Social Media and Strategic Communication: A two-year study of attitudes and perceptions about social media among college students
Social media have been adopted from its inception by public relations, advertising and marketing practitioners as tools for communicating with strategic publics. Wright and Hinson (2009) have established that public relations professionals perceive social media positively with respect to strategi...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Insitute for Public Relations
2012-09-01
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Series: | Public Relations Journal |
Online Access: | https://prjournal.instituteforpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2012LewisNichols.pdf |
Summary: | Social media have been adopted from its inception by public relations,
advertising and marketing practitioners as tools for communicating with strategic publics.
Wright and Hinson (2009) have established that public relations professionals perceive
social media positively with respect to strategic communication. Given that social media
are having an impact on professionals in the industry, the current study examined if
social media are having a similar impact on college students in general and students
studying in the area of public relations and advertising. The uses, attitudes and
perceptions of social media among college students were explored through survey data
over a 2-year period. The researchers found that education affects students’
understanding and attitudes towards social media. It is important for educators and
curriculum leaders to have an appreciation of students’ knowledge base of social media
and how they employ it in their construction of knowledge and reality. It is also valuable
for professionals in the industry, who are hiring recent college graduates, to gain insight
into how students perceive social media in their own lives and as strategic tools.
Findings suggest that college students majoring advertising and public relations view
social media more positively than other majors because they understand how it fits in to
the industry in which they are being educated. These finding suggest that social media
should be incorporated into strategic communications curriculum to better prepare
students for the current media climate. |
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ISSN: | 1942-4604 1942-4604 |