Public relations practitioners are encouraged to use their feelings and emotions at work, which Yeomans (2007: 218) describes as 'learning to please'. Executing the growing social media aspect of the public relations role can offer practitioners significant pleasure, although due to the industry's desire for transparency in online engagement a practitioner's identity is becoming an increasingly large part of the employer's product and subsequently responsible for aspects of organizational success. Drawing on interviews with public relations practitioners, this article examines the extent to which professional online engagement can be analysed in terms of 'emotional labour' (Hochschild 1983). It explores whether the pleasure that practitione...
Despite the significant and increasing influence of social media on employees' work lives, there is ...
‘Social phenomenology’ (Schütz, 1970; 1978) and its concept of the ‘lifeworld’ has received limited ...
Purpose - In this chapter we discuss the implications social media have for the selfrepresentation a...
This paper explores the impact of social media on public relations by analysing Singapore-based prac...
An analysis of how public relations practitioners are using social media. Online journal article at ...
While the introduction of Web 2.0 technology and social media is changing public relations practice,...
Public relations will continue to transform as digital mediums permeate how we interact, communicate...
This article explores how public relations practitioners use the microblogging tool Twitter to maint...
Social media has altered the design of modern society. It has changed the way people lived and worke...
The international survey of public relations practitioners (n=574) reported about in this article a...
Paper presented at 18th BledCom conference, Lake Bled, Slovenia, July 2011http://bledcom.renderspace...
This paper explores the impact of social media on public relations by analysing Singapore-based prac...
This paper explores the impact of social media on public relations by analysing Singapore-based prac...
If the explosion of professional and social networking media has radically changed the way in which ...
This research is not intended to examine on the advantages of using social media at work but to expl...
Despite the significant and increasing influence of social media on employees' work lives, there is ...
‘Social phenomenology’ (Schütz, 1970; 1978) and its concept of the ‘lifeworld’ has received limited ...
Purpose - In this chapter we discuss the implications social media have for the selfrepresentation a...
This paper explores the impact of social media on public relations by analysing Singapore-based prac...
An analysis of how public relations practitioners are using social media. Online journal article at ...
While the introduction of Web 2.0 technology and social media is changing public relations practice,...
Public relations will continue to transform as digital mediums permeate how we interact, communicate...
This article explores how public relations practitioners use the microblogging tool Twitter to maint...
Social media has altered the design of modern society. It has changed the way people lived and worke...
The international survey of public relations practitioners (n=574) reported about in this article a...
Paper presented at 18th BledCom conference, Lake Bled, Slovenia, July 2011http://bledcom.renderspace...
This paper explores the impact of social media on public relations by analysing Singapore-based prac...
This paper explores the impact of social media on public relations by analysing Singapore-based prac...
If the explosion of professional and social networking media has radically changed the way in which ...
This research is not intended to examine on the advantages of using social media at work but to expl...
Despite the significant and increasing influence of social media on employees' work lives, there is ...
‘Social phenomenology’ (Schütz, 1970; 1978) and its concept of the ‘lifeworld’ has received limited ...
Purpose - In this chapter we discuss the implications social media have for the selfrepresentation a...