Remove Corporate Remove Ethics Remove Interviews Remove Newspapers
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An “Interview” with ChatGPT: What is Public Relations? How Has PR Changed? Will Artificial Intelligence Replace Comms Pros?

Sword and the Script

We interviewed ChatGPT about public relations and while it does well with high-level questions, it becomes repetitive when those questions were more nuanced; the system says it is “unlikely” that it “or any other AI system will fully replace public relations (PR) professionals”. The answers are starting to feel repetitive and formulaic.

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Increasing Your Media Coverage Through Storytelling

PRSay

Whether you serve a large corporation, small nonprofit, major research university or municipal government, at some point your boss has probably said, “We need more media attention. Sure, go after The New York Times as your boss asked, but don’t forget your local newspapers, TV and radio stations. Keep it ethical.

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We Must Confront the Uncomfortable Truths – Roger Bolton

Ethical Voices

Joining me on this week’s episode of EthicalVoices is Roger Bolton , the president of Page , the premier global professional association for senior corporate communications executives. He discusses a number of important ethics issues, including: It’s great to be with you, Mark. Thank you so much for the opportunity.

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How Harry’s very LA relaunch has only just begun

Mark My Words

The former Royal’s first foray into the corporate world has seen him take up the role of chief impact officer at Silicon Valley coaching firm BetterUp, while also sitting alongside Rupert Murdoch’s daughter-in-law on a commission aiming to fight “misinformation”. The Telegraph Jobs appear to be like buses for Prince Harry.

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Maxim Behar: The state should be governed like a business structure."

Maxim Behar

We had, including myself, completely different ideas about how young people come and start to govern and make our lives more ethical, more honest, and more transparent. All these things were written in newspapers and said in television studios about how they would come into place. Watch the full interview here. Maxim: Why not?

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Double-dipping exposes reputation risk in blurred boundaries of PR and journalism

PR Conversations

Even more unnerving was that the anchor— and, on occasion, other journalists affiliated with the TV network—interviewed his agency’s clients on show segments. For public relations practitioners committed to ethics and professionalism, the natural first instinct was self-righteous shock. Transparency helps—but it’s not enough.

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Double-dipping exposes reputation risk in blurred boundaries of PR and journalism

PR Conversations

Even more unnerving was that the anchor—and, on occasion, other journalists affiliated with the TV network—interviewed his agency’s clients on show segments. For public relations practitioners committed to ethics and professionalism, the natural first instinct was self-righteous shock. Transparency helps—but it’s not enough.