For decades, corporate communications operated on a stable assumption: corporate representation flowed through identifiable channels. Press releases, executives, filings, interviews, and owned media created a legible chain of attribution. Third parties could interpret those statements, but the source and timing were contestable.
For decades, corporate communications operated on a stable assumption: corporate representation flowed through identifiable channels. Press releases, executives, filings, interviews, and owned media created a legible chain of attribution. Third parties could interpret those statements, but the source and timing were contestable.