Social Journalism Study 2014 - Finland
Report
Pole, K., Gulyas, A. and Cision.de 2014. Social Journalism Study 2014 - Finland. Cision Finland Cision Germany.
Authors | Pole, K., Gulyas, A. and Cision.de |
---|---|
Contributors | Rehkopf, F. |
Abstract | The fourth annual Social Journalism Study, conducted by Cision Germany and Canterbury Christ It shows that social is part of the journalists toolkit in their everyday work for a range of different tasks. However the results show a concentration of time and focus on social media so rather than using a large range of tools for a large amount of time journalists are choosing to focus on specific tools, namely Facebook and Twitter whilst experimenting on a much smaller scale with more bespoke tools for particular activities. Whilst many believe they could not carry out their work without social media, Finnish journalists feel it has helped their productivity but this hasn’t in turn decreased their workload so essentially it helps them produce more content. The relationship with PR professionals is satisfactory but there are areas to improve around the quality of their contribution to journalists work and the reliability of information. Email remains the main communication channels for PR professionals but there is evidence from a small number of |
Year | 2014 |
Publisher | Cision Germany |
Place of publication | Cision Finland |
Official URL | http://www.cision.com/fi/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Social-Journalism-Study-2014-Finland.pdf |
Output status | Published |
File | License |
Publication dates | |
04 Nov 2014 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 09 Jul 2015 |
Accepted | 04 Nov 2014 |
Funder | Cision.de |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/87617/social-journalism-study-2014-finland
Download files
94
total views44
total downloads1
views this month1
downloads this month