Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social Media
The international survey of public relations practitioners (n=574) reported about in this article appears to be the world’s first extensive examination of how social media are being implemented in public relations practice. In addition to measuring how social media are being employed in the pract...
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doaj-2e9ed7de1c914968b24ea99b681006da2020-11-24T21:30:32ZengInsitute for Public RelationsPublic Relations Journal 1942-46041942-46042009-06-0133Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social MediaDonald K. WrightMichelle Drifka HinsonThe international survey of public relations practitioners (n=574) reported about in this article appears to be the world’s first extensive examination of how social media are being implemented in public relations practice. In addition to measuring how social media are being employed in the practice of public relations, this study also explores actual social media use by individual public relations practitioners. Results suggest meaningful and statistically significant gaps exist between what practitioners say is happening in terms of social media use and what they say should be happening. When subjects were asked how important various social media are in the overall public relations efforts of their organizations, respondents listed search engine marketing most important followed in importance by blogs, social networks, video sharing and forums or message boards. When asked how important the same list of social media options should be responses didn’t do much to change the perceived order of importance, but mean scores and the overall perceived importance of all of the measured items are much higher when subjects are asked what should be happening in terms of social media use than they are when the question asks what actually is happening. Differences based upon demographics found younger respondents were more likely to recommend using social media in public relations. They also were more likely to use social media and other Internet-based technologies in their daily pursuit of news and information.https://prjournal.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/Examining-How-Public.pdf |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Donald K. Wright Michelle Drifka Hinson |
spellingShingle |
Donald K. Wright Michelle Drifka Hinson Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social Media Public Relations Journal |
author_facet |
Donald K. Wright Michelle Drifka Hinson |
author_sort |
Donald K. Wright |
title |
Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social Media |
title_short |
Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social Media |
title_full |
Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social Media |
title_fullStr |
Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social Media |
title_full_unstemmed |
Examining How Public Relations Practitioners Actually Are Using Social Media |
title_sort |
examining how public relations practitioners actually are using social media |
publisher |
Insitute for Public Relations |
series |
Public Relations Journal |
issn |
1942-4604 1942-4604 |
publishDate |
2009-06-01 |
description |
The international survey of public relations practitioners (n=574) reported
about in this article appears to be the world’s first extensive examination of how
social media are being implemented in public relations practice. In addition to
measuring how social media are being employed in the practice of public
relations, this study also explores actual social media use by individual public
relations practitioners. Results suggest meaningful and statistically significant
gaps exist between what practitioners say is happening in terms of social media
use and what they say should be happening. When subjects were asked how
important various social media are in the overall public relations efforts of their
organizations, respondents listed search engine marketing most important
followed in importance by blogs, social networks, video sharing and forums or
message boards. When asked how important the same list of social media
options should be responses didn’t do much to change the perceived order of
importance, but mean scores and the overall perceived importance of all of the
measured items are much higher when subjects are asked what should be
happening in terms of social media use than they are when the question asks
what actually is happening. Differences based upon demographics found
younger respondents were more likely to recommend using social media in
public relations. They also were more likely to use social media and other
Internet-based technologies in their daily pursuit of news and information. |
url |
https://prjournal.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/Examining-How-Public.pdf |
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