Digital Strategic Communication
Posts related to integrated strategic communication in a digital environment.
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Social Media for Crisis Communication
Social media outlets have a role to play as one tool in an effective crisis communication strategy, say researchers Shari Veil (University of Kentucky), Tara Buehner (University of Oklahoma), and Michael Palenchar (Univ of Tennessee, Knoxville). At the National Communication Association 2010 annual conference, they presented a paper entitled, “Increasing Dialogue in Disasters: Incorporating Social…
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Connecting to Publics with Social Media
Public relations practice has been dramatically impacted by social media. Papers presented in the Public Relations Division at the National Communication Association 2010 annual conference tied social media and web-based tools to core functions of public relations practice – using a variety of theoretical frames. Each provides unique insights into the theory and practice of…
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Social Media in PR: Is it really necessary?
In what ways have social media expanded the ideas of public relations instruction? How does social media challenge traditional models of instruction? How can social media impact research? Is social media even valuable at all? These questions guided the conversation today in the NCA panel entitled,”Bridging Social Media with Teaching, Research and Practice: Exploring the…
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Training Organizations for a Digital Marketplace
Corporations, non-profits, and public institutions alike are all concerned with managing their images in online environments. Yet, use of a technology typically preceeds training on effective use of that technology. At the National Commmunication Association annual convention, researchers are presenting on the issues of conducting business in a global, virtual world. In sum, these papers…
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Plagiarism rears its digital head
Plagiarism is not just a student issue. It’s a people issue. And plagiarism becomes an even broader issue in the realm of digital media. Web Shames Magazine for Plagiarizing Blogger’s Article – http://on.mash.to/bYCufl — Mashable (@mashable) November 6, 2010 (tweet embedded using the new WordPress version of “Blackbird Pie”) Plagiarism occurs when someone uses another’s…
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What’s Mine is Yours (Botsman & Rogers, 2010)
What’s Mine is Yours: The rise of collaborative consumption by Rachel Botsman and Roo Rogers (2010) “Unbeknownst to me, this was a book I was meant to read,” says Amy Martin. The need and market for trading, sharing, and reusing stuff is growing. Landfill space and space for storage is outpacing our growth as a…
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Putting the Public Back in Public Relations (Solis & Breakenridge, 2009)
Putting the Public Back in Public Relations by Brian Solis and Dierdre Breakenridge (2009) “I’ve always been curious about the use of social media in public relations,” says Valarie Udeh. “Putting the Public Back in Public Relations is about putting the relationship, the conversation, back into the old-school public relations model.” Solis and Breakenridge discuss…
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Defining Digital and Media Literacy
It’s not your daddy’s literacy. Discussions of media literacy in America have traversed the media landscape from newspapers and advertising, to television, radio and film, to Internet-based media. With new focus turning to literacy in digital realms, some, like Knight Foundation and Queens University of Charlotte, are examining media literacy in its increasingly digital form.…
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Speaking and Learning in Tweets: a field guide to Twitter language
This presentation is intended for Twitter beginners, to explore the language used to link information in Twitter. I delivered it as part of the Knight School of Communication’s digital media learning workshops series offered at Queens University of Charlotte and shared it here for interested others. As always, your comments and feedback on this presentation…
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How and Why I Teach Social Media.
What are the benefits of the Twitters? Why should I care about social media? Who cares what I had for breakfast? These questions slide off the tongues of my colleagues, friends and neighbors when they learn that I teach courses in social media. I usually answer with an explanation of my own perceived benefits, but…