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Within a month of taking leadership, Jodi Brooks led what Harold Burson calls one of the most significant new business wins in the history of Burson-Marsteller. And at SAP, Atle Erlingsson drove an internal campaign on gender pay equality and a successful media campaign that garnered coverage in Forbes, Fox, CNBC and the Wall Street Journal, helping the company to be named for the first time to Fortune’s Top 100 workplaces.

The Week in PR

December 12th, 2017 by
Our weekly roundup of news, trends and personnel moves in communications, marketing and PR. This week's stories include Mario Batali's unsavory behavior, federal politicians caught in #metoo and FleishmanHillard has a new tech leader.
An all-star lineup of communicators who routinely go above and beyond the call of duty were honored at the 2017 PR People Awards Luncheon, held Dec. 5 at the historic National Press Club in Washington, D.C. When accepting their awards, many of them expressed the need to be humble, to be receptive to new ideas and ultimately, to be an active listener, as the keys to their success.
With the firings of Charlie Rose, Matt Lauer and Garrison Keillor, the face of crisis PR has been changed, for the moment at least. When your client is fired before he can even say, "I need crisis PR," what's left for crisis PR people to do? On the other hand, perhaps all these men still need crisis PR. Look at Charlie Rose, who was ambushed on the street and gave a very inappropriate response to a question.
UCLA's and Pac-12's extended media moment following the incident in China is nothing new in an era in which not responding—as UCLA did by declining to take questions from the press—is a form of response in itself. We can now add UCLA to the list of brands ensnared in our divisive cultural and political climate.
Over the weekend, four brands announced they would not advertise on Sean Hannity’s Fox News program, but none felt the backlash quite like Keurig, as videos of people smashing its machines lit up Twitter. The violent response underscores the tricky situation brands are in when caught in the crossfire of a politically charged controversy. Keurig first faced backlash for its inaction. When it took a stand, it faced another angry wave of protests.

The Week in PR

November 7th, 2017 by
Our weekly roundup of news, trends and personnel moves in PR and communications. This week's stories include Papa John's deflection onto the NFL; a judge tells Wells Fargo's board and senior executives they should have known; and IBM's Jon Iwata is getting set to retire.
When Papa John's blamed its declining sales on the issue of NFL players kneeling during the national anthem, many found the correlation hard to believe. DiGiorno Pizza saw the opportunity to call them out for it on Twitter and did not hold back, while Pizza Hut subtly thrust itself into the spotlight.

The Week in PR

October 24th, 2017 by
Our weekly look at news, trends and personnel moves in PR, marketing and communications. This week we ponder whether it's good to let a crisis linger. Facebook has a new place for publishers' posts during a test in 6 countries. And PR News friend Melissa Wisehart has a new job in Atlanta.
Contact: Jessica Placencia Marketing Manager PR News [email protected] PR News' PR People Finalists Announced; Winners Will Be Unveiled at the PR People Awards Luncheon on December 5 The PR People Awards finalists represent the professionals making… Continued