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In Memoriam: Joe S. Epley, APR, Fellow PRSA

PRSay

Epley, APR, Fellow PRSA, a decorated PRSA leader who was a friend and mentor to many members and champion for the ethical practice of public relations, died suddenly in his South Carolina home on Nov. In 2008, he received PRSA’s highest individual honor — the Gold Anvil. Epley, who joined the U.S. were lifelong.

Ethics 166
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PR: Less Elitist Than Ever

Maxim Behar

A tiny portion of PR is designed to serve corporations’ CEOs and senior management. He can do that on his own, or some local journalist can do that for him for a small amount of money, or his teenage kid can do it for free. Even though Twitter and Facebook already existed in 2008, Facebook had “only” 100 million users.

Ethics 64
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Maxim Behar: Better put yourself in others’ shoes and then judge

Maxim Behar

If this happens in a corporation, a private company, or a business community, the manager will take measures, put everything in order, and replace whoever needs to be. Politicians should be examples of ethics, honesty, and transparency, which we don't see in Bulgaria. And we may have another six in the next two years.

Ethics 69
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Engaging (and grilling) the social side of James Grunig

PR Conversations

NOTE: Originally published on October 15, 2008. I believe the strategic management paradigm now is practiced in most major corporations, and I believe a major challenge for the profession is to reinstitutionalize public relations in the same way in the minds and practice of others. They would have no shared principles or values.