Articles in the Technology Category
Features, Public Relations Higher Education, Teaching PR, Technology, Top Level »
Campaigns students worked very hard this summer. They created a social network and pitched it to the faculty of the Department of Communication & Journalism, Auburn University.
Alana Wells, Sherry Namburi, Miles Duncan, Brett Pohlman, Lindsay McCormick and Whitney West were all members of the PR Campaigns class, Summer 2008. This site is their creation. Search for their resumes at PRProspects.com and hire them. ;o)
The mission? Bring together students and alumni in an online community.
It launched last week. In less than a week, members have looked at 2,673 pages …
Blog Talk, Features, Journalism, Public Relations Higher Education, Technology »
New technology and its use in journalism and public relations has long been an interest of mine. The reality is, not all technology can be used in every situation.
The recent editorial by John Temple, Editor and publisher of the Rocky Mountain News, is a perfect example of taking experiments with emerging digital media one step too far.
Rocky Mountain News reporter Berny Morson was sent on assignment to cover the funeral of Marten Kudlis, age 3. Kudlis was killed last week at an ice cream shop when a traffic …
Blog Talk, Marketing, New Media, PR Higher Education, Social Media, Teaching PR, Technology, Video, Video Blog, WOM, WOMM »
It especially won’t work if you have a bad product.
I can feel Jen O’Meara’s pain. We likely all can. She has a project she loves and it isn’t going anywhere. Frustration. We’ve all felt it, right?
David Meerman Scott shares A viral marketing story suitable for bedtime. It is a story of disappointment and sadness. But, at least the author, YOBI CIO Jen O’Meara, tries to tell it with a tongue-in-cheek spin.
Jen’s no dummy – you’d think. A Ph.D. under her belt, no less, she’s …
Blog Talk, Blogs, CMS, New Media, OpenPR, Opensource, Publishing, Social Media, Technology »
Previously, I mentioned the question I received during the HighEdWebDev conference. I was asked the always difficult question, “So, what’s next? What is the next thing on the horizon?” Again, if I knew (if any of us knew), we’d invest in it and reap the rewards. I did not have the answer, because I don’t know what is next.
It did remind me of something that I’ve thought about for a long time. The relatively unsung true driving force, in my opinion, of social media’s growth. Surely, …
