraid of it!

Maxim Behar

What does crisis PR require in such a situation? Every crisis is ultimately better resolved if we have good advance preparation and a quick reaction. It is up to us to calm the passions, to bring a normal and positive tone to the communication and, if we want to get our point across, to use as convincing arguments as possible. -