Organizational communication on Twitter: Differences between non-profit and for-profit organizations in the context of climate change

Authors
Publication date 2016
Host editors
  • C.M. Schmidt
Book title Crossmedia-Kommunikation in kulturbedingten Handlungsräumen: Mediengerechte Anwendung und zielgruppenspezifische Ausrichtung
ISBN
  • 9783658110758
Series Europäische Kulturen in der Wirtschaftskommunikation, 25
Pages (from-to) 305-313
Publisher Wiesbaden: Springer VS
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
Twitter as a socio-technical platform provides organizations with new ways to reach their stakeholders. In this paper, we compare the use of Twitter specific affordances – such as hashtags, mentions of usernames and sharing of URLs along the tweets in a sample of 1520 tweets sent by 16 profit organizations, and 1042 tweets sent by 18 non-profit organizations in the context of climate change debate. We also compare the use of Twitter for information sharing, engaging in the community and calls-for-action (Lovejoy & Saxton 2012) between the organizations. Our results show that nonprofit organizations used Twitter more for engaging in community than profit organizations whose tweets were almost completely (96%) about information sharing. Non-profit organizations shared more hashtags than profit-organizations, in particular hashtags related to campaigns and events. We can conclude that the two types of organizations used Twitter specific affordances differently to reach their targeted audiences.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-11076-5_16
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