Media Management Matters
Challenges and Opportunities for Bridging Theory and Practice

Media Management and Economics Series

Coordinators: Rohn Ulrike, Evens Tom

Language: English

166.30 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Media Management Matters
Publication date:
· 15.2x22.9 cm · Hardback

46.39 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Media Management Matters
Publication date:
· 15.2x22.9 cm · Paperback

This edited volume explores media management as engaged scholarship, building a bridge between theory and practice and discussing research collaboration between academia, policymakers and the media industry. In addition to advancing the scholarly discipline, it also questions, investigates and discusses the practical value of the research undertaken, showing how media management research can provide actionable, practice-relevant knowledge to decision makers throughout the media industry.

The volume is broken into two parts: a section reflecting on the need for collaboration between research and practice, and a section overviewing specific projects that aim to deliver administrative value to stakeholders. The international research projects presented here span topics such as digital transformation, business models in news and digital journalism, media entrepreneurship and start-ups, ad-blocking, location-based services, audiovisual consumption preferences, the sustainability of small television markets, co-located and clustered industries and digital privacy. Incorporating under-used methodological approaches, such as action research and ethnography, Media Management Matters brings suggestions for how scholarship might be promoted outside academia. Simply put, this book aims to demonstrate why media management matters.

Featuring an international roster of contributors, this collection is essential reading for scholars and practitioners of media management, business and policy.

1. Media management as an engaged scholarship 2. University-industry collaboration in the media management field 3. Why policymakers need to collaborate with academics on media policy and why that need will grow 4. Managing media firms: Case studies of practice-led research, actionable knowledge and instrumental impact 5. Conducting media management ethnography: A journey toward impacting industry stakeholders 6. Evaluating action research to innovate digital journalism revenue models 7. Examining ad avoidance consumers: A collaborative study with the ad blocker industry 8. Location-based services in regional media communication: Insights from a research project 9. Sustaining small television ecosystems: Lessons from policy-driven research in Flanders 10. Researching news media: Creating societal impact from research for the media industry and policymakers 11. Research for innovation: Improving the management of co-located and clustered industries 12. Eyes on tech! Media entrepreneurship and the relevance of technology in business models 13. Managing digital transformation: The case of the Finnish Broadcasting Company 14. Shedding light on audiovisual consumption preferences: A case study from Spain 15. Digital privacy and new media: Reflecting on lessons for policy and practice

Postgraduate and Professional

Ulrike Rohn is Professor of Media Economics and Management at Tallinn University, Estonia, where she works at the Baltic Film, Media, Arts, and Communication School (BFM) and the Centre of Excellence in Media Innovation and Digital Culture (MEDIT). She served as the President of the European Media Management Association (emma, 2016–2020), and is co-Editor of the Springer Series in Media Industries and Associate Editor of the Journal of Media Business Studies. Dr. Rohn’s research interests include, among others, audiovisual policies, media business models and international media strategies. Latter research interest has led to her book publication Cultural Barriers to the Success of Foreign Media Content: Western Media in China, India, and Japan (2010).

Tom Evens is an Assistant Professor at research group for Media, Innovation and Communication Technologies (imec-mict-UGent) at the Department of Communication Sciences at Ghent University, Belgium. He teaches in media economics, business model innovation and technology policy. He specialises in the economics and policies of media and technology industries, and has published widely on the media business. He is the lead author of The Political Economy of Television Sports Rights (2013) and Platform Power and Policy in Transforming Television Markets (2018). He served as the Deputy President of the European Media Management Association between 2017 and 2019. He is a member of several editorial boards and has been consulting several governments and media organisations on strategy and public policy issues.