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Outline. IntroductionUnderstanding Public OpinionA Theory of the MediaMedia and Crisis Management. Introduction. The Media Challenge. Communication and Public Opinion. Business decisions are necessarily complex Technical details (versus ?drama")Pricing and cost/benefit analysis (versus ?need a
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1. Public Opinion & The Media LO6.3595
Political Environment of the Law
Charles Cameron
Visiting Professor of Law
NYU Law School
Professor of Politics and Public Affairs
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
Princeton University
2. Outline Introduction
Understanding Public Opinion
A Theory of the Media
Media and Crisis Management
3. Introduction The Media Challenge
4. Communication and Public Opinion Business decisions are necessarily complex
Technical details (versus drama)
Pricing and cost/benefit analysis (versus need and suffering)
Statistics (versus victim)
Long-run (versus short-run)
So are many public policy issues
Increasing subway fares easy to grasp
Microsoft anti-trust? Health care finance? Environmental regulatory regimes?
5. Mass Publics and Political Information Most citizens have little interest in mastering these complexities
But they will respond to what interests them, if presented in an accessible way
Which means
Scandals, threats to the public, outrages, violent crime, conflict
Who is listening?
Stock holders activists political contributors regulators politicians -- motivated voters
6. Critical Role of the Media Few businesses, agencies, or NGOs can communicate their message to the general public directly
Critical role of the media (as an institution)
Often, the sole source of info for mass publics, and for many elites
Critical in shaping the content of that info
7. Media as a Challenge for Management How can we gain favorable coverage as part of an integrated strategy?
How can we limit/respond to bad messages during crises?
Managers must be able to anticipate amount and type of coverage, and its effects on mass publics and elites
8. 2 Key Questions How does media coverage affect public opinion among mass publics and elites?
What drives media coverage?
9. Understanding Public Opinion
10. What Americans Know:T-Shirt Version T-shirt version of what social scientists know about info levels in the mass public:
THE MEAN IS LOW BUT THE VARIANCE IS HIGH
Lots of dumb-dumbs, a few mavens
For Illinois Power: the mavens are apt to include major stock holders, rate payer activists, politicians, regulators
Why this pattern?
11. How to explain Low Mean/High Variance? Benefits vs. Costs of Information Acquisition
For most Americans, political information has few benefits & is costly to acquire
For a few Americans, political information has considerable benefit & is easy to acquire
12. Two Kinds of Benefits Instrumental benefits from political knowledge
Knowledge for use
Affective benefits from political knowledge
Knowledge for fun or passion
13. Instrumental Benefits: Political Accountability Why learn if you cant use the knowledge to get better government?
For most Americans, what difference does political knowledge make?
What consequences for policy of voting for/against a given congressman? Little
(More on this in later weeks)
14. Instrumental Benefits: Informational Free Riding Why learn if you can free ride on others information?
What happens to ME ME ME if I dont bother to learn anything about politics?
In the US, almost nothing
15. Instrumental Benefits: Private Benefits Note difference between individuals and large firms/interest groups
Big players have an incentive to learn
Individuals have an incentive to learn about matters affecting their private decisions
Alar in apples
Utility rates
16. Affective Benefits:Politics as Entertainment For some people, politics is like sports
These people partisan enthusiasts enjoy knowing a lot! (Heres the high variance)
Martin van Buren & the party system
How does Political Structure encourage/discourage political enthusiasm?
PR vs first past the post
PR type parties more ideologically distinct
Presidential vs prime minister systems
17. Costs: Cheap vs. Expensive Info is cheap if it comes to you, rather than you to it
Esp., if it is packaged in cognitively easy chunks
Ex: Endorsements
Likeability heuristics and on-line processing
Infotainment, esp with a personal connection
Importance of media and elite cue-givers
18. Opinion Change: The Converse Model (Zaller) A simple micro-level model that relates individual political responses to 1) individual information levels, 2) information environments, and 3) political messages (media)
Very simple: just algebra
19. Basic Parts of the Model Three parts:
Probability of Exposure to a political message
Probability of Opinion Change (conversion) GIVEN exposure to the message
Together, these determine the Probability of Opinion Change
20. Probability of Exposure
21. Prob. of Conversion GIVEN Exposure to the Message
22. Probability of Conversion (Defn) Pr of Conversion = (Prob of Exposure) X (Prob of Conversion|Exposure)
Just like: Prob of Getting Wet = Prob it Rains X the Prob of getting wet When it rains
Some simulations
23. Prob. of Conversion:Baseline
24. Prob. of Conversion:View 2
25. Some Implications How will mass publics respond to media messages, political appeals & political information?
Effects of media messages
How to conduct campaigns, media campaigns, etc
26. Widening Exposure to a Message (View 1)
27. Widening Exposure(View 2)
28. Widening Exposure
Conclusions Wider, more intensive bombardment can have dramatic effects
BUT, mostly among the dumbs-dumbs
Effects among the better informed are modest
29. More Effective Messages (View 1)
30. Better message(View 2)
31. Better message
Conclusion Crafting more convincing, more effective messages can have dramatic effects
BUT mostly among the highly informed maven types
The effects on the dumb-dumbs are likely to be small
32. Illinois Power Who listens to 60 Minutes?
Mavens
Which mavens are getting a bad message?
Stockholders, rate payer activists, regulators, state legislators
How can these people affect Illinois Power?
33. Why did 60 Minutes Mug Illinois Power? Anticipating & avoiding muggings
What to do next
34. Understanding the Media
35. What is the media trying to do? Profit maximization criteria
Revenue Side:
Circulation or viewers => Advertising Revenue
Circulation => Payments for publications
Cost Side
Story Identification or Leads
Story Creation
Production and Distribution
36. What does profit-maximization mean? Revenue Side
Find stories that have big impact
Find stories that draw the right kind of reader for advertisers
Cost Side
Obtain either inexpensive leads or exclusive leads
Choose big themes with multiple stories
Sensationalization can occur
Looking for something that might not be there
Create a story from somewhat suspicious facts
Target stories readers find interesting/advertisers do not find offensive
Snowball effect
Copy other outlets
Longevity effect
Keep hammering away at same story
37. Snowball Effect: An Example
38. Reporters Problem
Must have the story written before she investigates the facts
Pitch to the editor and the team in weekly meetings
Only best stories survive
This means that the reporter is filling the holes in the story
Unusual is usual
Business press tends to pursue the unusual and portray it as either:
All companies should be like this (Enron)
All companies are this evil (Enron)
39. The Reporters Problem
40. Two views of the media
Media as businesses
Demand side
Coverage and production of news is given primarily by audience interest
Media as social institutions
Supply side
Coverage and production of news is determined primarily by societal significance
41. Theory of media coverage
42. Combined theory of media
43. A Framework for Strategy Evaluation
44.
Generate list of alternatives
Screen the alternatives
Analyze the alternatives:
use insights from 4Is to anticipate institutional arenas, relevant interests and information problems
use issue life cycle to anticipate issue dynamics
use theory of the media and checklists to anticipate specific problems from activists and the media
evaluate alternatives from efficiency, rights, and fairness perspectives. Note: important is not only what you consider ethical, but what stakeholders consider ethical.
Use the ethical analysis to anticipate problems in nonmarket environments and for strategy development
Choose an alternative that is consistent with the firms principles.
Come up with specific suggestions tor implement the strategy that address the problem areas identified in the analysis.
Be creative and look for ways to integrate market and nonmarket strategies. A Framework for Strategy Evaluation - Details