Remove 2011 Remove Brand Remove Crisis Communications Remove Interviews
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How Big Data Will Modernize Your Crisis Communications Plan

PRSay

For every enterprise, brand or organization, a crisis always looms as a persistent — yet inevitable — threat on the horizon. In today’s digitally-fueled world, the tiny spark of a crisis can erupt into a massive fire overnight, leaving a corporate brand and reputation in a heap of smoldering ashes.

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The Financial Drain of Misinformation

PRSay

The bulk of this loss comes from stock market volatility stemming from financial disinformation campaigns, but the widespread proliferation of misinformation has also forced companies and organizations to increase spending on reputation management, brand safety, employee health and wellness, and crisis communication efforts.

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Lessons From a Very Public Break-Up

Waxing UnLyrical

We recognized the enormous opportunity that social channels can offer and felt that we could really extend the reach of our brand voice by speaking directly with our customers. We launched into Twitter on 25 August 2010 and into Facebook on the 7 February 2011. The Break-Up campaign was very much a collaborative effort.

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Kpop Lessons: Handling Defamation Through Public Relations

Waxing UnLyrical

Although I have no experience in crisis communication, I have learned some important lessons in light of Tablo’s scandal. Consider that the TaJinYo online community had over 131,000 members in September; imagine how much larger the community would have been had Tablo stayed silent on the matter. Liked what you saw?

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Future of PR: 2020 edition

Stephen Waddington

He published a paper called PR 2020 on behalf of the CIPR in 2011 that examined the future of PR. The PR 2020 project was based on interviews with PR practitioners throughout the UK and the outlook for the forthcoming decade. Brands can suffer the effect of negative influencers just as much as from positive ones.

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Bringing Open Community To Public Relations

Waxing UnLyrical

When I was at Blogworld this year, listening to Todd Defren and Dave Fleet talk about how social media for PR has to be about building engagement year-round with people, around your brand or organization. Lindy: Open communities already exist around every organization – we just need to find them and start building relationships.

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The Value Of A Fire Drill

Waxing UnLyrical

The smart brands kept their chips in: they stayed in the game with different messages, new incentives and, ultimately made themselves part of the conversation. I can go into other examples, but… you get the point. If you liked what you saw and read, Id love you to subscribe to my RSS feed or subscribe by email. Liked what you saw?

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