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I also suggest when sharing earned media content on social media to keep the status short … nobody wants to read several paragraphs to set up a one minute news clip or newspaper mention! The post AirPR Interview Series: Emmy Award Winning Journalist & PR Pro Mika Stambaugh appeared first on AirPR.
According to a Pew Research Center analysis of data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of newsroom jobs in the United States fell by 26 percent from 2008 to 2020. When it comes to realizing the value of media relations, Op-Ed columns in newspapers are the gold standard.
Kim Spear, director at Newgate Communications, has helped her clients build brands in China and also worked with sponsors during the 2008 Beijing Olympics. In this interview, she discusses what it’s like to work in PR in Asia, what it takes to build a successful brand and how to stay on top of an ever-evolving industry.
In this interview, Ted Meyer, senior vice president of global public relations and communications of Natixis Global Asset Management, shares his thoughts on the importance of communication during a crisis, how the financial crisis of 2008 is still affecting brands and what PR used to look like before the Internet and social took over.
In this interview, Rich shares the similarities between journalists and communication professionals, the steps to developing a successful media strategy and how to build strong relationships with journalists. I find that some young professionals don’t read newspapers or influential websites. What was behind that decision?
My career path took me through journalism, where I worked as a correspondent, editor, and editor-in-chief for many years, gaining invaluable experience at various newspapers and even creating one ("Standard" newspaper). There are two questions I never ask in an interview: where the candidate is from and what they studied.
You also, you know, in the area, but you know, so I started off as a training reporter here in Brighton for my local newspaper and that’s how I started out. And my first kind of major role was at the Sun newspaper and it was there that I broke the first COVID 19 case in the country. This was 2008. So, you know, very funny.
Our newspaper ended up winning an award for our reporting. I got my start in journalism in 2008, working for a weekly newspaper in Connecticut called The Middlebury Bee-Intelligencer. That was my first experience really using social media and the publication’s website to break news and keep residents in the community informed.
A local newspaper for which I interned, The North Baltimore News (Ohio), assigned me to cover the Dayton Air Show. I especially enjoyed the banter with fellow journalists who are Red Wings fans during the back-to-back Cup showdowns in 2008 and 2009.
Just 20 years ago, only newspapers, radio, and TV editors did that. At the beginning of our business, some clients were happy that news about their product was published in a newspaper and asked how many people read it. Back then, there was no method to measure how popular an article or news article was in the newspaper.
Twenty to twenty-five years ago, you turned on the TV and listened to something or opened the newspaper and read it, but you had no feedback and couldn't say if something wasn't true. The last time I saw him conscious was on Christmas, before the accident in 2008. Watch the full interview here. First, the media are interactive.
Two high-profile events in 2008 illustrated Rubenstein’s influence and media savvy. In an interview with PRSA publications in 2004, Rubenstein said that a career in law wasn’t for him — ditto for the newspaper business.
I’m old-school and so, I look at my own newspaper, The Washington Post , The Wall Street Journal , The New York Times. Do research, have time, and don’t do a 45-minute interview and run out. Pew Research says newsroom employment has dropped 25 percent since 2008. The Washington Post is expanding its investigative reporting team.
I mean did it even matter that nearly every newspaper in the country published full-throated condemnations of Mr. Trump? It prefers live TV interviews (vs. Leaders Who Lie (August 2008). This new communications paradigm has gone beyond identifying sympathetic reporters who’ll parrot their messages.
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