Industry backs controversial campaign aimed at cutting PR spam
29 Jan 2010 | by Gemma O'Reilly
Key PR industry figures have thrown their weight behind a controversial campaign that aims to cut PR spam.
Click
to remove filters
When two tribes go to war, one is all that you can score. Football: The beautiful game to some, the root cause of acrimonious divorce for others.
Key PR industry figures have thrown their weight behind a controversial campaign that aims to cut PR spam.
The media needs to act more responsibly when reporting health risk stories in the wake of MMR scare doctor Andrew Wakefield, says a PR expert.
The Financial Times is planning to make changes to the way it sells licences for its products.
Entertainment agency Hackford Jones is to promote Simon Cowell's celebrity-studded charity single for Haiti.
The Grocer's features editor Alex Black has quit to take his first job in PR.
Freeview has appointed House PR to handle the publicity for the launch of Freeview HD.
Interim managers are increasingly challenging PR consultancies for project work according to research from Interim Performers, part of recruitment firm VMA Group and freelance consultant network The Counsel House.
The Department of Health is launching a campaign to warn drinkers of the unseen health damage caused by regularly drinking more than the NHS advises.
The reputation of the public sector is in poor shape. In the past 12 months, the public sector has been ravaged by reports about social services (Baby P and recently the Edlington case), MPs expenses, chief executives' salaries, and pension payouts.