Remove Community Remove Crisis Management Remove Publicity Remove Wikipedia
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So Farah, not so good Freuds

Mark My Words

Read the opening paragraphs of athlete Mo Farah’s Wikipedia page and you’ll be confronted bya roll call of records sufficient to fill the sports category of several Trivial Pursuit decks. Much of the chatter has centred on Farah’s choice of crisis managers, Freuds. And the bigger the star the bigger the spike.

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Preview of my PRSA Talk, "Hacking Public Relations"

Where the Fishermen Ain't

This Sunday, I will be delivering my talk " Hacking Public Relations " at the PRSA International Conference in Philadelphia. There''s a preview over at the Edelman Digital site : Everyone can agree that the complexity involved in public relations and marketing has skyrocketed in the past decade. Friday5: Let’s Hack Public Relations.

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#19: Building a framework for reputation management

NewsWhip

Deploying crisis management teams | Jump to text. Chris: So if anyone’s behind a computer right now, we can all go to Wikipedia, right? And we can see, what does Wikipedia say? Is it isolated in one community or one space or one network? It starts with public interest and then carries over to media interest.

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28 Observations from 28 Months as a Solo PR

ZudePR

When I’m not doing a good job for clients, I write about digital PR/marketing for publications including Social Media Examiner , SEMRush , PR Daily , PR Moment , MuckRack , and Business2Community. Spot on, Wikipedia. 4: Get Involved in Communities I’m a runner. I’m a 43-year-old traditional-media-relations-guy-turned-digital-PR.