Forming ideas about who the organization is and who the stakeholders are. You do this before you start anything.
You go back to evaluate how well you did.
Survey and Content Analysis.
A single, cross-sectional study that generates a snapshot in time. Random sample of a relatively large population, uses questionnaires, the data comes from self-reports and uncovers attitudes and opinions of large populations.
Describes what the typical viewer/reader sees over time in the media. Quantitative Method employs counting of images, actions, words, portrayals, etc. Descriptive only and cannot establish cause/effect, attitudes or social impact.
Interviews, Focus groups, Ethnography, and Observation Study Behavior.
Personal interviews between one person and the researcher. May be face-to-face, on the phone, or over the internet. Beliefs, values, and opinions.
A specialized interview that brings together a group of people (6-10) to talk naturally about a topic or group of topics. Usually 2 hours long, the moderator leads the discussion, typically recorded by video or audio and is held in a two-way room with a mirror.
Typically involves the researcher immersing himself or herself into a particular culture or content to understand communication rules and meanings for that culture or context. Must take place in the natural environment for the groups under study and the particular methods used adjusted on the basis of what is occurring in that environment.
Researcher observes ongoing behavior, studies the behavior that happens naturally in the natural settings and can be descriptive or correlational, but does not allow for causal explanations.
Determine the objective of the Research, Select a problem, Review exsisting information, Develop a hypothesis or Research Question, Determine appropriate methodology/research design, Collect Relavent Data, Analyze Data, Interpret the results, Present the results in an appropriate form and Take action to solve the Problem.
What should our research achieve? The objective may be that a problem needs to be solved, “how do we improve our company’s image?”. Since research requires time and money to conduct, launching a research project should not be taken lightly or attempted for questions that are unimportant or not well defined. Constraints include time, money and ambiguity.
You need to narrow down the overall objectives to a specific problem or problems. Exploring all the aspects of the question and selecting one or two problems to answer will produce better and more usable research results for the organization. Who are the stakeholders for my communication, Which media are best for reaching this audience, How much money should be spent to reach this audience most effectively, and Which messages should be used most effectively?
Sometimes the answers to problems and questions are already available in existing information and there is no need to gather new data. Secondary research–the summary, collation and/or synthesis of existing data– is often faster and less expensive to obtain. A good researcher should always start any research project by finding out more about the problem or issue from already existing sources. Ex: Internal: sales reports and/or findings from previously conducted studies. External: articles in trade magazines or on government databases can also be helpful to answering research problems.
This can be the most difficult part of the research process because hypotheses or a research question are difficult to formulate, especially if you do not fully understand the topic under study. If you cannot find the answer(s) you need in a secondary research, you will conduct a primary research study. Ex: Awareness (asking unaided questions), Aided (providing answer choices), Knowledge (giving information in the question and answer), Conviction (thinking about one's own choices), Attitude/opinion (how they would categorize things), and Brand image (how they perceive brands).
The design describes the type of study, and the method refers to how the data will be collected. Descriptive Studies, Correlational Studies, and Casual Studies.
Takes the most time and effort, and therefore usually involves an outside commercial research firm who selects the actual participants and collects the data using professional research protocols and ethical guidelines.
Analyzed using statistical techniques or in the case of qualitative data, through coding and interpretation by the researcher. Qualtrics, Survey Monkey, Excel, SPSS.
The strategic communication researcher uses their skills and insights to understand what the data are saying and attempts to answer the research questions and/or hypotheses.
The researchers must write their results, conclusion and recommendations based on their unbiased interpretation of the data. They should include an introduction that explains the project, the objectives of the study, the findings of secondary research, the primary research questions and the method for gathering the data, including how the sample was drawn and what instruments were used. Should also include the statistical analysis and possibly the raw data in a large binder or online.
The purpose of research is to assist managers in making decisions and taking action that will benefit the organization and help achieve its objectives.
Large scale studies conducted by outside, commercial research firms and sold to multiple clients who need information. Large ongoing study, Not specific to one client’s needs and expensive.
Report national studies that often contain information about the communication industry, including salary surveys, listings of agencies, and annual information on media spending. Easily available based on large, national samples, Not always specific to your client’s needs and very broad in scope.
Publish academic research about strategic communication topics. Helpful for gathering broad, theoretical information. Often difficult to understand and interpret, May not relate to the “Real World” problems of the client.
Release studies relevant to the industry sector they’re associated with. Provide highly relevant data to their members. Narrow to one industry and Sometimes the research is influenced by the association’s personal agenda.
Excellent source of secondary data on demographics, etc. Free and available from a database on the web. Information is very general.
Provide information about website visits, social media sentiment, and click rates. Free/Flat rate, depending on source. Need some training to interpret data and understand how the variables are measured.
Most companies conduct their own research studies. Can save time collecting new data, Data are highly relevant to their products, employees, and sales trends. May be out-of-date, incomplete or poorly collected. Information about the method and procedure for collecting the data is not always available.
Help describe the state or condition of a phenomenon. Compare 2 or more e.g. A/B testing.
Attempt to determine the relationship between variables. Testing for a relationship between two variables. (do not cause/effect).
Seek to identify the precise cause of certain effects. Causation, A B testing. Gathering information informally. (“Pick brains”).
Longitudinal Designs, Pre/Post Tests, Field Tests and Laboratory.
Made up of a series of individual one-shot studies done the same way over time to measure change or trends. Can be predictive of the future.
Measure the effects before and after a particular action. Advertisers often measure product awareness before a campaign and compare it to awareness levels for the product after the campaign finishes to see if there is an impact from the messaging.
Often used in marketing communications research because they measure cause and effect in real situations.
Measure cause and effect in a controlled laboratory setting. The ability to control variables not under study is an advantage of a laboratory experiment, while the artificial environment of the lab can be a negative because research subjects may not behave normally in the artificial environment.
We plan, RFP Request for Proposals, for Communication program plan or a campaign plan. Planning is important, tight deadlines, every aspect is planned: from the client’s main issue to developing tactics to target to the budget and timeline. Must know everything about your client, what client wants and what client needs.
- Develop the top-line foundational goals of the organization.
- Determine the SMART objectives for each activity of the
organization.
SMART: Specific, Measurable, attainable, Realistic and
Timely.
- Develop strategies and tactics to achieve each objective that
will aim at meeting the foundational goals.
Analyze the Situation and Problem and Oppurtunities.
(Situation Analysis) To explain the recent history and current situation and to create a framework for future recommendations. Helps reveal the areas where more information is needed and gives background information about the organization’s history, sales, products, customers and competitors. Formative Research - Situation, Organization, Stakeholders (publics and audiences). Single document.
Description of product/brand, benefits/features, history, current market, pricing, distribution, current sales, current comm strats.
Demographics, Psychographics, Geographic, Behaviors, Purchase Cycle.
Strongest Competitor, Market Share, Positioning, and Promotional history.
(Research) Both internal and external–is extremely important to writing a good strategic communication plan. Focused on gathering information in both primary and secondary stages. The research is collected, analyzed and presented, there is one more step before developing the objectives and strategy for a plan. Often think…the situation is a problem! Obstacles limit the organization… mission. Problems are Obstacles are opportunities. Problem-opportunity statements. Problems and Opportunities Phase: The process of strategically converting research findings into organizational goals and objectives. Links the situation analysis (past) and research (currently) to the plan (future). Very difficult, but the most important step, key to your plan.
Ex: Client is a beverage company who sells seltzers. Trend that Gen Z is focusing more on health. Problem-Opportunity market seltzers as a healthier option than sugar drinks to Gen Z.
Planning and visual tool. Summarizes the key points from your situational analysis. Aids in determining the best path for you plan: Strengths (Internal positive qualities of the organization: Employer mental health, 401K, training), Weaknesses (Internal negative qualities of the organization: Retention, no Bonus, equal opportunities/employment, Security, No training), Opportunities (External positive to the organization: “do not refer to what you should do in the future” Untapped market, Failing competitor, Trend), and Threats (External negative to the organization: Spokesperson has negative publicity, Social Movement). We do not consider tactics in situational analysis. Devised only after you have smart objectives.
You have control; company records, annual reports, sales data, previous research.
You have no control; trade articles, industry research, consumer trends data, etc.
Reported by the person who conducted it. Typically published in peer-reviewed academic journals.
Reported by someone other than the person who conducted it. Reported in newspapers, popular or trade magazines, handbooks and textbooks, and, frequently, the internet.
Objectives (where do you want to go?), Strategies (how are you going to get there?), and Tactics (executional details).
Objective-get elected. Strategy-brainstorm with division managers to come up with objectives and best practices for each unit.
Communications: Objective-persuade 51% of likely voters to choose the candidate. Strategy-utilize research to determine best message strategy; creates tools for campaigns to persuade target voters.
Objective-develop specific communications tools to increase name recognition and fundraising by 30%. Strategy-create website with messaging, fundraising and volunteer options; design door cards for field team; utilize social media to emphasize messaging.
Goals are broad, objectives and strategies are specific and tactics are more specific.
Reputation: Enhance hospital’s prestige as a center for sports medicine.
Relationships: Maintain favorable relationships amid social/organizational change.
Task: Attract a sell-out to a fundraising event.
Specific outcomes, emerges from goals, Smart (Specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and timely), focuses on awareness, acceptance and action. Awareness: your attention (calling it out) and comprehension(understanding) of retention (how well they remember). Acceptance: the interest and attitude towards individuals, positive or negative. Feelings.
Should be concrete and measurable, define the stakeholder, benchmark the degree of the change sought, and specify time period. Start with “to” followed by an active (or power) verb. Ex: Address, delegate, guide, record, analyze, build, arrange, make, etc.
Simple: To create… Use SMART, define stakeholders.
EG: To increase sales by 10% for Grape Nehi among young adults (18-24) in the U.S. by the end of the 8-week campaign period.
Research, Objectives, Programming, Evaluation, Stewardship.
External, Key, Latent, Aware, Active, Gruing & Hunt Groups.
The people to whom the communicative entity aims to send messages. Individuals and groups that can affect or be affected by the messages, actions, goals and policies of the CE. Groups or individuals who are impacted by the decision and actions of an organization, Have a stake in the organization, and two-way communication. Voters, citizens, employees or elected officials.
Customers or target markets.
Public Relations: “Publics arise on their own and choose the organization for attention” (Grunig and Repper, 1992, p.128). Have direct or indirect interest.
Advertising: Those who will receive your message, either directly or indirectly. Receivers = one-way communication.
Are people whose interest in a company comes through a direct relationship. E.G. employees, employment, owners, members of management, or investors.
Are people who do not directly work with a company but are affected somehow by the actions and outcomes of the business. E.G. suppliers, creditors, customers, investors, partners, society, and government.
Impacted directly-positively or negatively-by the actions of the organization.
Affected indirectly by the organization.
Respond with action. Motivated by their beliefs and desires and are easily persuaded by the goals of an organization or the ideas of their peers. In class: Motivation by own beliefs, persuaded by peers/org, most loyal. Ex: Swifties and Aggies.
Passively respond to media messages rather than emotionally or intellectually engage in the content. In class: Most people belong here, Not invested enough to actively engage, might not be donors or follow news coverage, wallflowers.
Enabaling, Functional, Normative, and Diffused Stakeholders.
Have some control and authority over the organization. E.G. Stakeholders, board of directors, stockholders, elected officials, governmental legislators and regulators.
Are essential to the operations of the organization. Divided between
Input- providing labor and resources to create products or services (such as employees and suppliers).
Output- receiving the products or services (such as consumers and retailers).
Are associations or groups with which the organization has a common interest. These stakeholders share similar values, goals, or problems. E.G. Typically include competitors.
Are the most difficult to identify. Have frequent interaction with the organization but become involved based on the actions of the organization. Are different according to the situation. Publics that arise in times of a crisis. E.G. the media, the community, activists, and other special interest groups.
Non-publics, Latent, Aware, and Active Publics.
Stakeholders who are not affected by the CE and do not interact with it.
Those who see a situation but don’t see it as a problem or are not affected by it. They have the potential to become active.
Those who are aware the organization or issue is affecting them but are waiting for an event to trigger them into action.
Groups that are aware of an event and are actively seeking information about the situation.
Group you want to communicate with first. They may have the greatest influential power, urgency or most involvement, either negative or positive.
Baby Boomers: 1946-1964, skeptical, less influenced by fads, reliable voters, look for “best value”.
Generation X: 1965-1980, suspicious of Iarge corporations, traditional, facebook.
Generation Y (Millennials): 1981-1996, competitive, aligned careers with passions, social consciousness.
Generation Z: 1996-2012, care about mental health, less likely to stay at a job for longer, value sustainability.
Generational Alphas: 2013-2025, Very digitally minded, keep the parents in mind.
Breaking the total population into smaller homogenous groups. You can send one message that will appeal to many people. Must have effective and efficient messaging. It is important that they are distinguishable, homogeneous, important, large enough to matter and reachable.
Must distinguish who you are targeting so you can be efficient with your messaging.
To be the same or alike. You should find characteristics that unit the group. Many of your message strategies can be uniformly tailored toward them.
The segment needs to be important to justify the time and energy spent to reach it.
When a small group becomes large enough to be important, the organization they are targeting will sit up and pay attention.
It’s up to you to determine if you can get their attention and how much it might cost you to do it.
“Who you are” The statistical study of populations, especially human beings; age, race, gender, income, educational level, and profession.
“Where you are” The location that your stakeholder is in, can tell you a lot about them; Zip code, city, state, nation, and Urban/Suburban/Rural.
“Why you are” Dive deeply into the human psyche; Lifestyle, activities, interests, and opinions.
“How you are” Information about the rate of use, what benefits the consumer is seeking from the product, how loyal they are to the CE and how ready they are to purchase; Usage patterns, loyalty, and shopping patterns.
Now (today); today's analytics. To start with individual customers and try to group them into like-behaving units. Takes individual data and groups it into larger meaningful segments.
Context, Character, Conflict, Climax, Conclusion.
The environment, bringing life, taste, sound, feeling. Introduces the environment and provides rich details to understand place, time, social order and who the characters are.
Most characters need to be a hero. Good stories have interesting characters whom the readers/viewers can relate to.
Achieving something. Drives the story and helps the hero achieve his/her goal.
The turning point. No good story is complete without it.
Helps change your mind or your behavior. Story should be consistent.
In strategic communication, CE needs to tell stories with rich detail in which their customers or stakeholders are the heroes of their stories and the product or service should help the heroes to overcome its enemies, but not without an epic battle that reaches a pinnacle. Theme is important, and the action you want the audience to walk away with is just as important.
Messaging, Orginizational, Traditional Media, Advertising, Interpersonal, Publicity, Experimental and Sales Promotion.
Involves how an organization portrays itself, shares information about itself and the value it provides.
Informative, easy-to-navigate website and professionally produced collateral materials, communicate with internal audiences, company newsletter, employee events and incentive programs.
Press release or media release, FAQs, Backgrounds, Feature Articles (B-roll, VNRs, ANRs) Test Question, Media Kit (include fact sheet about the organization or event, biographical sketch of the major people involved, a straight news story, news-column material, a news feature, a brochure, photographs, and audio and video segments) and Photos.
A form of persuasive communication that is run in the media and paid for by an identified sponsor. Ex: Newspaper ads, Magazine ads, Billboards, Yard signage, Promoted posts, Digital marketing, Celebrity endorsements and Product placement.
Volunteering, Donations, Speech, Demonstrations, Meet and greets, Door knocking, and Product exhibitions.
Media Advisory (media alerts), Story Pitch, Letter to Editor, News Conference, Media Tour, and Partnerships. Ex: CDC announcement.
Guerilla marketing, Sporting events, Content, Holiday events, Happy hour, and Fundraising.
Designed to increase sales or encourage the use or trial of a product or service. Ex: Coupons, In-store sampling, Postcards, Catalogs, and Direct Mail items, Contests, Free Trial, Shared Programs and experiences.
P: Paid: Any type of strategic communication content that involves paying for exposure-most common paid media is advertising. Ex: Advertising, sponsorship and boosted content of social media, pay per click.
E: Earned: Publicity gained through media relations in order to benefit from third party credibility most commonly associated with public relations. Ex: Mentions in publications, guest blogging, guests on podcasts. (the most trusted media)
S: Shared: The posting of a communicative entity’s content by stakeholders (fans or followers) on social media. Share media, like earned, is free and provides third party credibility. Ex: Social media, word of mouth, referrals.
O: Owned: The sharing of content by the CE on its own media. Ex: Website, blog, social media, blog, and email.