Making an impression
In this Age of Information, where competing facts and figures, opinions and appeals bombard us from all directions, one form of storytelling helps cut through the noise.
In this Age of Information, where competing facts and figures, opinions and appeals bombard us from all directions, one form of storytelling helps cut through the noise.
The British Royal Family has veered from public relations triumph (William and Kate Windsor) to public relations disaster (take your pick).
Apps have shaped the way people experience the internet.
World leaders and CEOs gathering in the snow of Davos this year might have experienced a little extra chill at the sheer weight of pessimism on display. The United Nations captured the mood by choosing that platform to predict a global ‘worst cas
On April 14, Eyjafjallajökull volcano in the south of Iceland started erupting clouds of black ash. The whole world soon woke up to the consequences, as airspace was closed down across Europe, affecting flights throughout the world.
I am not sure precisely where or when this particular story began; but, looking back, I’d say that it was just around my tenth birthday when I first stumbled upon writings of C.S. Lewis and his imagination-absorbing tales of Narnia.
In the past few years, there has been increased interest in the history of public relations, spurred on by the International History of Public Relations Conference and