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San Francisco: Change. Craft. Communicate.

Landis PR

In this week’s blog, we are featured in Public Relations Global Network ‘s Faces and Markets of PRGN. Click here for the original blog. Currently, our client focus areas include environmental, biotechnology, healthcare, autonomous mobility and gaming/hospitality. The results will be compounded.

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Faces & Markets of PRGN: Hong Kong – Asia’s World City

Bianchi Biz Blog

Joanne Chan, founder and managing director at LBS Communications The information in this post originally appeared on Public Relations Global Network’s blog. Faces and Markets of PRGN is a series of blog posts in 2024 that puts Public Relations Global Network (PRGN) member agencies and their markets in the spotlight.

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The Online Brain Hypothesis

Doctor Spin

The “online brain”: how the … Continue reading A study published in the National Center for Biotechnology Information highlights this trend, emphasizing how the multitude of online media sources vies for our attention, often at the expense of our ability to concentrate for extended periods. Source: World Psychiatry 1 Firth, J., Steiner, G.,

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Attention Spans in the Social Media Age

Doctor Spin

The “online brain”: how the … Continue reading A study published in the National Center for Biotechnology Information highlights this trend, emphasizing how the multitude of online media sources vies for our attention, often at the expense of our ability to concentrate for extended periods. Source: World Psychiatry 1 Firth, J., Steiner, G.,

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The Anatomy of Attention

Doctor Spin

A recent study published in the National Center for Biotechnology Information highlights this trend, emphasizing how the multitude of online media sources vies for our attention, often at the expense of our ability to concentrate for extended periods. Please support my blog by sharing it with other PR- and communication professionals.

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Stop Smearing Goldfish: That Attention Span Statistic is Dubious

Sword and the Script

The statistic goes like this: A 2015 Microsoft study shows that the average consumer has an attention span of eight seconds down from 12 seconds back in 2000. of articles and blog posts that start with this statistic. That goldfish statistic just won’t die. That’s a shorter attention span than a goldfish. Why is it less clear?