Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field Study

In a statewide experimental field study, Kansas newspapers were sent news releases over a four-month period addressing four children’s health issues. Half of the releases contained state-level data; half contained county-level data. A content analysis showed that the effect of localizing content...

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Main Authors: Bonnie Bressers, Joye Gordon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Insitute for Public Relations 2010-09-01
Series:Public Relations Journal
Online Access:https://prjournal.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2010BressersGordon.pdf
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spelling doaj-4c919234861f47b98e51e934cf451d392020-11-25T01:15:19ZengInsitute for Public RelationsPublic Relations Journal 1942-46041942-46042010-09-0144Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field StudyBonnie BressersJoye GordonIn a statewide experimental field study, Kansas newspapers were sent news releases over a four-month period addressing four children’s health issues. Half of the releases contained state-level data; half contained county-level data. A content analysis showed that the effect of localizing content was overwhelming, with county-level data published 6-to-1 times more than state-level news releases. Additionally, front-page placement of news releases occurred one-quarter of the time. A last paragraph that provided resources for additional information was included in publication almost 70% of the time. Moreover, key text presenting children’s health issues as a chronic rather than an episodic event was retained nearly 95% of the time. Utilization of readily available, public data and relational software can efficiently increase publication frequency and prominence of motivated messages — in this case, children’s health — and impact the rhetorical framing of those topics in newspapers.https://prjournal.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2010BressersGordon.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bonnie Bressers
Joye Gordon
spellingShingle Bonnie Bressers
Joye Gordon
Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field Study
Public Relations Journal
author_facet Bonnie Bressers
Joye Gordon
author_sort Bonnie Bressers
title Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field Study
title_short Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field Study
title_full Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field Study
title_fullStr Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field Study
title_full_unstemmed Increasing Publicity and Thematic News Coverage: The Impact of Localizing News Releases in a State-Wide Experimental Field Study
title_sort increasing publicity and thematic news coverage: the impact of localizing news releases in a state-wide experimental field study
publisher Insitute for Public Relations
series Public Relations Journal
issn 1942-4604
1942-4604
publishDate 2010-09-01
description In a statewide experimental field study, Kansas newspapers were sent news releases over a four-month period addressing four children’s health issues. Half of the releases contained state-level data; half contained county-level data. A content analysis showed that the effect of localizing content was overwhelming, with county-level data published 6-to-1 times more than state-level news releases. Additionally, front-page placement of news releases occurred one-quarter of the time. A last paragraph that provided resources for additional information was included in publication almost 70% of the time. Moreover, key text presenting children’s health issues as a chronic rather than an episodic event was retained nearly 95% of the time. Utilization of readily available, public data and relational software can efficiently increase publication frequency and prominence of motivated messages — in this case, children’s health — and impact the rhetorical framing of those topics in newspapers.
url https://prjournal.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2010BressersGordon.pdf
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