Proofreading Pointers: Three Ways to Polish Conversational Writing

When proofreading a document, you want to ensure your message is clear. You have an idea in your mind, you transform it into words, and you hope the person reading it understands.

The words we choose are often too conversational. If you nonchalantly said certain words or phrases in conversation, your idea could make perfect sense and not disrupt the cohesiveness of the discussion. In writing, even if an informal tone is appropriate, little differences can affect your message’s clarity and effectiveness. You want to choose formal words even amidst a humorous, witty, or casual subject matter.

Proofreading Pointers: Three Ways to Polish Conversational Writing

Spin to Win Talent

Public relations practitioners spin for a living. There, I said it. I dared to utter the “S” word. Get over it and listen to why the profession’s revulsion to the word is just misplaced and counterproductive aggression.

A few years ago at the Public Relations Society of America International Conference in Detroit, the keynote speaker caused quite a stir among the attendees when she use the word “spin” several times while discussing the PR profession.

Because that struck such a chord, I’ve been keeping an eye on reactions to the word whenever it’s used around PR people. For the most part, I’ve noticed that too many practitioners young and old, entry level to veteran, are bothered by it.

Spin to Win Talent

Can Walking on Coals Unleash Your Personal Power?

A few months back, I invested in a trip to Chicago and spent four days with peak performance coach Tony Robbins.

If you don’t know Robbins or his work, he is worth knowing. He grew up in a household with little money, often experiencing holidays with no food and a rotating door of four absent fathers.

His career took shape in the early 1980s as he walked on the beach, 40 pounds overweight, listening to the tune “Barracuda” and feeling a big change was needed.

At the age of 19, after working with other legendary speakers like Jim Rohn, Robbin’s path of success included conducting seminars, radio shows, writing books, and coaching.

Can Walking on Coals Unleash Your Personal Power?

Nine Reasons Recruiters Never Call

Have you ever wondered why a recruiter never called after you submitted your résumé? If so, you are not alone.

Here are nine scenarios and some advice:

Situation: Too many responses and not enough time: One advertised job can bring as many as three hundred responses in less than three days. It is logistically impossible for a recruiter to reply personally to every applicant.

Advice: Network your way into the company. This is the best way to circumvent the tidal wave of résumés recruiters face daily.

Nine Reasons Recruiters Never Call

A Call to Unlearn

People often ask me what it takes to be or to hire a great connection planner. Does a candidate need to have a media background? Can yesterday’s brand planners morph into today’s connection planners? Is it more about creativity or strategic smarts?

My short answers to the above are no, yes, and both (but leaning toward the latter). Ask someone else in the field, though, and you could get different answers.

A Call to Unlearn

Why Walmart’s New Ad Speaks ‘More Than Words’

Walmart in February rolled out a spot, called “More Than Words,” promoting its partnership with the National Urban League in celebration of Black History Month. The spot, by GlobalHue (named Adweek’s Multicultural Agency of the Decade), shows a young, African-American boy rising to the challenge of tutoring a much older man. (“All I know is his name is James and he needs extra help with his reading,” the boy says.) The spot—which is running at frequent intervals throughout the rest of the year—taps into the African-American mom’s desire to see her child “do good and have a positive impact on society,” said GlobalHue vp and group account director Detavio Samuels. Brandweek spoke with Samuels and the agency’s Vida Cornelious, vp-group creative director, and Ozioma Egwuonqu, vp-cultural strategy director, about the multicultural insights the agency leveraged in creating the ad. Excerpts from that conversation are below.

Why Walmart’s New Ad Speaks ‘More Than Words’.

Whither Twitter?

The debate over when and how Twitter will offer marketers paid placement among its 50 million daily tweets heated up last week when rumors emerged that Twitter will finally unveil its ad platform this month. For now, it’s speculation, but clues to how Twitter might integrate advertising can be found in the clutch of companies already integrating brand messages in the Twitter ecosystem.

via Whither Twitter?.

Sweet! Chocapic Augmented Reality

Chocapic, the chocolate cereal from Nestlé, is promoting its sponsorship of the new movie “Arthur and the revenge of Maltazard” with an Augmented Reality application that turns the cereal package into a game console. The online portion of the campaign, recently featured on the Creative Zone, has a teaser game that can be played with or without a webcam.

A great post was written originally on Jawbone.TV about the Chocapic Augmented Reality campaign and we would like to thank its author, Todd Denis, for letting us re-post the blog for our readers. Enjoy. Continue reading

IAB Confab: Future of Branded Sites Unclear

So, are Web publishers totally screwed — or aren’t they?

That’s not the official theme at the Interactive Advertising Bureau’s annual meeting (it’s actually “Revenue: the Next Wave”), but it appears to be the reigning question at the event, which is being held this week in Carlsbad, Calif.

Based on the topics discussed by various speakers thus far, the future of ad-supported traditional branded sites is very much up in the air. The ongoing threat of ad networks, exchanges and demand-side buying platforms turning sites into commodities has many asking scary questions — while others are expressing steadfast defiance.

via IAB Confab: Future of Branded Sites Unclear.

Photography Competition Call For Entries

Introduce your work to the world. Enter Communication Arts magazine’s 51st Photography Competition. Hundreds of award-winning images are selected for their creative excellence by an esteemed jury of designers and art directors in editorial, advertising, institutional, for sale and unpublished categories.

Why enter?
CA’s Award of Excellence is one of the most-coveted awards in the industry. If selected, winning places you in the highest ranks of your profession. Ask any creative director which competitions rank as the most influential, and they’ll place Communication Arts at the top of the list.

Submission Guidelines and FAQs:
commarts.com/competitions/photography
To Enter Online NOW:
submit2.commarts.com
Entries must be sumitted by March 26, 2010. Entries submitted after that date require a $10 per entry late fee. No entries will be accepted after April 9, 2010.

Google Updates Publisher Ad Server

Google is taking the wraps off its new publisher-side ad platform, combining its technologies with DoubleClick’s systems.

DoubleClick for Publishers melds DART for Publishers and Google Ad Manager. The combined product is designed to ease the complexity publishers face in serving ads, managing ad network relationships and maximizing revenue from inventory sold directly and through ad nets or exchanges.

Google paid $3.1 billion to acquire DoubleClick in April 2007.

New features include an open API that lets publishers tie in third-party applications like forecasting and workflow tools, integration with the DoubleClick Ad Exchange and new yield-optimization features. Continue reading