PR Training

Top 10 Quotes From the PRSA International Conference

Punch lines, one liners, tweetable inspirations — all speakers have them. Here are some of my favorite quotes from this year’s PRSA International Conference.

Punch lines, one liners, tweetable inspirations — all speakers have them. Here are some of my favorite quotes from this year’s PRSA International Conference.

  • “If you want to catch a fish, you need to think like a fish. Use the bait fish like, not the bait you like. If you want to engage a reader, you need to think like a reader. Use the content your readers will like, not the content you like.” – Ann Wylie
  • “A loyal Fan trumps a neutral party.” – Chris Brogan
  • “Stories are more than compelling facts. People remember stories more than they remember statistics.” – Soledad O’Brien
  • “Business is about belonging, which means inclusion is the new black.” – Chris Brogan
  • “You need to write for humans, not for Google.” – Ann Wylie
  • “Website is home base. Facebook should never be home base. You are a visitor to Facebook.” – Chris Brogan
  • “Nobody wants a quarter-inch drill. They want a quarter-inch hole. Stop selling the drill and start selling the hole.” – Ann Wylie
  • “The future of your business should not be about technology. It should be about the people.” – Geno Church
  • “Cultivate visibility because attention is currency.” – Chris Brogan
  •  “You don’t target your audience, you channel your audience.” – Geno Church

Which quotes do you remember from the Conference or from reading the #prsaicon Twitter stream? Which ones are worthy of printing out and putting up in your office? Share your favorites here.

Ashley Walters, APR, Word-of-Mouth Marketing Manager for Empower MediaMarketing, oversees influencer marketing for clients across multiple categories and is a board member for Cincinnati’s PRSA Chapter. Contact her on Twitter and LinkedIn.

About the author

Ashley Walters, APR

1 Comment

  • “You need to write for humans, not for Google.”  – This is a funny one, because you really do need to write for both. You can write an entire article about a subject for a human without using the keywords that they would have search for that content for… But then I guess that’s also writing for how people will be using Google. 

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