A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China

Several previous studies have been conducted to examine China’s management of internal crises, but few have investigated the approaches to crisis management used by domestic Chinese organizations. It is critical to study these organizations because their approaches exemplify the intricacies of crisi...

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Main Authors: Pang, Augustine, Hu, Yang, Woon, Eugene
Other Authors: Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144166
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1441662020-10-19T06:05:58Z A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China Pang, Augustine Hu, Yang Woon, Eugene Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Business Crisis Communication Crisis Response Strategies Several previous studies have been conducted to examine China’s management of internal crises, but few have investigated the approaches to crisis management used by domestic Chinese organizations. It is critical to study these organizations because their approaches exemplify the intricacies of crisis management at the local level. In China, there are two main types of organizations: state-owned enterprises (SOE) and privately owned enterprises (POE). This study aimed to determine how their business orientations led to different styles of crisis management in terms of media relations, government relations, and crisis responses. The findings showed that SOEs sought shelter from the government, whereas the POEs sought goodwill from the government. The SOEs sought to control the media, whereas the POEs sought to circumvent media exposure. The SOEs predominantly employed the barnacle strategy in their crisis responses and occasionally used third-party endorsements and set up new topics, whereas the POEs employed third-party endorsements and set up new topics. Ministry of Education (MOE) This project was funded in part by the first author’s Ministry of Education Tier 1 grant number [M4011321 RG82/14]. 2020-10-19T06:05:58Z 2020-10-19T06:05:58Z 2017 Journal Article Pang, A., Hu, Y., & Woon, E. (2018). A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China. Chinese Journal of Communication. 11(1), 5-25. doi:10.1080/17544750.2017.1357641 1754-4769 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144166 10.1080/17544750.2017.1357641 1 11 5 25 en Chinese Journal of Communication © 2017 The Centre for Chinese Media and Comparative Communication Research, The Chinese University of Hong Kong. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business
Crisis Communication
Crisis Response Strategies
spellingShingle Business
Crisis Communication
Crisis Response Strategies
Pang, Augustine
Hu, Yang
Woon, Eugene
A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China
description Several previous studies have been conducted to examine China’s management of internal crises, but few have investigated the approaches to crisis management used by domestic Chinese organizations. It is critical to study these organizations because their approaches exemplify the intricacies of crisis management at the local level. In China, there are two main types of organizations: state-owned enterprises (SOE) and privately owned enterprises (POE). This study aimed to determine how their business orientations led to different styles of crisis management in terms of media relations, government relations, and crisis responses. The findings showed that SOEs sought shelter from the government, whereas the POEs sought goodwill from the government. The SOEs sought to control the media, whereas the POEs sought to circumvent media exposure. The SOEs predominantly employed the barnacle strategy in their crisis responses and occasionally used third-party endorsements and set up new topics, whereas the POEs employed third-party endorsements and set up new topics.
author2 Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
author_facet Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Pang, Augustine
Hu, Yang
Woon, Eugene
format Article
author Pang, Augustine
Hu, Yang
Woon, Eugene
author_sort Pang, Augustine
title A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China
title_short A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China
title_full A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China
title_fullStr A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China
title_full_unstemmed A broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? Examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in China
title_sort broad stroke or different strokes for different folks? examining the subtleties in crisis management approaches in state-owned enterprises and privately owned enterprises in china
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144166
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