Chick-fil-A Sues Vermont Artist, Invokes Streisand Effect
Chick-fil-A’s legal team must be bored and have nothing better to do. At least nothing better than pursuing legal action against an artist for using a generic part of their tagline.
Chick-fil-A’s legal team must be bored and have nothing better to do. At least nothing better than pursuing legal action against an artist for using a generic part of their tagline.
The New York Times recently ran a story titled The Dwindling Power of a College Degree. This is news to me as someone not quite 30, but at one point, according to The Times, a college degree apparently provided a virtual lock on a well-paying job.
Anil Dash has an unmissable post titled: Facebook is gaslighting the web. We can fix it. Indeed, if this description of Facebook’s latest actions is accurate, it should be cause for concern among all web content producers.
Nothing frustrates me more than poorly executed or disingenuous marketing and PR efforts. That’s one of the reasons I’m motivated to blog: I’m irrationally committed to seeing brands implement quality, useful marketing programs.
Previously we noted that your brand’s Facebook updates were pretty much ignored and poked a bit of fun at those who considered that a “shocker.” Well, more research continues to prove what we’ve been arguing for ages.
Mathew Ingram at GigaOm recently (re) shared some data from PEW Research Center, and added his own commentary on how media companies are still “doing it wrong” on Twitter.