Survey: Two-Thirds of Public Affairs Professionals Believe Social Media is Dominant Communications Channel in Shaping Public Policy in China

ข่าวต่างประเทศ Tuesday November 17, 2009 11:42 —Asianet Press Release

BEIJING--17 Nov--Media OutReach-AsiaNet/InfoQuest More than two-thirds of 132 public affairs professionals with responsibility for China believe that opinions expressed in the social media have more influence over contemporary public policy than other media. The Edelman/PublicAffairsAsia survey findings will be presented in full this afternoon during a closed-door roundtable featuring senior government officials, foreign multi-nationals (MNCs) and state owned enterprises (SOEs). Some 66 percent of survey respondents believe that social media is "the most influential communications medium in modern China." In addition, respondents believe that the government is responsive to online opinion: almost 60 percent disagree with the statement that the Chinese government will not respond to suggestions and policy positions advanced through social media. "It is no longer adequate simply to monitor the social media. It's clearly impacting the development and implementation of public policy in China," said Alan VanderMolen, President of Edelman's Asia Pacific Region. "Foreign MNCs, SOEs and other organizations must get engaged to foster meaningful dialogue and relationships with stakeholders on an ongoing basis." "The survey reveals the significance of social media in public policy in modern China. Yet just eight per cent of respondents state that their public affairs department is responsible for social media strategy," said Craig Hoy, Executive Director, PublicAffairsAsia. "To deliver meaningful outcomes, senior practitioners need to align medium and message and start taking responsibility for social media." Embracing But Not Yet Engaging Responses to the survey suggest that public affairs executives use social media but have not begun to approach it systematically. Forty-three percent of respondents have started to utilize social media platforms as part of their public affairs strategy "but have not yet evaluated its impact". Only one in seven (17%) claim to use it as a fully integrated and evaluated tool in their public affairs work. When it comes to leveraging social media as a means to collect and disseminate information about their business, 59 percent of respondents use it at least several times during the week as an input device for news and information about their business. However, 37 percent use social media for putting messages about their business into public view at least several times a week. Nearly half (46%) use it less than once a week or not at all. Samantha J. Silver Edelman +86 13439630027 SOURCE: PublicAffairsAsia -- Distributed by AsiaNet ( www.asianetnews.net )--

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