Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
News
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts115/v4/fe/61/de/fe61ded8-3d14-64db-7573-586be3d8c645/mza_5635333629237080811.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Women in PR
Ana Adi
34 episodes
3 months ago
In this conversation, Anke Schmidt shares her journey into public relations, beginning with an internship in France that sparked her interest in intercultural communication. She discusses her extensive experience working in Asia-Pacific as a communications leader for BASF, highlighting the cultural challenges and strategies she developed to navigate complex international environments. Throughout the discussion, Anke provides insights on indirect influence, managing global teams, and the importance of understanding cultural contexts when implementing communication strategies. She also reflects on her involvement with Global Women in PR Germany and the importance of balancing career ambitions with family priorities. Takeaways - Anke's career in PR began through intercultural experiences between French and German business practices - Cultural adaptation requires both resilience and strategic thinking about indirect influence - Understanding power dynamics across cultures is essential for effective global communication - When managing global teams, consider resource disparities between headquarters and regional offices - Successful international PR requires flexible approaches to planning and implementation - Indirect influence strategies can be effective in hierarchical organizational cultures - Building community among global team members helps overcome resource and expertise gaps - Women need networks and visible role models in PR leadership positions - Family should remain a priority even amid successful career development - Effective intercultural communication often comes through lived experience rather than just training
Show more...
Business
RSS
All content for Women in PR is the property of Ana Adi and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In this conversation, Anke Schmidt shares her journey into public relations, beginning with an internship in France that sparked her interest in intercultural communication. She discusses her extensive experience working in Asia-Pacific as a communications leader for BASF, highlighting the cultural challenges and strategies she developed to navigate complex international environments. Throughout the discussion, Anke provides insights on indirect influence, managing global teams, and the importance of understanding cultural contexts when implementing communication strategies. She also reflects on her involvement with Global Women in PR Germany and the importance of balancing career ambitions with family priorities. Takeaways - Anke's career in PR began through intercultural experiences between French and German business practices - Cultural adaptation requires both resilience and strategic thinking about indirect influence - Understanding power dynamics across cultures is essential for effective global communication - When managing global teams, consider resource disparities between headquarters and regional offices - Successful international PR requires flexible approaches to planning and implementation - Indirect influence strategies can be effective in hierarchical organizational cultures - Building community among global team members helps overcome resource and expertise gaps - Women need networks and visible role models in PR leadership positions - Family should remain a priority even amid successful career development - Effective intercultural communication often comes through lived experience rather than just training
Show more...
Business
https://i1.sndcdn.com/artworks-CV9LVNrBz71mWyUD-zJ7FSw-t3000x3000.jpg
#16 Erica Ciszek_Women in PR with Ana Adi
Women in PR
49 minutes 58 seconds
4 years ago
#16 Erica Ciszek_Women in PR with Ana Adi
Today we’ll focus on public relations for social justice, on the times when activism is public relations. To do so, we’ll also consider whether public relations practitioners themselves should be change agents. And we’ll be introducing a new view on theorizing public relations: queer theorizing. This is all part of Dr Erica Ciszek’s research and it is with them that we’ll be chatting today. They are an Assistant Professor with the Stan Richards School of Advertising & Public Relations at the University of Texas with their work published in many of PR’s most valued academic journals including Public Relations Review, Journal of Communication and Public Relations Inquiry to name a few.
Women in PR
In this conversation, Anke Schmidt shares her journey into public relations, beginning with an internship in France that sparked her interest in intercultural communication. She discusses her extensive experience working in Asia-Pacific as a communications leader for BASF, highlighting the cultural challenges and strategies she developed to navigate complex international environments. Throughout the discussion, Anke provides insights on indirect influence, managing global teams, and the importance of understanding cultural contexts when implementing communication strategies. She also reflects on her involvement with Global Women in PR Germany and the importance of balancing career ambitions with family priorities. Takeaways - Anke's career in PR began through intercultural experiences between French and German business practices - Cultural adaptation requires both resilience and strategic thinking about indirect influence - Understanding power dynamics across cultures is essential for effective global communication - When managing global teams, consider resource disparities between headquarters and regional offices - Successful international PR requires flexible approaches to planning and implementation - Indirect influence strategies can be effective in hierarchical organizational cultures - Building community among global team members helps overcome resource and expertise gaps - Women need networks and visible role models in PR leadership positions - Family should remain a priority even amid successful career development - Effective intercultural communication often comes through lived experience rather than just training