Twitter and its usage for dialogic stakeholder communication by MNCs and NGOs

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in SammelwerkenForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Twitter and its usage for dialogic stakeholder communication by MNCs and NGOs. / Inauen, Sarah; Schoeneborn, Dennis.
Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility: Perspectives and Practice. Hrsg. / Ralph Trench; William Sun; Brian Jones. Band 6 Bingley: Emerald Publishing Limited, 2014. S. 283-310 (Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability; Band 6).

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in SammelwerkenForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

Inauen, S & Schoeneborn, D 2014, Twitter and its usage for dialogic stakeholder communication by MNCs and NGOs. in R Trench, W Sun & B Jones (Hrsg.), Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility: Perspectives and Practice. Bd. 6, Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability, Bd. 6, Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, S. 283-310. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2043-9059(2014)0000006019

APA

Inauen, S., & Schoeneborn, D. (2014). Twitter and its usage for dialogic stakeholder communication by MNCs and NGOs. In R. Trench, W. Sun, & B. Jones (Hrsg.), Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility: Perspectives and Practice (Band 6, S. 283-310). (Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability; Band 6). Emerald Publishing Limited. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2043-9059(2014)0000006019

Vancouver

Inauen S, Schoeneborn D. Twitter and its usage for dialogic stakeholder communication by MNCs and NGOs. in Trench R, Sun W, Jones B, Hrsg., Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility: Perspectives and Practice. Band 6. Bingley: Emerald Publishing Limited. 2014. S. 283-310. (Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability). doi: 10.1108/S2043-9059(2014)0000006019

Bibtex

@inbook{a64a0303b00a4cd285f1d50f34a95cc0,
title = "Twitter and its usage for dialogic stakeholder communication by MNCs and NGOs",
abstract = "Purpose-The era of globalization has increased the challenges for multinational corporations (MNCs) to retain legitimacy. In striving for legitimacy, MNCs increasingly engage in dialogue processes with their stakeholders. However, the era of globalization and the parallel rise of the Internet and the new {"}Web 2.0{"} have dramatically widened the range of options for such dialogue processes. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in particular make use of {"}social media{"} (e.g., Facebook, Weblogs, Twitter) which enable them to quickly generate attention regarding socially and environmentally harmful business practices by MNCs. In response, MNCs have started applying social media technologies for corporate communication purposes. However, given the novelty of these activities, we lack knowledge on how these organizations make use of social media. Therefore, in this chapter, we examine how MNCs and NGOs utilize one particular social media application, that is, Twitter, for dialogic stakeholder communication. Design/methodology/approach-In our empirical study, we examine current practices of Twitter usage by MNCs and NGOs. We investigate a dataset of more than 3,000 Twitter articles from 30 MNCs and 30 NGOs in the German-speaking world. Our analysis is based on the {"}conceptual orality or literality{"} scale by Koch and Oesterreicher (1994). Findings-The comparative analysis shows that on average MNCs and NGOs exhibit a surprisingly similar profile on Twitter. Both tend toward conceptual literality. However, the analysis of Tweets per organization reveals a much larger variance. At the extreme poles, while some NGOs (like Greenpeace Youth) make extensive use of the medium's potential for conceptual orality, some MNCs (like Deutsche Borse) almost entirely adhere to conceptual literality. In other words, these MNCs promote a classical one-way model of communication and fail to make use of the dialogue-like qualities of the medium. Research limitations-We analyzed a small number of organizations and we restricted our study to MNCs and NGOs in the German-speaking world. Furthermore, Twitter only allows for short messages with a maximum of 140 letters or signs. This, in turn, renders questionable whether the medium is suited to establish deliberative dialogues between MNCs and NGOs that are based on more elaborate arguments which can be expressed in the short format. Originality/value-Our study addresses the lack of research regarding new possibilities for stakeholder communication in the age of social media. Moreover, the study methodologically contributes to the study of social media in the context of corporate communication by applying the scale of {"}conceptual orality or literality{"} to MNCs' and NGOs' Twitter usage.",
keywords = "Corporate communication, Corporate social responsibility (CSR), Deliberation, Legitimacy, Social media, Twitter, Management studies",
author = "Sarah Inauen and Dennis Schoeneborn",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1108/S2043-9059(2014)0000006019",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-78350-795-5",
volume = "6",
series = "Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability",
publisher = "Emerald Publishing Limited",
pages = "283--310",
editor = "Ralph Trench and William Sun and Brian Jones",
booktitle = "Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Twitter and its usage for dialogic stakeholder communication by MNCs and NGOs

AU - Inauen, Sarah

AU - Schoeneborn, Dennis

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Purpose-The era of globalization has increased the challenges for multinational corporations (MNCs) to retain legitimacy. In striving for legitimacy, MNCs increasingly engage in dialogue processes with their stakeholders. However, the era of globalization and the parallel rise of the Internet and the new "Web 2.0" have dramatically widened the range of options for such dialogue processes. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in particular make use of "social media" (e.g., Facebook, Weblogs, Twitter) which enable them to quickly generate attention regarding socially and environmentally harmful business practices by MNCs. In response, MNCs have started applying social media technologies for corporate communication purposes. However, given the novelty of these activities, we lack knowledge on how these organizations make use of social media. Therefore, in this chapter, we examine how MNCs and NGOs utilize one particular social media application, that is, Twitter, for dialogic stakeholder communication. Design/methodology/approach-In our empirical study, we examine current practices of Twitter usage by MNCs and NGOs. We investigate a dataset of more than 3,000 Twitter articles from 30 MNCs and 30 NGOs in the German-speaking world. Our analysis is based on the "conceptual orality or literality" scale by Koch and Oesterreicher (1994). Findings-The comparative analysis shows that on average MNCs and NGOs exhibit a surprisingly similar profile on Twitter. Both tend toward conceptual literality. However, the analysis of Tweets per organization reveals a much larger variance. At the extreme poles, while some NGOs (like Greenpeace Youth) make extensive use of the medium's potential for conceptual orality, some MNCs (like Deutsche Borse) almost entirely adhere to conceptual literality. In other words, these MNCs promote a classical one-way model of communication and fail to make use of the dialogue-like qualities of the medium. Research limitations-We analyzed a small number of organizations and we restricted our study to MNCs and NGOs in the German-speaking world. Furthermore, Twitter only allows for short messages with a maximum of 140 letters or signs. This, in turn, renders questionable whether the medium is suited to establish deliberative dialogues between MNCs and NGOs that are based on more elaborate arguments which can be expressed in the short format. Originality/value-Our study addresses the lack of research regarding new possibilities for stakeholder communication in the age of social media. Moreover, the study methodologically contributes to the study of social media in the context of corporate communication by applying the scale of "conceptual orality or literality" to MNCs' and NGOs' Twitter usage.

AB - Purpose-The era of globalization has increased the challenges for multinational corporations (MNCs) to retain legitimacy. In striving for legitimacy, MNCs increasingly engage in dialogue processes with their stakeholders. However, the era of globalization and the parallel rise of the Internet and the new "Web 2.0" have dramatically widened the range of options for such dialogue processes. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in particular make use of "social media" (e.g., Facebook, Weblogs, Twitter) which enable them to quickly generate attention regarding socially and environmentally harmful business practices by MNCs. In response, MNCs have started applying social media technologies for corporate communication purposes. However, given the novelty of these activities, we lack knowledge on how these organizations make use of social media. Therefore, in this chapter, we examine how MNCs and NGOs utilize one particular social media application, that is, Twitter, for dialogic stakeholder communication. Design/methodology/approach-In our empirical study, we examine current practices of Twitter usage by MNCs and NGOs. We investigate a dataset of more than 3,000 Twitter articles from 30 MNCs and 30 NGOs in the German-speaking world. Our analysis is based on the "conceptual orality or literality" scale by Koch and Oesterreicher (1994). Findings-The comparative analysis shows that on average MNCs and NGOs exhibit a surprisingly similar profile on Twitter. Both tend toward conceptual literality. However, the analysis of Tweets per organization reveals a much larger variance. At the extreme poles, while some NGOs (like Greenpeace Youth) make extensive use of the medium's potential for conceptual orality, some MNCs (like Deutsche Borse) almost entirely adhere to conceptual literality. In other words, these MNCs promote a classical one-way model of communication and fail to make use of the dialogue-like qualities of the medium. Research limitations-We analyzed a small number of organizations and we restricted our study to MNCs and NGOs in the German-speaking world. Furthermore, Twitter only allows for short messages with a maximum of 140 letters or signs. This, in turn, renders questionable whether the medium is suited to establish deliberative dialogues between MNCs and NGOs that are based on more elaborate arguments which can be expressed in the short format. Originality/value-Our study addresses the lack of research regarding new possibilities for stakeholder communication in the age of social media. Moreover, the study methodologically contributes to the study of social media in the context of corporate communication by applying the scale of "conceptual orality or literality" to MNCs' and NGOs' Twitter usage.

KW - Corporate communication

KW - Corporate social responsibility (CSR)

KW - Deliberation

KW - Legitimacy

KW - Social media

KW - Twitter

KW - Management studies

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84896520283&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1108/S2043-9059(2014)0000006019

DO - 10.1108/S2043-9059(2014)0000006019

M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies

AN - SCOPUS:84896520283

SN - 978-1-78350-795-5

VL - 6

T3 - Critical Studies on Corporate Responsibility, Governance and Sustainability

SP - 283

EP - 310

BT - Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility

A2 - Trench, Ralph

A2 - Sun, William

A2 - Jones, Brian

PB - Emerald Publishing Limited

CY - Bingley

ER -

DOI

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