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Corporate community and the new technologies: concepts for communicators

Richard J. Varey (Director, BNFL Corporate Communications Unit, The Management School, University of Salford, Salford, UK.)

Corporate Communications: An International Journal

ISSN: 1356-3289

Article publication date: 1 March 1997

230

Abstract

States that the emerging economic democracy driven by electronically‐mediating communication systems (information sharing technology) is decentralizing the decision process to informed, empowered stakeholders in coalitions over rights and responsibilities. Reports that the modern world is in the throes of creating an information age in which fragmentation, competition and division is giving way to unification and co‐operation as knowledge, technology, and capital flows across the world. Reveals that electronic technology is shifting the critical factor of production from capital to knowledge. The knowledge‐based world has different economic imperatives. Democracy and enterprise have become economically efficient. Information technology provides the communication for the system of complexity which is the knowledge society. Notes that the context of communication is irreversibly changing with the advent of relationships in networked constituencies. The corporate communicator will have to deal with, and be part of, social systems which can balance the opposing forces of community (conformity, belonging, association, and collaboration) and individualism (freedom, co‐operation, conflict, and competition). Corporate communication is a part of this.

Keywords

Citation

Varey, R.J. (1997), "Corporate community and the new technologies: concepts for communicators", Corporate Communications: An International Journal, Vol. 2 No. 3, pp. 117-123. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb046542

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1997, MCB UP Limited

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