Title: Best Practices in Public Relations Research
1Best Practices in Public Relations Research
- Don W. Stacks, Ph.D.
- School of Communication
- University of Miami
- Coral Gables, FL 33145
2What is Research?
- Controlled, objective, and systematic gathering
of data - Strives to describe, understand, predict, and
control social and business phenomena - Seeks to answer questions
- Reliable and valid way to access data
- Systematic collection and interpretation of data
3Theory vs. Applied Research
- Theory
- Abstract, conceptual
- Builds a body of knowledge for PR
- Academic or Basic Research
- Serves as a framework for understanding and
predicting why people act the way they do.
- Applied Research
- Concrete, practical
- Strategic Research develops programs, messages,
and benchmarks - Evaluation Research determines whether
communication campaigns works
4Main Uses of Public Relations Research
- Monitoring developments and trends
- Examining public relations position
- Assessing messages and campaigns
- Measuring communication effectiveness
- Tracking studies
- Gap studies
- Evaluation research
5General Research Assumptions
- Decision-making process is uniformly the same in
all companies and organizations - All communication research should
- Set objectives
- Determine strategy to establish objectives
- Implement tactics which bring strategies to life
6Assumptions (Contd.)
- Research can be divided into three general
phases - Program or campaign development
- Program refinement
- Program evaluation
- Communication research is behavior-driven and
knowledge-based
7Public Relations Research Assumptions
- Research must be behavior-driven and yield data
that help design campaigns that lead to desired
behavior - PR campaign research must parallel decisions
communication pros make otherwise, they are not
knowledge-driven or information based - Effective research is integral to campaign
creation, implementation, and evaluation
8Best Practice Public Relations Research Programs
- Conduct background/secondary research to
establish benchmarks - Establish achievable goals
- Ask appropriate research questions
- State measurable objectives
- Employ the appropriate methodologies
- Understand the need for programmatic research
- Have the budgets/resources necessary
91. Does Homework Secondary Research/Benchmarking
- Establishes both an understanding of what has
been done and how it was done - Adds to an understanding of theory
- Provides a window into past practice
- Not a new concept espoused by John Hill in the
50s - Reduces the costs associated with needless
replication - Provides possible benchmarks against which to
gauge progress
102. Establishes Achievable Goals
- Goal General outcome expected by campaign end
- Objective Very specific projected output
- Outputs individual communication elements
- Impact of specific tactics
- Written, visual, verbal
113. Asks The Appropriate Research Question(s)
- All research addresses four research questions
- Questions of Definition
- Questions of Fact
- Questions of Value
- Questions of Policy
- Best practice research asks and answers them in
order definition, fact, value, policy
12Questions Contd.
- Definition
- What is it?
- How do I operationalize it?
- Fact
- Does it exist?
- In what quantity?
- Do groups differ or did change occur over time?
- Value
- How good or bad is it?
- How well was it done?
- Addresses aesthetics
- Policy
- What should be done
- Answered through research on definition, fact,
and value
134. States Measurable Objectives
- Management must concur about objectives
- Do they meet the business objective(s)?
- Precise, results-oriented objectives
- Stated in measurable ways?
- Realistic, credible, measurable, and compatible
objectives - Are they realistic or are they simply goals?
14Objectives (contd.)
- Informational objectives fairly clear cut
- What information does the public need?
- When do they need it (before, during, after)?
- Motivational objectives require
- Research
- Means to isolate effect provided by public
relations - Behavioral objectives state
- What you expect the public to do
15Programmatic Approach
Secondary/ Benchmark
Informational/Evaluation
Behavioral/Evaluation
Motivational/Evaluation
Planned benchmarked evaluations
Time Development (Evaluation)
Refinement (Evaluation)
Final Evaluation
16Objectives, contd.
- Informational Objective(s)
- Motivational Objective(s)
- Behavioral Objectives
- Business objective(s)
175. Employs Appropriate Methodologies
- A public relations campaign hardly ever employs
only one method - Best practices triangulate methods to ensure
that all research questions are addressed - Methods are often classified as qualitative and
quantitative or informal and formal
18Public Relations Methods
- Surveys and Polls
- Descriptive
- Explanatory
- Attitude
- Opinion Polls
- Content Analyses
- Descriptive
- Readability
- Readership
- Communication Audits
- Delphi Studies
- Focus Groups
- Field Observations
- Participant-Observation
- In-depth Interview
- Case Studies
- Experiments
19Qualitative or Quantitative Methods?
- Qualitative Questions of definition and value
- Intense, but small sample
- In-depth knowledge vs. Generalizability
- Examples
- Focus Groups
- Participant-Observation
- Informal Observations
- In-depth Interviewing
- Case Studies
20Qualitative or Quantitative Methods? (Contd.)
- Quantitative Questions of definition and fact
- Scientific
- Large samples
- Generalizability vs. In-depth understanding
- Reliable, representative sampling
- Examples
- Surveys (descriptive, explanatory, attitude)
- Opinion polls
- Delphi studies
- Experiments
21Triangulation
Secondary
Qualitative
Quantitative
22Qualitative or Quantitative Methods? (Contd.)
- Triangulation
- Uses secondary, qualitative, and quantitative
methods to better describe, understand, predict,
and control public relations campaigns - Provides both representative sampling and
in-depth knowledge of the publics or audiences
under study - Takes the case study into the real world
23Quantifying via Measurement
- Assigning numbers to categories
- Four Levels
- Nominal (distinguishes only counts, percent)
- Ordinal (distinguishes and orders counts,
percent) - Interval (assumes an equal distancing between
categories counts, means, dispersion) - Ratio (assumes absolute distancing between
categories counts, means, dispersion)
24Measurement Examples
- Nominal
- England, France, Germany, Austria
- Ordinal
- GNP Austria (1B), England (2B), France (3B),
Germany (4B) - Interval
- Strongly Agree, Agree, Disagree, Strongly
Disagree - Assumes that the distance between SA A D SD
(problem is that SAA, and DSD, but D?A) - Data are interval, but not scalar in that there
is no arbitrary zero point - Ratio
- Actual date and time of birth Bank account
balance
25Attitude Measurement
- Most Often Likert-Type Measurement
- Assumes interval data
- Respondents react to statements, typically by
degree of agreement - MUST have a zero point a midpoint
- MUST have an ODD number of responses (3, 5, 7)
- MUST consist of two or more statements
- Strongly Strongly
- statement1. Agree Agree
Uncertain Disagree Disagree - Strongly Strongly
- statement2. Agree Agree
Uncertain Disagree Disagree
26Attitude Measurement (Contd.)
- Creates a scale of statements that
- Range from Positive through Neutral to Negative
- Strongly Strongly
- Public Relations is an excellent career.
Agree Agree Uncertain
Disagree Disagree - Strongly Strongly
- Public Relations is a career. Agree
Agree Uncertain Disagree
Disagree - Strongly Strongly
- Public Relations is no career at all.
Agree Agree Uncertain
Disagree Disagree - Actual reaction to statements is 2
1 0 -1
-2 - Coded as 5 4
3 2
1 - Scale Range 3 (negative) to 15 (positive)
27Surveys vs. Polls
- Polls
- Short and quick
- fact-based
- Surveys
- Longer
- Definition- and fact-based
- Allow for limited questions of value
28Poll Survey Sampling
- Sampling
- Scientific Sampling Probability Sampling
- Group sampled represents the entire population
from which it is drawn (cross-sectional trend
panel cohort trend) - Non-Scientific Sampling Convenience Sampling
- Group sampled is not representative of entire
population, but only one limited segment
(volunteer, snowball, quota, man-on-the-street
296. Programmatic PR Research
- Best practice research is programmatic
- Divided into three phases
- Program development research
- Program refinement research
- Program evaluation research
30Program Development Research
- Program Development stage requires
- Communications goals
- Research goals
- Communication Goals
- Establish actionable and measurable objectives
- Design overall strategy to achieve these
objectives - Research Goals
- Understand the situation
- Relate this understanding to the communications
opportunities
31Program Development Research Should Tell You
- The circumstances creating the opportunity or
challenge - Target audience(s) characteristics
- What needs to be communicated to realize the
objective - How ideas can best be communicated
- Go beyond just turning out information
development stage helps to change, modify, or
reinforce behavior
32Program Refinement Research
- Communication Goals
- Make correct decisions implementing the PR or
communication program - Research Goals
- Validate that decisions made are correct
- Supply the information necessary to choose
between alternatives
33Why Program Refinement Research?
- Pre-testing of messages
- Informative, Persuasive, Attitude Change,
Attitude Reinforcement - Pre-testing of public/audience stance on
objectives - Pre-testing communication strategies
- Pre-testing for gatekeeper selection
- Pre-testing for publics (Active, Aware, Passive,
Latent)
34Program Refinement Research Examples
- Types
- Concept/Message testing studies (definition)
- Spokesperson selection research (fact)
- Format testing (fact/value)
- Methods
- Focus Groups
- Polls (telephone/Internet)
- Informal Field Research
35Program Evaluation Research
- Communication Goal
- Determine program/campaigns effectiveness
- Research Goals
- Performance measurements in terms of
- Outputs Air time, clippings, Internet hits,
etc. - Impacts What program/campaign did to
audience(s) - Behavior Were desired behaviors realized?
367. Research and the Budget
- Research is a necessary, not sufficient condition
for public relations - Research is a part of EVERY program/ campaign
budget - Research permeates the program/campaign, plan
research across the process - Integrated research is essential to effective
public relations and should be built in to each
budget
37Budgetary Factors
- Circumstances
- Availability of in-house personnel to conduct
research - Commercial research firm availability
- Whether the research has been budgeted across or
simply as a budget item - The research question(s) asked
38Research Costs
- Focus Groups 1,000 4,500 per group
- One-on-One Interviews 250 2,000 per
interview - Telephone Surveys
- Small 3,500 35,000
- Large 20,000 95,000
- Mail/Internet Surveys
- Small scale 5,000 30,000
- Large scale 12,500 85,000
39Stretching the Research Budget
- Never sacrifice quality for price
- Seek competitive bids
- Never take the low bid without examining the
individual or firms credentials - Learn about research questions and budget
appropriately - Dont conduct a survey when a focus group is more
efficient - When looking only for facts, consider a poll over
a survey - Never stop participating in the research
experience - All good researchers are Participant-Observers
- Continually seek informal data in the field
40Conclusions
- Best Practice Public Relations Research
- Is programmatic
- Has clearly defined and achievable goals
- Has its objectives stated in measurable terms
- Addresses the appropriate research question(s)
- Employs a triangulated methodologies
- Has the necessary resources allocated to the
research program