In the News
For decades, publicists have prided themselves on getting their clients quoted in the biggest circulation and most popular publications possible. While that’s certainly a focus at Inkandescent Public Relations, we know that times have changed. Going hyper-local is important, as is having a presence in the social media sphere.
While our clients are regularly featured in such newspapers of record as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Times of London, US News & World Report, Money magazine, Washington Post, and Philadelphia Inquirer — we also get them quoted in Patch.com, Yahoo.com, AOL.com, and newspapers and magazines that circulate in their communities. Radio and TV is also a popular spot for Inkandescent clients, who have been interviewed on the CBS “Early Show,” NBC News, Fox News, “CNN Money,” “The Kojo Nnamdi Show,” and Federal News Radio, among others. Scroll down to see those media mentions.
Inkandescent PR also has thousands of friends, followers, and contacts in the social media world, where we regularly get the word out about our clients. Friend us today: www.facebook.com.
Washington Business Journal, January 9, 2009 — In this week’s Washington Business Journal, HR expert Sharon Armstrong is quoted in an article on page 13 entitled, “Gotta make a plan for inaugural day madhouse.”
Armstrong said executives and human resource professionals have a joint mission: “Communicate, disseminate information, anticipate and get the word out.”
_Work with your human resources team to keep your staff informed of our plans (“We’re closed,” “We’re open, but you can take a vacation day,” etc.) and what’s going on around them. Put together a contact sheet or online list of links to public information about inaugural activities, such as road closing locations and times, suggestions for travel and the like. Get the information to your staff as soon as possible. Then follow up with reminders leading up to Inauguration Day.
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January 4, 2009, The Washington Post Magazine — In today’s issue of The Washington Post Magazine, reporter Elizabeth Chang profiles Hooks Book Events owners about their growing book events business. “Perry Pidgeon Hooks and Loretta Yenson say Washington is the perfect base for a business that brings books and ideas to public and private organizations,” she writes. Says Perry: “Washington’s kind of the central place for thinking and thought production.” Read the article here.
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Celebrate Gettysburg magazine, January 1, 2009 — “His voice resonates with vibrant passion,” writes reporter Adam Kulikowski in the January-February issue of Celebrate Gettysburg. “It fills any room he presides and fills the minds of those in attendance. At 6 foot 3 inches, The Lincoln Leadership Institute at Gettysburg President Steven Wiley’s stature in business and in person commands attention.”
And so begins a thoughtful article about the successes and failures that helped Wiley learn firsthand about what it means to be a true leader in the world of business. For as those who have heard Wiley speak know — his first company, an exterior restoration business, grew from a $50,000 start-up to a multi-million-dollar organization with more than 130 offices in three countries. But in 1989, he lost $4.5 million.
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PLACED ARTICLE
WASHINGTON, DC, January 1, 2009 — Insight into how her three books have helped HR expert Sharon Armstrong’s business is featured in a new book released this month entitled, “42 Rules™ for Driving Success With Books,” by Mitchell Levy, publisher of Happy About, a quick2publish book publisher based in Southern California.
“The authors in this book wrote content that allowed them to demonstrate innovation, share their marketing strategy, improve client retention, and share tricks and techniques on using a tool or service,” Levy explains. “The fact that they put this content in a book gave their ideas weight and increased their credibility and reputation. Having the books show up on Amazon, BN.com and other bookstores as well as personally delivering their books to clients/prospects really helped to drive the impact of their message.”
Armstrong is the author of three books: The Essential HR Handbook, 2007, Stress-Free Performance Appraisals, and Healing the Canine Within. For Levy’s book, she contributed the text for Chapter 25: Get Immediate Credibilty.
She writes: “I hadn’t planned on writing ‘Stress-Free Performance Appraisals’ back in 2002. But when an agent at Career Press read my first book … she liked it, and thought I could write another one for her. The next one was for HR professionals, and right up my alley … “
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WASHINGTON, DC, January 1, 2009 — Lincoln Leadership Institute at Gettysburg president Steven B. Wiley is featured in a new book released this month, “42 Rules™ for Driving Success With Books,” by Mitchell Levy, publisher of Happy About, a quick2print publishing company based in Southern California.
Wiley writes: “I have had the great honor of being invited to speak at some of the biggest organizations and Fortune 500 companies in the world to make presentations based on a book I wrote during the toughest period in my life. It is called ‘The Human Side of High Performance,’ and I am thrilled to say that its message has resonated with some of the most famous, and infamous, leaders of our time who have hired me to speak to their sales teams and managers.”
“I didn’t just wake up one morning and decide I wanted to be a celebrated author and speaker who helps people be more productive and effective as sales and business professionals. I began by trying to help myself.”
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The Mom Entrepreneur, Nov. 22, 2008 — While surfing through the hundreds of reporter queries that I daily field for my PR clients, I saw a request for “Lemons to Lemonade” stories for a terrific new blog called The Mom Entrepreneur. I responded, and the blog founder Traci Bison and I began a wonderful conversation that became her Lemons to Lemonade Feature Number 8, which went live this week.
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Washington Business Journal, November 21, 2008 — What are the biggest challenges facing human resources departments in 2009? A reporter at The Washington Business Journal asked five HR experts, including Sharon Armstrong, owner of Sharon Armstrong & Associates and co-author of The Essential HR Handbook. Her response was featured in the piece issue published today.
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Ethical Human Resourcing, Nov. 13, 2008 — Alice Waagen, PhD, owner of the leadership training firm Workforce Learning, was featured prominently in an article posted Nov. 13 on the Organic Home website. She talked to reporter Scott Westcott about how HR departments are handling bleak jobless reports.
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MAIN LINE TIMES, November 1, 2008 — Main Line Today magazine named the Delaware Market House “Best Gourmet Meals To Go 2008” today, the 13th award for the Gladwyne, PA gourmet grocery store owned by chefs Kim and Edgar Alvarez. “We are really excited to have won this award,” says Chef Kim, a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, who has been a chef at such 4-star restaurants as the Striped Bass. “We won it for the first time in 2006, and are so happy to have this beautiful plaque grace our counters again.”
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Washington Examiner, October 13, 2008 — Alice Waagen, PhD, president of Workforce Learning, was featured today in “Entry Level Careers,” a regular column by Washington Examiner reporter Heather Huhman about why Gen Y is experiencing more difficulty transitioning from the classroom to the workplace than previous generations. Waagen helped with tips on how to make the transition seamless.
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WASHINGTON EXAMINER, Sept. 26, 2008 — Do you know what your references will say? In a Sept. 26 Washington Examiner article reporter Heather Huhman interviewed author and HR expert Sharon Armstrong about how to best handle the opportunity.
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PHILADELPHIA BUSINESS JOURNAL, September 19, 2008 — Kim and Edgar Alvarez are featured on the front page of the business section of today’s Philly Business Journal. “As business plans go, it’s perhaps not the most sophisticated, but it sure is straightforward,” Stone writes. “Kim and Edgar Alvarez have a catering business to run, they’ve got a retail shop to manage, and they have ambitions for growth. Their strategy: Make the best food they can.”
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WOMEN ENTREPRENEUR, August 15, 2008 — “One of the hardest things I’ve ever done as a business owner was to fire someone,” begins reporter Aliza Sherman for an article posted on WomenEntrepreneur.com. She interviewed HR expert Sharon Armstrong, author of The Essential HR Handbook, about how to soften the blow.
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FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE, August 2008 — An article was published in the August issue of Foreign Policy magazine by Social Technologies’ Josh Calders. “We were pleased to see our Speed of Change Index covered in the new issue of Foreign Policy,” says Calder, who wrote:
How swiftly or slowly life changes in particular countries is the subject of the Speed of Change Index, which measures changes in urbanization, literacy, GDP per capita, civil liberties, and access to a telephone, TV, and the Internet in countries during the last 15 years…. The index reveals where citizens’ needs are rapidly changing, new markets are opening, and the risk of instability runs high.
The magazine’s graphic shows selected countries in Europe, Africa, and Asia, but the index actually includes nearly every country on Earth, with the exception of some microstates.
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The Futurist magazine, July 2008 — Hot off the presses is the July-August issue of The Futurist magazine, featuring the first in a two-part article by Social Technologies’ futurist Andy Hines.
Entitled “Consumer Trends in Three Different ‘Worlds,” it is the first in a two-part series in which Hines looks at the big trends in demography, money, and consumerism that will shape the world in the next decade.
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CBS EARLY SHOW, July 3, 2008 — Featured today on the CBS Early Show was a spot on the study Social Technologies’ conducted this spring for Spike TV on The Future of American Men. At a man-friendly bar called the Black Sheep Pub and Restaurant in Philadelphia, anchor Maggie Rodriguez talked to five men earlier in the week who each represented one of the personas outlined in the study. Then, from the plaza of the GM building in New York City, she introduced the piece saying: “Let’s talk about men.”
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HOW’D YOU SCORE THAT GIG?, July 2008 — “When I was writing this book, countless people asked me which job I thought was the coolest,” explains author Alexandra Levit in her new book, How’d You Score That Gig? In this “Guide to the Coolest Jobs, and How To Get Them,” she referred to the job of a futurist, and interviewed Social Technologies’ Josh Calder about his career.
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COLUMNIST MILDRED CULP, June 29, 2008 — “You’re about to be playing in an entirely new ballgame if you’ve been marketing exclusively to baby boomers – unless you have a timeless product or service,” writes syndicated columnist Mildred Culp in a June 29 article, “Expand Your Marketing from Boomers to Gen Y.” She interviewed futurist Andy Hines of Social Technologies about the possibilities.
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THE MIAMI HERALD, May 24, 2008 — “Technology has changed the way families stay in touch, profoundly influencing not only how often we communicate, but also what we share with each other,” writes Miami Herald reporter Ana Veciana-Suarez in a May 24 article. “But does more mean better?” she asks.
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TELEVISIONWEEK, May 11, 2008 — “Television today is in a state of flux,” writes TelevisionWeek correspondent Allison J. Waldman in the May 11 issue of the magazine. “New technologies, multiple platforms, decreasing audience share for the major networks, emerging digital interactivity—how will the industry adapt to the changes and make them television viable and thriving in the decade ahead?”
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BUSINESSWEEK, May 8, 2008 — In a May 8 BusinessWeek article entitled “The Slump: It’s a Guy Thing,” Social Technologies’ Andy Hines was interviewed by reporter Peter Coy about the fact that women and men are “operating in two different economies.” Is it true?
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ENTREPRENEUR MAGAZINE, May 2008 — Is your company ready for the nanotech boom? For an article entitled “Small Wonders” that appears in the May issue of Entrepreneur magazine, reporter Andrea Cooper talked to Social Technologies’ Peter von Stackelberg about a brief he wrote on the future of nanomaterials.
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WASHINGTONIAN MAGAZINE, February 2008 — Hot off the presses is the February 2008 issue of Washingtonian magazine featuring an article about Social Technologies’ founder Tom Conger by the magazine’s managing editor, Ellen Ryan.
She interviewed Conger about the changes we’re are likely to see in the coming years. He shared some thoughts on how his children will live as adults in 10 or 15 years, what robots will do for the average home, and how valued-based buying decisions will affect what is sold at grocery stores.
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THE WASHINGTON POST EXPRESS, Dec. 14, 2007 — Your friends seem to have everything, or are steering clear of accumulating more “stuff,” so what do you buy them this holiday season? In a December 14 article for The Washington Post Express, reporter Kris Coronado suggested Washingtonians tap into a new trend of buying experiential gifts. For insight into the trend, Coronado turned to Social Technologies’ Director of Programs Chris Carbone.
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NEW YORK TIMES, December 13, 2007 — In an article that ran in the Dec. 13 issue of the New York Times, “You won’t find me in my office, I’m working,” reporter Lisa Belkin talked about the growing trend of “white space,” the place where workers go to think, write, and be creative. She spoke with Futurist Andy Hines about the topic.
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MSNBC, November 26, 2007 — Social Technologies Futurist Gio Van Remortel was recently featured on MSNBC.com in the article: For Gen X, Time To Grow Up And Get A Broker. “They’re not a saving generation — they’re spenders,” said Gio Van Remortel began.
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CBS EARLY SHOW, Nov. 13, 2007 — Social Technologies’ Director of Consulting, Andy Hines, appeared yesterday morning on The Early Show (CBS) to discuss our recent seven-month study for MTV Research, “The Future of Happiness: What makes 12 to 24-year-olds happy?” Following are his thoughts on the research, and the findings.
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MODERN BRIDE, June 1, 2007 — “Lately, guest gifts seem to fall into one of two hot categories: something completely personalized, or something to eat,” writes Modern Bride reporter Ann Cochran. “You’ll find great options for both approaches at a Virginia-based Web site, greathandmadegifts.com.”
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