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Facebook and the public framing of a corporate crisis

Michael Andreas Etter (Department for Intercultural Communication and Management, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark.)
Anne Vestergaard (Department for Intercultural Communication and Management, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark.)

Corporate Communications: An International Journal

ISSN: 1356-3289

Article publication date: 7 April 2015

3472

Abstract

Purpose

It is crucial for corporate communication to know how different public sources frame a crisis and how these sources influence each other. The purpose of this study is to investigate the role of Facebook by examining – if the public represented on Facebook contributes distinct frames to the discursive negotiation of a crisis at all, and whether the public represented on Facebook is able to influence the crisis framing of news media.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors compared how four different public sources framed the Nestlé Kit Kat crisis: news media, corporate communication, NGOs, and Facebook users. The authors therefore, coded 5,185 sentences from the four sources and conducted a frame-analysis through the detection of co-occurrence between actors and attributions. A cross-correlation with a seven-day lag in each direction was applied to detect the frame-setting effects between the public represented on Facebook and news media.

Findings

While the public represented on Facebook is found to apply distinct crisis frames in comparison to conventional sources, its frame-setting power is limited. In contrast to findings from political communication, it is rather the news media that influences the crisis framing in social media. The role of the public represented on Facebook, hence, appears marginal in comparison to news media that remain a major force in the discursive negotiation of a corporate crisis.

Originality/value

As a first study, crisis framing in social media is compared with that of news media, NGOs, and corporate communication. Second, so far there have been no studies in the corporate communication field investigating the frame-setting effects between social media and news media. Contrary to social media’s promising frame-setting power ascribed by some scholars, the authors do not find such effects with Facebook, the most popular social media tool to date.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This paper was originally presented at The 2nd International CSR Communication Conference 2013, Aarhus, Denmark. The authors want to thank Elmie Nekmat and Julie Uldam for their comment on a previous version of this paper.

Citation

Etter, M.A. and Vestergaard, A. (2015), "Facebook and the public framing of a corporate crisis", Corporate Communications: An International Journal, Vol. 20 No. 2, pp. 163-177. https://doi.org/10.1108/CCIJ-10-2013-0082

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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