Numbers over Narratives? How Government Message Strategies Affect Citizens’ Attitudes

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Abstract

This article applies different marketing concepts to released government information and analyzes the effect on citizens’ attitudes. It looks at how the presentation of a message affects citizens’ attitudes when the content remains the same. It investigates the effects of an informational strategy (presenting facts and figures) and a transformational strategy (adding narratives to the figures to appeal to emotions of citizens). Based on theories about information process and framing, different responses are expected from engaged and unengaged citizens. It finds that unengaged citizens respond more favorably when information is couched in a transformational message strategy. Engaged citizens have an opposite response and are better served with an informational strategy. The article concludes that to reach the broader group of unengaged citizens, just disclosing information is insufficient; information needs to be embedded in a meaningful narrative.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1005-1028
Number of pages24
JournalPublic Performance & Management Review
Volume42
Issue number5
Early online date12 Dec 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • citizen satisfaction
  • citizen trust
  • experiments
  • performance
  • transparency

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