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Strategic communication in participatory culture : From one- and two-way communication to participatory communication through social media

Falkheimer, Jesper LU and Heide, Mats LU orcid (2014) p.337-349
Abstract
In contemporary literature in strategic communication, public relations, and corporate communication, co-creation of meaning is often claimed to be a core objective (e.g., Coombs & Heath, 2006). The aim of this chapter is to review the literature on social media and strategic communication and develop arguments for why we believe the new communication structure is challenging old concepts and perspectives. The chapter discusses social media as technologies woven into a social and cultural communication structure, dened through participatory communication. It also addresses some of the challenges, opportunities, threats and changed practices that an organization’s approach to participatory communication, through use of social media, can... (More)
In contemporary literature in strategic communication, public relations, and corporate communication, co-creation of meaning is often claimed to be a core objective (e.g., Coombs & Heath, 2006). The aim of this chapter is to review the literature on social media and strategic communication and develop arguments for why we believe the new communication structure is challenging old concepts and perspectives. The chapter discusses social media as technologies woven into a social and cultural communication structure, dened through participatory communication. It also addresses some of the challenges, opportunities, threats and changed practices that an organization’s approach to participatory communication, through use of social media, can cause. The chapter is, as mentioned, a literature review and it also contains a conceptual analysis, using dierent examples. The theoretical approach is to a certain extent founded in the cocreational tradition, but it follows a social constructionist perspective where communication is viewed as constitutive of reality. This approach may be interpreted as a current example of a paradigm struggle, forecast by Botan and Taylor (2004, p. 659):

We expect the period starting in the early 2000s and extending into the next decade to be characterized by a paradigm struggle away from symmetrical research. The future state of the field of public relations lies with whichever cocreationist model emerges as the most useful, the most theoretically valuable, and perhaps, the one that situates public relations theory as a foundational member of the field of communication. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
The Routledge Handbook of Strategic Communication
pages
13 pages
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:85136097380
ISBN
9780367367732
9781136207129
DOI
10.4324/9780203094440-31
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d98a98cf-0867-4a69-8af4-f2e85af2a3f0
date added to LUP
2022-12-05 13:31:48
date last changed
2024-04-18 15:51:42
@inbook{d98a98cf-0867-4a69-8af4-f2e85af2a3f0,
  abstract     = {{In contemporary literature in strategic communication, public relations, and corporate communication, co-creation of meaning is often claimed to be a core objective (e.g., Coombs &amp; Heath, 2006). The aim of this chapter is to review the literature on social media and strategic communication and develop arguments for why we believe the new communication structure is challenging old concepts and perspectives. The chapter discusses social media as technologies woven into a social and cultural communication structure, dened through participatory communication. It also addresses some of the challenges, opportunities, threats and changed practices that an organization’s approach to participatory communication, through use of social media, can cause. The chapter is, as mentioned, a literature review and it also contains a conceptual analysis, using dierent examples. The theoretical approach is to a certain extent founded in the cocreational tradition, but it follows a social constructionist perspective where communication is viewed as constitutive of reality. This approach may be interpreted as a current example of a paradigm struggle, forecast by Botan and Taylor (2004, p. 659):<br/><br/>We expect the period starting in the early 2000s and extending into the next decade to be characterized by a paradigm struggle away from symmetrical research. The future state of the field of public relations lies with whichever cocreationist model emerges as the most useful, the most theoretically valuable, and perhaps, the one that situates public relations theory as a foundational member of the field of communication.}},
  author       = {{Falkheimer, Jesper and Heide, Mats}},
  booktitle    = {{The Routledge Handbook of Strategic Communication}},
  isbn         = {{9780367367732}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  pages        = {{337--349}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  title        = {{Strategic communication in participatory culture : From one- and two-way communication to participatory communication through social media}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203094440-31}},
  doi          = {{10.4324/9780203094440-31}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}