Measuring the Impact of Social Media use in the Public Sector

Measuring the Impact of Social Media use in the Public Sector

Author: 
Mergel, Inez
Place: 
Hershey, PA
Publisher: 
IGI Global
Date published: 
2012
Editor: 
Downey, Ed
Source: 
Public Service, Governance and Web 2.0 Technologies
Subject: 
Abstract: 

Existing research on eGovernment performance has provided limited proof for the impact the use of technology has on citizen participation, engagement or generally satisfaction with government activities. Social media applications have the potential to improve responsiveness, reach, and efficiency, and even cost savings in government. The current Government 2.0 initiatives launched by all executive departments and agencies of the U.S. Federal Government as a response to President Obama's Transparency and Open Government memo show that government agencies are implementing social media applications as additional information and communication channels. This chapter provides a comparison between traditional eGovernment measurement techniques and the current practices, highlighting the current practices of measuring social media impact in the public sector. The insights are based on data collected in 2010 from interviews with social media directors in the most innovative executive departments and agencies. The results show that the current standard practices mostly include quantitative impact measures instead of the qualitative measures needed to better understand the sentiments of citizens.

Series: 
Advances in Web Technologies and Engineering

CITATION: Mergel, Inez. Measuring the Impact of Social Media use in the Public Sector edited by Downey, Ed . Hershey, PA : IGI Global , 2012. Public Service, Governance and Web 2.0 Technologies - Available at: https://library.au.int/measuring-impact-social-media-use-public-sector