Publication | Closed Access
The blogosphere and public relations
53
Citations
38
References
2009
Year
Citizen JournalismDigital MarketingEmerging MediaMedia InnovationCluster AnalysisCommunicationBlog UsePublic RelationsPublic Relations PractitionersMedia StudiesJournalismPublic Relations ModelsInteractive JournalismComputational Social ScienceSocial MediaManagementSocial Medium NewsPolitical CommunicationContent AnalysisMedia InstitutionsDigital MediaPublic Relation StrategyMedia PoliciesOrganizational CommunicationSocial ComputingMass CommunicationArtsSocial Informatics
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the perception and adoption of blogs among public relations practitioners and how blog use relates to roles and status. Design/methodology/approach A national e‐mail survey of 216 US public relations professionals was used. Findings While blog use was similar to national audiences, practitioners were maintaining mostly personal blogs and using blogs professionally at low levels. Furthermore, women lagged behind men in the strategic use of blogs. Finally, cluster analysis challenged Porter and Sallot's roles typology, reverting to the previous manager‐technician dichotomy. Practical implications While practitioners use blogs at a similar level to that of the general population, they may be missing an opportunity to reach publics directly both through blogging and placing stories in blogs. Originality/value The paper provides an early look at an emerging technology that most practitioners agree will have a substantial impact on the industry.
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