A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating Violence

BackgroundThe Emory Jane Fonda Center implemented the Start Strong Atlanta social marketing campaign, “Keep It Strong ATL”, in 2007 to promote the development of healthy adolescent relationships and to foster the prevention of adolescent dating abuse among 11-14 year olds....

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Main Authors: Lambert, Danielle N, Bishop, Lauren E, Guetig, Stephanie, Frew, Paula M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2014-11-01
Series:JMIR Research Protocols
Online Access:http://www.researchprotocols.org/2014/4/e64/
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spelling doaj-d40c19f6f8574bf290d8ea3775ddc1af2021-05-02T19:28:38ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Research Protocols1929-07482014-11-0134e6410.2196/resprot.3546A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating ViolenceLambert, Danielle NBishop, Lauren EGuetig, StephanieFrew, Paula M BackgroundThe Emory Jane Fonda Center implemented the Start Strong Atlanta social marketing campaign, “Keep It Strong ATL”, in 2007 to promote the development of healthy adolescent relationships and to foster the prevention of adolescent dating abuse among 11-14 year olds. ObjectiveA formative evaluation was conducted to understand whether messages directed at the target audience were relevant to the program’s relationship promotion and violence prevention goals, and whether the “Web 2.0” social media channels of communication (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, Tumblr, and Pinterest) were reaching the intended audience. MethodsMixed methodologies included qualitative interviews and a key informant focus group, a cross-sectional survey, and web analytics. Qualitative data were analyzed using constant comparative methodology informed by grounded theory. Descriptive statistics were generated from survey data, and web analytics provided user information and traffic patterns. ResultsResults indicated that the Keep It Strong ATL social marketing campaign was a valuable community resource that had potential for broader scope and greater reach. The evaluation team learned the importance of reaching adolescents through Web 2.0 platforms, and the need for message dissemination via peers. Survey results indicated that Facebook (ranked 6.5 out of 8) was the highest rated social media outlet overall, and exhibited greatest appeal and most frequent visits, yet analytics revealed that only 3.5% of “likes” were from the target audience. These results indicate that the social media campaign is reaching predominantly women (76.5% of viewership) who are outside of the target age range of 11-14 years. ConclusionsWhile the social media campaign was successfully launched, the findings indicate the need for a more focused selection of communication channels, timing of media updates to maximize visibility, balancing message tone and delivery, and incorporating differentiated messaging for the target audiences. Collaboration with parents and community partners is also emphasized in order to expand the campaign’s reach and create more channels to disseminate relationship promotion and dating violence prevention messaging to the intended audience.http://www.researchprotocols.org/2014/4/e64/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lambert, Danielle N
Bishop, Lauren E
Guetig, Stephanie
Frew, Paula M
spellingShingle Lambert, Danielle N
Bishop, Lauren E
Guetig, Stephanie
Frew, Paula M
A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating Violence
JMIR Research Protocols
author_facet Lambert, Danielle N
Bishop, Lauren E
Guetig, Stephanie
Frew, Paula M
author_sort Lambert, Danielle N
title A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating Violence
title_short A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating Violence
title_full A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating Violence
title_fullStr A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating Violence
title_full_unstemmed A Formative Evaluation of a Social Media Campaign to Reduce Adolescent Dating Violence
title_sort formative evaluation of a social media campaign to reduce adolescent dating violence
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Research Protocols
issn 1929-0748
publishDate 2014-11-01
description BackgroundThe Emory Jane Fonda Center implemented the Start Strong Atlanta social marketing campaign, “Keep It Strong ATL”, in 2007 to promote the development of healthy adolescent relationships and to foster the prevention of adolescent dating abuse among 11-14 year olds. ObjectiveA formative evaluation was conducted to understand whether messages directed at the target audience were relevant to the program’s relationship promotion and violence prevention goals, and whether the “Web 2.0” social media channels of communication (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, Tumblr, and Pinterest) were reaching the intended audience. MethodsMixed methodologies included qualitative interviews and a key informant focus group, a cross-sectional survey, and web analytics. Qualitative data were analyzed using constant comparative methodology informed by grounded theory. Descriptive statistics were generated from survey data, and web analytics provided user information and traffic patterns. ResultsResults indicated that the Keep It Strong ATL social marketing campaign was a valuable community resource that had potential for broader scope and greater reach. The evaluation team learned the importance of reaching adolescents through Web 2.0 platforms, and the need for message dissemination via peers. Survey results indicated that Facebook (ranked 6.5 out of 8) was the highest rated social media outlet overall, and exhibited greatest appeal and most frequent visits, yet analytics revealed that only 3.5% of “likes” were from the target audience. These results indicate that the social media campaign is reaching predominantly women (76.5% of viewership) who are outside of the target age range of 11-14 years. ConclusionsWhile the social media campaign was successfully launched, the findings indicate the need for a more focused selection of communication channels, timing of media updates to maximize visibility, balancing message tone and delivery, and incorporating differentiated messaging for the target audiences. Collaboration with parents and community partners is also emphasized in order to expand the campaign’s reach and create more channels to disseminate relationship promotion and dating violence prevention messaging to the intended audience.
url http://www.researchprotocols.org/2014/4/e64/
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