Top Banner
What is all this communications stuff? David Phillips FCIPR, FSNCR
16
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Communication Theory2

What is all this communications stuff?

David Phillips FCIPR, FSNCR

Page 2: Communication Theory2

What We Will Do Today

• Look back to see what how much we know about communicating

• Learn about different models for communication

• Look at the evolving communications landscape

Page 3: Communication Theory2

Interacting• Communication through books - Did you delight in pp

144-146 of Exploring Public Relations 2006 (Tench & Yeomans) and pp 20- 31 The Public Relations Handbook 2001 ( Theaker et al)?

• Communication using experiences one to many - This slide show is available at Slideshare.net (http://www.slideshare.net/dphillips4363)

• Adding a bit of a symmetrical interaction, noise and feedback - You can have cell phones on, blog, Twitter, and ask questions.

• One to one is not all bad with a bit of symmetrical influence - You can email me david.g.h.phillips (at) geemaildotcom or chat on Google Talk/Live Messenger.

Page 4: Communication Theory2

History of Models• Animals communicate – Humans communicate –

what is the difference?• If humans communicate why don’t we

understand much about it?• After 60,000 years of human evolution, Aristotle

2300 years ago thought of three models – Ethos – The nature and qualities of the communicator– Logos – The nature, structure and content of the

message (s)– Pathos – The nature, feelings and thoughts of the

audience.

Page 5: Communication Theory2

Laswell’s theory• Who says – what – to whom – with what – effect.• Great for propagandists – all control – and

limited in effect (McQuail & Windahl) – audiences have feelings to (and can turn a deaf ear)

• Shannon and Weaver explained how by adding Noise ( now extended to physical, cultural, intellectual, emotional) and Feedback (the receiver has a role too) we can see its not that simple.

• The bank of England dropped interest rate 1.5% - did the message get through for student loans?

Page 6: Communication Theory2

Osgood and Schramm

Page 7: Communication Theory2

All too linear

• Assumption that communication is linear• From someone to someone • Who could possibly be interested?• What was the effect• Should communication ‘do something’?• A cognitive implication?

Page 8: Communication Theory2

Westley & McLean

Page 9: Communication Theory2

Context, society, experience and culture

• Communication uses ‘signs’ (Peirce, Saussure) • Pictures, words, movements etc.• They have meanings• My picture is not the same as your picture. My word means

what it means to me not what it means to you (Fiske).– Denotative - dictionary definition, explication of a picture etc)– Connotative - experience of the sign – nice/nasty, fun/dull)– Ambiguous - signs with many meanings – fit (healthy)/fit (worth

a snog)/fit (shoes that don’t)/ fit (a health problem)– Polysemic can be interpreted differently. Often leads to

misunderstanding – ‘I was bombed in London’

Page 10: Communication Theory2

The inquisitive human• McQuail/Blumer & Katz

– Seeks diversion (from boring lectures)– Looks for personal relationships (the social animal)– Personal identity (the ‘badges’ that say ‘I’m me’ in the group or

crowd– Surveillance (where am I, opportunities, threats, what’s cool)

• McGuire– Search for knowledge – Search for emotional reward– Active or passive engagement– Ambition to get educated (internalised)/ need to get a degree

(external badge)– Seeks gratification

Page 11: Communication Theory2

Maletzke

C= Communicator, M = Message, R = Reciever

Page 12: Communication Theory2

Mass media

• Does it work? It depends (friends & neighbours)

• Opinion Formers and agenda setters• Two step flow (with ‘journalist’ in the middle)• Agenda setters

Page 13: Communication Theory2

Social Media

• Network effect• One-2-one• One-2-many• Many-2-one• Many-2-many• Niche not mass communication• The transition of mass media (http://www.glamourmagazine.co.uk)

Page 14: Communication Theory2

Lets try out the theory

• Facebook for the corporation• Twitter for the newspaper• YouTube for the University• Computer Games for the teacher• Mobile for the fashion industry• Network or broadcast?• Mass media or niche media?

Page 15: Communication Theory2

What We Will Do Today

• Look back to see what how much we know about communicating

• Learn about different models for communication

• Look at the evolving communications landscape

Page 16: Communication Theory2

What is all this communications stuff?

David Phillips FCIPR, FSNCR