140 research outputs found
Social PR study 2015: a study of social media use among PR professionals
This study aims to explore and understand how social media impacts PR professionals and their media relationships. It compares the results with research from the published Social Journalism Study 2015 and notes that PR professionals and journalists are largely in agreement about how social media is changing their work environment
Journalists views and use of social media: Cision Social Journalism Study 2012: global report
The annual Social Journalism Study conducted by Cision and Canterbury Christ Church University, UK, is charting the changes of how journalists and media professionals use social media for work. Unique to this year’s study is the identification of five profile groups of professional social media users who differ in terms of patterns of use, attitude and knowledge.These groups are: Architects, Hunters, Observers, Promoters and Sceptics. This report also includes a Social Journalism Barometer which was developed to assess social media involvement, practice, knowledge and attitudes among journalists and media professionals in different countries. To put journalists in the wider social context of the changing use of technology, we also included a comparison to Forrester’s Social Technographics® framework of general population‘s use of social media
'Social Journalism' Studie 2012-2013 - Deutschland
This report chart the use, attitudes, behaviours and views of German journalists towards social media
NEW NETWORK DESIGN STANDARDS FOR THE GRID CONNECTION OF LARGE CONCENTRATIONS OF DISTRIBUTED GENERATION
ABSTRACT Connecting large concentrations of Distributed Generation to the distribution networks usually requires high investments in network extension. This contribution describes how Enexis used its Risk Based Asset Management approach to develop new network design standards for the grid connection of large concentrations of DG in a cost-effective way
Towards an Effective Access to the ICC? Analysis of the ICC Decision of 17 Jan. 2006 (Vers Un Accès Effectif À La Cour Pénale Internationale? Analyse De La Décision Du 17 Janvier 2006)
Narcissism, toxic work culture and abusive supervision: a double-edged sword escalating organizational deviance
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