Chapter 11: Research Flashcards
What is research?
Research is the systematic gathering of information to describe and understand a situation, check assumptions about publics and perceptions and check the PR consequences. Research helps define the problem and publics.
What three questions does research answer?
WHO do we want to reach?
WHAT do we want them to do?
WHAT message do we want to communication to get the desired outcome?
Research term: Primary vs. Secondary
Primary research is an investigation conducted first-hand. Secondary research uses findings of others.
Research term: Formal vs. Informal
Formal uses principles of scientific investigation to obtain empirical data. (examples: surveys) Informal or nonscientific research looks at values or qualities and are subjective. It’s good for pre-testing formal strategies. (examples: interviews, forms, call-in phone lines, field reports)
Research term: Qualitative vs. Quantitative
Qualitative is research that is somewhat subjective, using a problem or open-ended free-response format. Also known as exploratory research. Yields an in-depth understanding of an issue. (example: focus group) Quantitative is research that can be numerically stated or compared, factual, numerical.
Research term: Scientific Method
Also known as formal research to gather empirical data
What are three attributes of a useful problem statement?
- Written in present tense, describing the current situation
- Describes the situation in specific, measurable terms (what is the source of concern, where is the problem, when is it a problem, who is involved, how are they involved, why is this is concern)
- Does not imply solutions or place blame
Outline the four step problem solving process.
Defining the problem
Planning and programming
Taking action and communicating
Evaluating
(aka RPIE)
A low-level expectation for most public relations campaigns is ______. Higher-level practice focus on what three things?
Awareness is low-level expectation.
High-level expectation focuses on impacting an audience’s behavior, attitude and action.
What are some considerations when deciding on a research method?
- What decision will be made from the research?
- What information is required?
- Available resources?
- Does sample selection give you an accurate assessment?
- What size of the sample is needed?
- How will you collect the data - survey, telephone, mail?
- How much time do you have?
- What questions will you ask?