@chrissyfarr I don’t know who remembers what the early websites/digital experiences of hospitals and providers was like, but many now actually look, feel and act more like a modern consumer experience. Also, big leaps in urgent care access.
Are you a woman who changed your name when you got married?
Congress is considering a bill that could make it much harder for you to vote.
Call your rep—this is not a drill. https://t.co/P7CcCnFTk1
@jrpsaki I guess people have forgotten what these are. They’re called Thank You notes, and polite people with a sense of civility hand write them and mail them to show their appreciation.
Lies and conspiracies about my family and me are nothing new. Still, I am particularly troubled by the absurd claims that continue to pervade social media this week, fact checks be damned.
Facts: I’m proud of the Clinton Foundation work that has helped tens of millions of people worldwide. Our impact speaks for itself. I don’t take a cent from the Foundation. Never have. In fact, my family personally contributes meaningfully to our work each year.
Misinformation isn't just noise—it's a weapon. Efforts to undermine good work won't stop us, and we stand in solidarity with those who are committed to truth, public health, progress, and the endless potential of our future.
The creative process:
1. Discover - Read a lot. Observe the world. Notice.
2. Collect - Immediately record anything that strikes you.
3. Generate - Build on your notes to brainstorm lots of ideas.
4. Combine - Connect previously unconnected ideas.
5. Refine - Edit, edit, edit. Select the best.
Note to self: try for less animus… "For better or worse, I don't really think animus is helpful, particularly in my job," @DrFaucis1 told @statnews. "I think when you have animus to some people, it sometimes clouds your thinking."
The new trend after founder-led sales is going to be founder-led PR.
It never made any sense for CEOs to outsource the most interesting part of their business: Their personal story. And the world has shifted from caring about brands to caring far more about individuals.
It's easy to find ways to improve when you are genuinely curious about something. Rather than asking yourself, "How can I be better at this?" start by asking, "How can I be more curious about this?"
Think of a time you failed or struggled greatly.
If you were to view that experience in a more useful way, what story would you tell yourself?
What did it teach you? How did it prepare you for what came next?
Turn your failures into lessons.
It is nearly impossible to have your best idea the first time you think about something.
The most likely way to uncover important insights is to frequently revisit a problem. The longer you’re in the game, the more ideas bubble up to the surface.
Time unlocks insights.
"If you want to do media relations, think of the journalist as a journalist. And then correspondent with them like you would if you were in that role."
Yes!