The Use of Social Media in Public Relations at Non-Governmental Organisations in South Africa
Abstract
Social media can be a useful tool in public relations in non-governmental organisations (NGOs), but do NGOs make use of social media in their quest for service delivery in South Africa? Social networking sites, blogging, email, instant messaging, and online journals are some of the technological changes that changed the way interaction between people and how they gather information. Although social media is mainly used for interactive dialogue and social interaction, the private sector soon realised that the web-based technologies (especially Facebook and Twitter) could also be a competitive business tool. Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) soon followed suit however at a slower pace than the general communication growth rate of social media in South Africa. This article examines if social networking sites have any impact on public relations practices of NGOs in South Africa – an environment where both customers and employees still struggle to take full advantage of social media. The critical literature findings increase the understanding of the current and future challenges of social media use in public relations at NGOs in South Africa. The study explores the main differences between traditional and social media, how social media is redefining public relations role, and shed some light on defining public relations practices, identify the uses, limitations and benefits of social media by public relations practitioners in NGOs. Recommendations for future communication research are given. Based on the literature, a qualitative research design collected data using semi-structured, individual interviews. The results revealed that social media platforms such as Facebook do have an effect, and even changed the way in which NGOs communicate. The study also revealed that social media certainly has an impact on public relations relationships. This means that it has become crucial that public relations practitioners at NOGs embrace and take advantage of social media, and that they should also invest in proper electronic platforms to reap the benefits of improved communication internally and externally.
Downloads
References
Al-Deen, H. S. N. & Hendricks, J. A. (2012). Social Media Usage and Impact, Lexington, KY: Lexington.
Azimi, O. (2016). The Impacts of Social Media on Traditional Broadcast and Print Journalism.
Babbie, E. & Mouton, J. (2010). The Practice of Social Research, Cape Town: Oxford University.
Botha, L. (2017). Utilising Social Media to the Benefit of Companies, Dissertation in Computer Science: North-West University
Breakenridge, D. (2012). Social Media and Public Relations: Eight New Practices for the PR Professionals, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.
Chawinga, W. (2017). Taking Social Media to a University Classroom: Teaching and Learning using Twitter, blog. International Journal of Education Technology in Higher Education, 14(3), 1-19.
Cole, L. (2018). Marketing with Social Media: 10 Easy Steps to Success for Business, Sydney: Wiley.
Curtis, L., Edwards, C., Fraser, K. L., Fudelsky, S., Holmquist, J., Thornton, K. & Sweeter, K. D. (2010). Adoption of Social Media for Public Relations by Non-Profit Organisations. Public Relations Review, 26(1), 90-92.
Dahl, S. (2018). Social Media Marketing, Theories and Applications, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Field, A. (2009). Understanding statistics using SPSS, London: Sage.
Fitch, K. (2009). Making friends in the Wild West: Singaporean Public Relations Practitioners’ Perceptions of Working in Social Media. Prism, 6(2).
Geyer, S. & Kruman, B. (2015). Development of a Social Media Maturity Model – A Grounded Theory Approach. Proceedings of the 48th International Conference on System Sciences, IEEE Computer Society. Washington, DC, 5-8 January.
Internet Service Provider Association. (2018). ISPA. https://ispa.org.za/
Kent, M. L. & Taylor, M. (2002). Beyond Excellence: Extending The Generic Approach to international Public Relations the Case of Bosnia. Public relations review, 33(1), 10-20.
Khan, G. F. (2017). Social media for Government, Singapore: Springer.
Kotler, P. & Armstrong, G. (2017). Principles of Marketing, (17th ed.), Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.
Lubua, E. W., Semlambo, A. & Pretorius P. D. (2017). Factors Affecting the Use of Social Media in the Learning Process. South African Journal of Information Management 19, 1-12.
Medaglia, R. & Zheng, L. (2017). Extending Impact Analysis in Government Social Media Research: Five Illustrative Cases. 18th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research. Staten Island, NY, 7-9 June.
Merrian-Webster. (2018). Online Dictionary.
Pillay, A. (2017). Exploring Alternative Revenue Sources that can be Utilized to Improve Advertising Revenue at SABC Public Broadcasting Radio Stations. Durban: Durban University of Technology.
PPC. (2015). PPC Integrated Report, Sandton: Merril Lynch (SA).
Rajendran, L. & Thesinghraja, P. (2014). The Impact of New Media on Traditional Media. Middle-East Journal of Scientific Research, 22(4), 609-616.
Reiman, C. (2012). Public Interest and Private Rights in Social Media. Oxford: Chandos.
Rouse, M. (2016). What is Social Media? https://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/social-media.
Salmons, J. (2015). Doing Qualitative Research, Singapore: Sage.
Scott, D. M. (2010). The new rules of marketing and PR, Hoboken. NJ: Wiley.
Seargeant, P. & Tagg C. (2014). The Language of Social Media: Identity and Community on the Internet, New York, NY: Palgrave McMillan.
South Africa. (1996). Telecommunications Act (No. 103 of 1996), Pretoria: State Printers.
South Africa. (2005). Electronic Communications Act (No. 36 of 2005), Pretoria: State Printers.
South Africa. (2009). South African Government Gazette, Pretoria: State Printers.
South Africa. (2013). South Africa Broadband Policy.
South Africa. (2013). South African Government Gazette, Pretoria: State Printers.
South Africa. (2017). The Government Gazette Republic of South Africa, 629 (41242), Pretoria: State Printers.
South Africa. (2018). The South African Department of Communications. https://www.doc.gov.za/
South African Social Media Landscape. (2018). The2018 Social Media Landscape in South Africa.
Statistics South Africa. (2017). South Africa has 55 million Internet Users.
Stokes, R. (2009). E-Marketing: The Essential Guide to Online Marketing. 2nd ed. New Delhi: Shumani.
Stoycheff, E., Liu, J., Kunto, A., Wiibowu. & Nanni, D. P. (2017). What was learned about social media by studying Facebook? A decade in review. The American Journal of Nursing, 117(9), 50-54.
United Nations. (2017). 5 Tips for your Social Media Strategy.
Uyenco, K. (2017). The new social: How social media is changing the job market.
Waters, R. D., Burnett, E. M., Lamm, A. M. & Lucas, J. (2009). Engaging stakeholders through social networking: How non-profit organisations are using Facebook. Public Relations Review, 35, 102-106.
World Wide Worx. (2010). Internet World Stats for 2010. www.Worldwideworx.com
World Wide Worx. (2017). Internet World Stats 2017. www.Worldwideworx.com
Zang, D., Feng, X. & Chen, P. (2018). Social Behaviour and Personality. Social Behavior and Personality: An International Journal, 46(4), 667-681.
Zoonen, W., Veerhoeven, W. R. & Vleigenthart, M. (2017). Understand the Consequences of Public Social Media Use for Work. European Management Journal, 35(5), 595-605.
Copyright (c) 2018 G. Nchabeleng, CJ. Botha, CA Bisschoff
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Author (s) should affirm that the material has not been published previously. It has not been submitted and it is not under consideration by any other journal. At the same time author (s) need to execute a publication permission agreement to assume the responsibility of the submitted content and any omissions and errors therein. After submission of a revised paper in the light of suggestions of the reviewers, editorial team edits and formats manuscripts to bring uniformity and standardization in published material.
This work will be licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) and under condition of the license, users are free to read, copy, remix, transform, redistribute, download, print, search or link to the full texts of articles and even build upon their work as long as they credit the author for the original work. Moreover, as per journal policy author (s) hold and retain copyrights without any restrictions.