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Datafied corporate political activity : Updating corporate advocacy for a digital era

Murray, John LU orcid and Flyverbom, Mikkel (2021) In Organization 28(4). p.621-640
Abstract

Digital transformations have significant consequences for organizational attempts to shape their environments. Our focus is on how corporate political activity evolves in ways that require us to pay more attention to how information gets structured in digital spaces, and on how information ecosystems operate and shape strategic communication activities in organizational settings. We outline these digital transformations, offer a focus on corporate political activity as informational and develop a typology of datafied corporate political activity techniques to illustrate how the workings of digital spaces shape political issues more concretely. This serves to highlight the necessity of extending the focus of informational corporate... (More)

Digital transformations have significant consequences for organizational attempts to shape their environments. Our focus is on how corporate political activity evolves in ways that require us to pay more attention to how information gets structured in digital spaces, and on how information ecosystems operate and shape strategic communication activities in organizational settings. We outline these digital transformations, offer a focus on corporate political activity as informational and develop a typology of datafied corporate political activity techniques to illustrate how the workings of digital spaces shape political issues more concretely. This serves to highlight the necessity of extending the focus of informational corporate political activity beyond the contents of overt and direct messages to include the more covert and subtle forms of influence made possible through the strategic structuring of information itself. This also contributes to our understanding of the political significance of corporate political activity, which is less about influencing political issues by composing appealing messages and distributing them to relevant audiences, and more about influencing political issues by organizing digital information and feeding algorithms. We suggest that such datastructures and algorithmic forms of sorting will become as important as message contents, and that datafied advocacy will become a central component of corporate political activity and other organizational activities.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Advocacy, algorithms, corporate political activity, digital transformations, strategic communication
in
Organization
volume
28
issue
4
pages
20 pages
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:85086589655
ISSN
1350-5084
DOI
10.1177/1350508420928516
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2020.
id
120f0cdd-fc4a-4042-a2c8-f4e3e22dd043
date added to LUP
2024-02-14 10:24:23
date last changed
2024-02-15 12:02:17
@article{120f0cdd-fc4a-4042-a2c8-f4e3e22dd043,
  abstract     = {{<p>Digital transformations have significant consequences for organizational attempts to shape their environments. Our focus is on how corporate political activity evolves in ways that require us to pay more attention to how information gets structured in digital spaces, and on how information ecosystems operate and shape strategic communication activities in organizational settings. We outline these digital transformations, offer a focus on corporate political activity as informational and develop a typology of datafied corporate political activity techniques to illustrate how the workings of digital spaces shape political issues more concretely. This serves to highlight the necessity of extending the focus of informational corporate political activity beyond the contents of overt and direct messages to include the more covert and subtle forms of influence made possible through the strategic structuring of information itself. This also contributes to our understanding of the political significance of corporate political activity, which is less about influencing political issues by composing appealing messages and distributing them to relevant audiences, and more about influencing political issues by organizing digital information and feeding algorithms. We suggest that such datastructures and algorithmic forms of sorting will become as important as message contents, and that datafied advocacy will become a central component of corporate political activity and other organizational activities.</p>}},
  author       = {{Murray, John and Flyverbom, Mikkel}},
  issn         = {{1350-5084}},
  keywords     = {{Advocacy; algorithms; corporate political activity; digital transformations; strategic communication}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{621--640}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Organization}},
  title        = {{Datafied corporate political activity : Updating corporate advocacy for a digital era}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1350508420928516}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/1350508420928516}},
  volume       = {{28}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}