Michele Ewing, associate professor in ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ Stateβs School of Journalism and Mass Communication (JMC), was recently recognized for her research on internal communication at the International Public Relations Research Conference in Orlando.
Ewing and the team of researchers β Julie OβNeil, of Texas Christian University; Stacey Smith, of Jackson, Jackson & Wagner; and Sean Williams, of True Digital Communications β earned the IPR Top 2 Papers of Practical Significance Award for the paper βA Delphi Study to Identify Standards for Internal Communication,β which is focused on a two-year research project.
The research began with an 11-member international task force with the goal of developing recommendations for internal communication measurement standards. Ewing, OβNeil, Smith and Williams then extended the task forceβs initial work by conducting a Delphi study in 2016 with a purposive sample of internal communication thought leaders. The team sought to determine if a wider audience of internal communication practitioners agreed with the task forceβs recommended standards and definitions.
The 2016 study asked participants to indicate their level of agreement with the recommended definitions of the proposed standards, their usage of the proposed standards, whether they recommended additional standards and which standards they viewed as most important and why. The researchers also presented the proposed standards at three public relations conferences and obtained feedback about the proposed standards from hundreds of academics and communication practitioners.
The IPR-recognized paper describes the findings of the Delphi Study and introduces and defines 21 measurement standards that internal communication practitioners can use to create more effective communication plans and measure the value communication brings to their organizations.
βThe recommendations have potential value for both academics and practitioners in terms of showing how to measure internal communication in a consistent and comparable mannerβthe ultimate goal of standardization,β Ewing said.
The research team plans to begin a second phase of the study to determine methodology for how to measure the defined standards.
ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ IPR
The Institute for Public Relations (IPR) is a nonprofit foundation dedicated to research in, on and for public relations. IPR investigates the science beneath the art of public relationsβ’. IPR focuses on research that matters to the practice, providing timely insights and applied intelligence that professionals can put to immediate use.