Quoting from the Feb. 21 Adweek.com posting by Terry Stanley:
"In this eventful and entertaining election year, the campaigning is not limited to Hillary and Bernie and Marco and Trump. Also out there stumping—for another high-profile and much-coveted albeit very different kind of prize—were Leo and Brie and Saoirse and Sly. And Spielberg and Pitt. And Paramount and Fox and Disney."
Link to the full article
News from Absolutely PR and its clients. Absolutely PR specializes in media relations, the strategies and tactics necessary to achieve impactful editorial placements in the national/international, trade press local and social media. Follow tweets at @AbsolutelyPR or call for information 303.669.3558
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Good Read From PRNews: "The 4 C’s of an Insightful PR Dashboard"
Quoting Mark Renfree in the PRNews online posting from February 1:
"But the PR dashboard should not be thought of as just another reporting document to be shuffled out during meetings. Instead, this valuable tool should be used as a crucial learning device that senior leaders want to see early and often so it can be used to inform business decisions."
Link to read the article at PRNewsonline.com
"But the PR dashboard should not be thought of as just another reporting document to be shuffled out during meetings. Instead, this valuable tool should be used as a crucial learning device that senior leaders want to see early and often so it can be used to inform business decisions."
Link to read the article at PRNewsonline.com
Friday, January 22, 2016
Observer: '5 Big Changes Coming to Social Media in 2016'
Quoting the January 20th Observer.com opinion piece by Ryan Holmes:
"Expect to see new technologies fundamentally change how we interact with social media, opening up new options like shopping and enabling us to share ever-more vivid, real-time experiences. But new functionality and the widening universe of social options also threaten to leave some users in the dust."
Link to Observer.com read the full article.
"Expect to see new technologies fundamentally change how we interact with social media, opening up new options like shopping and enabling us to share ever-more vivid, real-time experiences. But new functionality and the widening universe of social options also threaten to leave some users in the dust."
Link to Observer.com read the full article.
Labels:
Opinion Posting Of Interest
Monday, January 11, 2016
Social Savvy from Digiday: "How Tiffany found its Twitter voice"

"According to a December Engagement Labs ranking, Tiffany’s Twitter game has made it the top luxury brand on the platform. The study, which used Engagement Labs’ eValue social metrics system to compare competitors, found that Tiffany’s Twitter sees high engagement from followers, and the account is the most responsive, replying to customers’ questions and complaints. The ranking also cited Tiffany’s #WillYou hashtag, used in reference to its engagement rings, as representative of the brand’s most engaging tweets."
Link to Digiday.com
Labels:
Social Media Strategy,
Twitter
Friday, January 8, 2016
Pew Research Features Denver Data: "Around half of newspaper readers rely only on print edition"
Quoting the January 6th overview, which includes Denver statistics:
"Data from Pew Research Center and other sources show that around half of newspaper readers consume newspapers only in their printed form. In our study of the local news environments in three markedly different U.S. metropolitan areas, nearly or about half of readers of the local daily paper in Denver (46%), Macon, Ga. (48%), and Sioux City, Iowa (53%) did not access the paper online."
Further, the data shows that print readers are "news enthusiasts," and are also more likely to watch television news broadcasts.
Link to PewResearch.org
"Data from Pew Research Center and other sources show that around half of newspaper readers consume newspapers only in their printed form. In our study of the local news environments in three markedly different U.S. metropolitan areas, nearly or about half of readers of the local daily paper in Denver (46%), Macon, Ga. (48%), and Sioux City, Iowa (53%) did not access the paper online."
Further, the data shows that print readers are "news enthusiasts," and are also more likely to watch television news broadcasts.
Link to PewResearch.org
Labels:
Denver PR News and Information
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Denver PR Is Making Headlines Nationally
Quoting the MDEDC's recent posting:
"Metro Denver's robust economy and expanding infrastructure are making headlines nationally. Check out what the media has to say about our region."
Link to read items from these national news outlets:
AreaDevelopment
Hartford Courant
Wall Street Journal
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
MSNBC
The Huffington Post
The New York Times
NH Business Review
BloombergBusiness
Governing
Skift Travel
NationalJournal
USA Today
Bloomberg
AP
The Street Toronto Star
Good work MDEDC and team (and our great city and state)!
"Metro Denver's robust economy and expanding infrastructure are making headlines nationally. Check out what the media has to say about our region."
Link to read items from these national news outlets:
AreaDevelopment
Hartford Courant
Wall Street Journal
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
MSNBC
The Huffington Post
The New York Times
NH Business Review
BloombergBusiness
Governing
Skift Travel
NationalJournal
USA Today
Bloomberg
AP
The Street Toronto Star
Good work MDEDC and team (and our great city and state)!
Labels:
Denver PR News and Information
Sunday, May 10, 2015
PR TACTICS: "Move Over Millennials, Here Comes Generation Z"
For those keeping up on our demographic subgroups, here's an excellent overview about the "under 20-year-olds," called Generation Z (the new realists) by Stephen Dupont, APR.
Quoting from the introduction:
"Roughly defined as those born since 1996, Gen Z is the group of under-20-year-olds, the first generation born into a digital world. The next generation of trendsetters — representing more than 25 percent of the U.S. population (larger than the boomers or millennials, according to the U.S. Census Bureau) — is already beginning to put its stamp on the world."
Link to the Full PR Tactics article.
Quoting from the introduction:
"Roughly defined as those born since 1996, Gen Z is the group of under-20-year-olds, the first generation born into a digital world. The next generation of trendsetters — representing more than 25 percent of the U.S. population (larger than the boomers or millennials, according to the U.S. Census Bureau) — is already beginning to put its stamp on the world."
Link to the Full PR Tactics article.
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