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Strategic Communication (77641SP05Y) Summary - Part 1 & 2

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This is a complete and carefully prepared summary of the Strategic Communication course (77641SP05Y) at the University of Amsterdam, Master’s in Corporate Communication program. It brings together notes from all 12 lectures, including explanations of key theories, core concepts, and summaries of all essential readings (like Weick, Ferguson, Men, Schneider, Stohl, and many others). The summary also includes: 1. Clear connections between articles and lectures. 2. Examples that help make the theories easier to understand. 3. Useful tables, definitions, and reflections to support studying. 4. A section with mock exam questions for extra practice. I created this document to support my own preparation, and it helped me achieve strong exam grades (7.2 and 9.4). I hope it can save others time and help them feel well-prepared for the lectures and exams in this course.

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Strategic Communication (77641SP05Y)
part 1 & 2
LECTURE 1. INTRODUCTION STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION...................................................3
WHAT IS STARTEGIC COMMUNICATION?........................................................................................................... 3
LECTURE 1 SLIDES. INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................... 4
BUILDING THEORY IN PUBLIC RELATIONS: INTERORGANIZATIONAL RELATIONSHIPS AS A PUBLIC RELATIONS PARADIGM
(FERGUSON, 2018)................................................................................................................................... 5
TESTING AN ENVIRONMENTAL FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING PUBLIC RELATIONS PRACTITIONERS' ORIENTATION
TOWARD RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT (LEE & KEE (2017)................................................................................6
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (FERGUSON, 2018) AND (LEE & KEE (2017).......................................................9
FINAL REFLECTIONS STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION.............................................................................................. 9
LECTURE 2. SENSEMAKING AND DISCOURSE ......................................................................9
LECTURE 2 SLIDES. SENSEMAKING AND DISCOURSE.......................................................................................... 9
ORGANIZING AND THE PROCESS OF SENSEMAKING (WEICK ET AL, 2005)...........................................................11
INTERNAL CRISIS COMMUNICATION AND THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF EMOTION: UNIVERSITY LEADERS’ SENSEGIVING
DISCOURSE DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC (YEOMANS & BOWMAN, 2020)...................................................12
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (WEICK ET AL, 2005) AND (YEOMANS & BOWMAN, 2020)...................................14
FINAL REFLECTIONS SENSEMAKING AND DISCOURSE......................................................................................... 15
LECTURE 3. ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTITY AND CULTURE......................................................15
LECTURE 3 SLIDES. ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTITY AND CULTURE...........................................................................15
IDENTIFICATION IN ORGANIZATIONS: AN EXAMINATION OF FOUR FUNDAMENTAL QUESTIONS (ASHFORTH ET AL. 2008) 17
"Identification: A Fuzzy Set"............................................................................................................ 18
Explanation of "Episodes of Emulation and Affinity"........................................................................19
Explanation of "A Process Model of Identification"...........................................................................20
ORGANIZATIONAL CLIMATE AND CULTURE (SCHNEIDER ET AL., 2013)................................................................22
WHAT IS ORGANIZATIONAL CLIMATE?............................................................................................................ 23
WHAT IS ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE?........................................................................................................... 24
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (ASHFORTH ET AL. 2008) AND (SCHNEIDER ET AL., 2013)...................................24
FINAL REFLECTIONS ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTITY AND CULTURE...........................................................................25
LECTURE 4. LEADERSHIP COMMUNICATION.......................................................................26
LECTURE 4 SLIDES. LEADERSHIP COMMUNICATION.......................................................................................... 26
STRATEGIC INTERNAL COMMUNICATION: TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP, COMMUNICATION CHANNELS, AND EMPLOYEE
SATISFACTION (MEN, 2014)...................................................................................................................... 28
COMPLEXITY LEADERSHIP THEORY: SHIFTING LEADERSHIP FROM THE INDUSTRIAL AGE TO THE KNOWLEDGE ERA (UHL-
BIEN ET AL., 2007)................................................................................................................................. 29
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (MEN, 2014) AND (UHL-BIEN ET AL., 2007).....................................................30
FINAL REFLECTIONS LEADERSHIP COMMUNICATION.......................................................................................... 30
WHAT IS SYSTEMS THEORY?....................................................................................................................... 30
LECTURE 5. VISIBILITY AND TRANSPARENCY.....................................................................32
LECTURE 5 SLIDES. VISIBILITY AND TRANSPARENCY......................................................................................... 32
MANAGING OPACITY: INFORMATION VISIBILITY AND THE PARADOX OF TRANSPARENCY IN THE DIGITAL AGE (STOHL ET
AL., 2016)............................................................................................................................................ 34
COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION IN THE AGE OF COMMUNICATION VISIBILITY (TREEM ET AL., 2020)..............35
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (STOHL ET AL., 2016) AND (TREEM ET AL., 2020).............................................35
FINAL REFLECTIONS VISIBILITY AND TRANSPARENCY......................................................................................... 36
LECTURE 6. MEDIATIZATION............................................................................................. 37
LECTURE 6 SLIDES. MEDIATIZATION............................................................................................................. 37
DEALING WITH INCREASING COMPLEXITY: MEDIA ORIENTATIONS OF COMMUNICATION MANAGERS IN PUBLIC SECTOR
ORGANIZATIONS (JACOBS & WONNEBERGER, 2019)......................................................................................38
MEDIA CATCHING: A CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING STRATEGIC MEDIATIZATION IN PUBLIC RELATIONS
(ERZIKOVA ET AL., 2018)......................................................................................................................... 39
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (JACOBS & WONNEBERGER, 2019) AND (ERZIKOVA ET AL., 2018).........................40
FINAL REFLECTIONS MEDIATIZATION............................................................................................................. 40

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LECTURE 7. EMPLOYEES AS AMBASSADORS......................................................................41
LECTURE 7 SLIDES. EMPLOYEES AS AMBASSADORS.........................................................................................41
ACTIVE EMPLOYEE COMMUNICATION ROLES IN ORGANIZATIONS: A FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING AND DISCUSSING
COMMUNICATION ROLE EXPECTATIONS (VERHOEVEN & MADSEN, 2022).............................................................43
EXPLAINING ONLINE AMBASSADORSHIP BEHAVIORS ON FACEBOOK AND LINKEDIN (VAN ZOONEN ET AL., 2018)..........44
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (VERHOEVEN & MADSEN, 2022) AND (VAN ZOONEN ET AL., 2018).......................44
FINAL REFLECTIONS EMPLOYEES AS AMBASSADORS..........................................................................................44
GOLDEN IDEAS............................................................................................................... 44
OVERALL CONNECTIONS BETWEEN ARTICLES....................................................................48
SIMPLE EXPLANATIONS OF KEY THEORIES, FRAMEWORKS AND CONCEPTS (WITH EXAMPLES)
...................................................................................................................................... 50
CONNECTING COURSE THEORIES TO REAL-WORLD EXAMPLES...........................................57
ANALYSIS OF ADYEN’S CULTURE, LEADERSHIP STYLE, AND ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTIFICATION
BASED ON EMPLOYEE REVIEWS.......................................................................................60
MEDIA CATCHING & ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE................................................................62
LEADERSHIP & SYSTEMS THEORY....................................................................................65
LECTURE 8. CHANGE AND RESISTANCE.............................................................................67
LECTURE 8 SLIDES. CHANGE AND RESISTANCE............................................................................................... 67
THE POWER OF THE PLATFORM: PLACE AND EMPLOYEE RESPONSES TO ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE (STENSAKER ET AL.,
2021).................................................................................................................................................. 70
RESISTANCE TO CHANGE: THE REST OF THE STORY (FORD ET AL., 2008)...........................................................73
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (STENSAKER ET AL., 2021) AND (FORD ET AL., 2008)........................................75
FINAL REFLECTIONS CHANGE AND RESISTANCE...............................................................................................76
LECTURE 9. BIAS............................................................................................................. 76
LECTURE 9 SLIDES. BIAS........................................................................................................................... 76
HOW STEREOTYPES ARE SHARED THROUGH LANGUAGE: A REVIEW AND INTRODUCTION OF THE SOCIAL CATEGORIES AND
STEREOTYPES COMMUNICATION (SCSC) FRAMEWORK (BEUKEBOOM & BURGERS, 2019).......................................81
POLES APART: THE PROCESSING AND CONSEQUENCES OF MIXED MEDIA STEREOTYPES OF OLDER WORKERS (KROON ET
AL., 2016)............................................................................................................................................ 84
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (BEUKEBOOM & BURGERS, 2019) AND (KROON ET AL., 2016).............................87
FINAL REFLECTIONS BIAS........................................................................................................................... 88
LECTURE 10. CSR/CSA..................................................................................................... 88
LECTURE 10 SLIDES. CSR/CSA................................................................................................................. 88
HOW TO ACHIEVE SUSTAINABILITY? EMPLOYEE’S POINT OF VIEW ON COMPANY’S CULTURE AND CSR PRACTICE
(KUCHARSKA & KOWALCZYK, 2019)........................................................................................................... 91
HOFSTEDE’S CULTURAL FRAMEWORK............................................................................................................ 94
FROM RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT TO CHANGE EMPOWERMENT: SHIFTING PUBLIC RELATIONS THEORY TO PRIORITIZE
PUBLICS (MUNDY, 2021).......................................................................................................................... 95
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (KUCHARSKA & KOWALCZYK, 2019) AND (MUNDY, 2021)....................................97
FINAL REFLECTIONS CSR/CSA................................................................................................................... 97
LECTURE 11. DIALOGUE AND ENGAGEMENT......................................................................98
LECTURE 11 SLIDES. DIALOGUE AND ENGAGEMENT........................................................................................ 98
PUTTING ENGAGEMENT IN ITS PROPER PLACE: STATE OF THE FIELD, DEFINITION AND MODEL OF ENGAGEMENT IN PUBLIC
RELATIONS (DHANESH, 2017)................................................................................................................. 101
SOCIAL PRESENCE AND DIGITAL DIALOGIC COMMUNICATION: ENGAGEMENT LESSONS FROM TOP SOCIAL CEOS (MEN ET
AL., 2018).......................................................................................................................................... 107
KENT AND TAYLOR’S DIALOGIC COMMUNICATION THEORY..............................................................................109
THE DIALOGIC INTERNET PRINCIPLES......................................................................................................... 110
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (DHANESH, 2017) AND (MEN ET AL., 2018)...................................................111
FINAL REFLECTIONS DIALOGUE AND ENGAGEMENT.........................................................................................111
LECTURE 12. TRUST...................................................................................................... 112

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LECTURE 12 SLIDES. TRUST..................................................................................................................... 112
EXPLORING TRUST AND DISTRUST AS CONCEPTUALLY AND EMPIRICALLY DISTINCT CONSTRUCTS: ASSOCIATION WITH
SYMMETRICAL COMMUNICATION AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT ACROSS FOUR PAIRINGS OF TRUST AND DISTRUST (KANG &
PARK, 2017)....................................................................................................................................... 114
WHERE DOES MY MONEY GO? HOW ONLINE COMMENTS ON A DONATION CAMPAIGN INFLUENCE THE PERCEIVED
TRUSTWORTHINESS OF A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION (WIENCIERZ ET AL., 2015)...............................................116
THE EFFECTS OF BLOG-MEDIATED PUBLIC RELATIONS (BMPR) ON RELATIONAL TRUST (YANG & LIM, 2009)............117
CONNECTING POINTS BETWEEN (KANG & PARK, 2017), (WIENCIERZ ET AL., 2015) AND (YANG & LIM, 2009)......119
FINAL REFLECTIONS TRUST....................................................................................................................... 120
GOLDEN IDEAS.............................................................................................................. 120
OVERALL CONNECTIONS BETWEEN THE ARTICLES...........................................................123
ORIGINAL CONNECTIONS BETWEEN THE ARTICLES..........................................................126
REAL WORLD EXAMPLES................................................................................................ 127
THREE ASPECTS OF A PLACE THAT SHAPE COLLECTIVE SENSEMAKING (STENSAKER ET AL., 2021)..........................129
SCSC MODEL (BEUKEBOOM & BURGERS, 2019)........................................................................................130
HARVARD CSA INITIATIVES (MUNDY, 2021)...............................................................................................132
ORGANIZATION LEADING THE PUBLIC – PATAGONIA (CSR/CSA; MUNDY (2021)................................................133
SEVEN RULES OF INTERACTION BETWEEN ORGANIZATIONS AND STAKEHOLDERS – PATAGONIA (DIALOGUE AND
ENGAGEMENT)....................................................................................................................................... 134

MOCK EXAM QUESTIONS............................................................................................... 135




Lecture 1. Introduction Strategic Communication

What is startegic communication?
Strategic communication is the purposeful use of communication by organizations, individuals or
institutions to achieve specific goals. It involves planning, executing and evaluating communication efforts to
influence target audiences, shape public perception and align with broader organizational or societal
objectives.

Key aspects of strategic communication:

1. Goal-oriented – focused on achieving specific objectives such as brand positioning, reputation
management, crisis response or behavioral change.

2. Audience-centered – tailored to specific stakeholders, including customers, employees, investors,
policymakers or the general public.

3. Integrated approach – encompasses various communication disciplines like public relations,
corporate communication, marketing, advertising, political communication and digital media.

4. Message consistency – ensures coherence across all channels (e.g., social media, press releases,
speeches, campaigns) to maintain credibility and trust.

5. Research-driven – relies on data, audience insights and communication theories to craft effective
strategies.

6. Ethical and responsible – considers ethical implications, transparency and social responsibility in
communication practices.

Examples of strategic communication:

 A company launching a crisis communication plan during a PR scandal.

 A government promoting public health campaigns (e.g., COVID-19 vaccination).

 A nonprofit organization raising awareness about environmental issues.

 A political candidate crafting a campaign message to attract voters.

Strategic communication is widely applied in corporate settings, public affairs, non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) and political contexts to drive engagement and achieve long-term success.

, 4



Lecture 1 slides. Introduction
Micro and meso-level: communication and sensemaking process (individual and group level),
stakeholders’ relationships.

Public relationships as a guiding paradigm for PR research and this course.
Ferguson (2018): Building theory in public relations

Introduction and key argument

Ferguson highlights the lack of a unified theoretical paradigm in PR research and proposes a shift
toward public relationships as the guiding framework. She critiques PR’s reliance on borrowed
theories and suggests interorganizational relationships (IORs) as a more structured and predictive
approach.

Theoretical foundation and paradigm shift

Drawing from Kuhn’s paradigm theory (1970), Ferguson critiques PR’s reliance on borrowed
theories from management, communication and psychology. She identifies three potential
paradigms:

1. Social responsibility and ethics – PR’s role in ethical decision-making.

2. Social issues and issue management – PR’s influence on political and societal issues.

3. Public relationships – The study of interactions between organizations and stakeholders.

She argues that public relationships offer the most promising paradigm, emphasizing
reciprocal engagement rather than one-way communication.

Framework for public relationships

Ferguson suggests PR scholars should:

 Classify and measure relationships based on trust, control and mutual understanding.

 Analyze how organizational structures and communication strategies affect
relationship-building.

 Develop predictive models to explain how PR relationships evolve over time.

Conclusion

Ferguson advocates for a relationship-focused approach to PR, aligning it with strategic
communication disciplines. This paradigm shift strengthens PR’s scientific legitimacy and enhances
its ability to address real-world organizational challenges.



Lee & Kee (2017): Testing an environmental framework for relationship management in PR

Introduction and key argument

Seow Ting Lee and Amanda Kee examine how political, economic, and media environments shape
PR practitioners’ approach to relationship management. Their study, conducted in Singapore, tests
an environmental framework for understanding PR strategies.

Theoretical framework and methodology

The study builds on relationship management theory (Ledingham, 2003, 2010), measuring
trust, control mutuality, satisfaction, commitment, exchange, and communal relationships.
Using Hon & Grunig’s (1999) relationship quality scale, they surveyed 84 PR practitioners from
corporate, governmental, and agency settings.

Key findings
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