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Chapter 1: The communication of organizations Corporate communication: the management function within an organization responsible for communication processes that are initiated from within the organization and thus trying to promote sustainable interaction between organization and public groups ...

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  • October 29, 2021
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Summary Corporate Communication Worldwide

Chapter 1: The communication of organizations

Corporate communication: the management function within an organization responsible for
communication processes that are initiated from within the organization and thus trying to promote
sustainable interaction between organization and public groups in the internal and external environment.
 Communication should be a management function
 It’s a multi layered process
 It’s initiated by an organization
 It should be a sustainable interaction
 Different groups should be involved.
 It’s done internally and externally.

Integrated communication: integrating corporate communication.
Public relations: the field of corporate communication.
Reputation management: the creation of values for stakeholders. The Reputation Quotient (RQ): measures
corporate reputations in 6 areas:

1. Emotional appeal
2. Products and services
3. Workplace environment
4. Financial performance
5. Vision and leadership
6. Social responsibility

Marketing communication: focused on selling. When public relations are seen as instrument for marketing,
it can be split in 2:
 Product-related publicity
 Corporate communication

Goals of organizations
 Profit companies include large, small and international organisations whose aim it is to make profit
they have to communicate with shareholders, stakeholders, clients, suppliers, financial world and
employees
 Non-profit governmental organizations such as central government, local government, regions and
municipalities.
communicate with inhabitants (clients) and stakeholders
 Non-governmental organization (NGO’s)-> hospitals, libraries, the police and so on
communicate with government, clients, suppliers and employees
 Syndicates (unions)
communicate with members, government, companies and non-profit organizations
 Pressure groups-> consumer groups, environmentalist, social activists and so on
communicate with members, volunteers, government and politicians




The aim of organizations in communicating:

,  Organizational aim: continuity
 Economic aim: profit or no profit
 Social aim: people, planet, profit
Mission statement: public goal/intentions of an organization (often try to include the 3 P’s)
Vision statement: how the organization views its role in society

Media influences communication.
Define groups in society: public groups, publics or stakeholders.

Stakeholders: certain persons in that groups that are important. Can be divided in internal and external.
Internal -> employees, work council, central staff, management, board of directors, interns, students
External -> government, unions, employers’ organisations, shareholders, banks, suppliers, pressure groups

Public groups:
1. Employees
2. Owners shareholders
3. Financial groups
4. Customers
5. Suppliers
6. Trade unions/ employer’s unions
7. Branch organizations/ professional organizations
8. Competitors
9. Government
10. Community
11. Pressure groups
12. Education
13. Media

Stakeholder mapping: not always possible to communicate intensively with all public groups at all times.
Analyse the attention given to certain stakeholders:

Low level of interest High level of interest
Low power Minimal effort Keep informed
High power Keep satisfied Keep players

Describe public groups in the following format: What do we know about them? What do they want from
us? What do we want from them?

, Chapter 2: Global aspects of corporate communication

Globalisation: increasing internationalisation of the economy, social, cultural and political processes.
2 conditions for successful global communication:

1. News is efficiently distributed around the globe
2. News must relatively quickly diffuse among the various populations

3 variables are responsible for differences in messages being spread among different countries:
1. Geographical distance from the location of the event
2. The extent of trade relations between the countries
3. The amount of existing communicative relations between countries

3 factors that influence each other continually:
 Changes in the international economy
 Changes in organizations
 Changes in computer and communication technology

 Knowledge is becoming the key factor
Knowledge work: economic value creation by knowledge
 Products and services are digitised and therefore virtualised
 We live in a network economy (integration/networking)
 Disintermediation: less intermediaries
 Prosumption: gap between consumers and producers becomes smaller
 Immediacy
 Molecularization/regionalisation: mass media, production and monolithic governments are
replaced by smaller scale, molecular media, production and governance
 Globalisation
 Discordance: massive social contradictions are arising

Civil society: social space between the market and government
These organizations are called: Non-profit sector, Third sector, Social midfield & NGO’s
A healthy nation has a balance in the state, market and civil society.

Global activism: internationally organized groups that fight globalism and other international
developments.
Cross-cultural communication: communication with groups from other cultures.

Cultural dimensions of Hofstede:
1. Power distance
2. Individualism vs collectivism
3. Masculinity vs femininity
4. Uncertainty avoidance
5. Long-term vs short-term orientation:
Long-term: thrift and perseverance
Short-term: respect for tradition, fulfilling social obligations, protecting one’s ‘face’




Colours have different values in different countries:

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