I never quite trust these hit counts, and as old Seth and I always say, it's who visits rather than how many. So I won't give you the raw numbers. But the tiny bars represent several hundreds of daily hits and the big bar represents … more.
A communication awards program as communicators would design it
What if you could enter a communication awards program simply by explaining to the guru judges—consultants like Roger D'Aprix, Gary Grates and Steve Crescenzo, top pros like Terry McKenzie and Erik Battenberg—why you thought your program or vehicle is cool and letting them decide how your work stacks up?
I'm the program chairman of just such an awards program. It's the E2E Communication Awards, for excellence in employee communication.
Co-sponsored by McMurry and Communitelligence, E2E will name winners during an intense educational keynote session led by Crescenzo, at the Innovating Employee Engagement conference in Chicago June 16.
Seriously. That's exactly how the program works, and it's that simple.
But the deadline is nearly upon us. It's May 22.
Enter your best work here—and now!
Facebook: The great leveler
I'm given to reverence of older people who have lived through history that I've only read about. One of the people I've revered most is Chester Burger, who at CBS in 1947 became the nation's first TV news reporter, and who went on to a stellar career in the very highest levels of public relations, giving advice to the top management of AT&T, a little gig that lasted from 1955 to 1988.
He used his talent as a communicator to push civil rights in the 1960s, served on countless boards while writing books and taking wonderful photographs.
In his retirement, he's been classy and generous in rendering advice to young Turks, this writer happily included on occasion.
Chet sashayed through the 20th century with a set of 19th century manners.
So I chuckled ruefully when I looked him up on Facebook. I wasn't surprised to find the 87-year-old there grinning above a list of 62 friends of all ages; the man has formaldehyde in his brain case. But it was amusing to be offered the opportunity to:
Send Chester a Message
Suggest Friends for Chester
Poke Chester
Another story, another reference to Studs Terkel. Once, when Terkel was about Chet's age now, a young reporter from the Sun-Times called. She was on a story about Chicago celebrities' favorite watering holes.
"Tell me, Studs," she asked, "where do you party?"