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[ecrea] CFP - Managing Disruptiveness as the New Normal (WPCC)
Fri Nov 27 21:38:19 GMT 2015
This is a final reminder, for the CfP for,
MANAGING DISRUPTIVENESS AS THE NEW NORMAL
Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture (Vol 11)
www.westminsterpapers.org
***Revised Proposal deadline: 1 December 2015***
The whole notion of a 'media company' is undergoing reconceptualization.
While the future of media and of media professions are being questioned,
studies on media management and media business observe the
practicalities of media transformations. In a changing digital realm
finding the right business model is only one of many riddles to be
solved by media managers who usually pay little attention to theory. On
the other hand, involvement in media management makes one an active
learner, considering the pace of changes. In this regard modern research
on media management is doubly challenged: at first, scholarship needs to
keep pace with current changes, and second, theory if it is to have
tangible impact needs to be adaptable to the needs and attention spans
of those in the industry.
In this issue we will focus on anything from strategic change and
innovation on a par with culture alongside studies on technology,
audience and leadership. However, to narrow things down, we will look at
current media management practices from the angle of disruption.
A report by the McKinsey Global Institute in 2013 (Disruptive
technologies: Advances that will transform life, business, and the
global economy, McKinsey and Company, May 2013) predicted that the top
four of 12 technologies that would transform life, business and the
global economy in the next decade were media technologies: namely
mobile internet; the automation of knowledge work; the internet of
things; and the cloud, underlining the importance of academic studies
that take disruption as a central concern.
Seen in the dimension of the market space sphere of global media
markets, disruptiveness is relative. What is disruptive for the
incumbents may be the normality for the innovators. For example what the
New York Times may now be struggling to cope with is what the Huffington
Post may thrive on. In the Web 2.0 and mobile era when media technology
has enabled the audience to come into play as never before, this
relativity has become even more complicated. With the ubiquity of
innovative technology, disruptiveness may have become the new normal
of the media industries. If so, managing disruptiveness will become the
normality of media management.
This issue of WPCC examines these issues from a variety of perspectives:
incumbents, innovators, and/or audiences. We also welcome proposals
covering different national markets or with an international dimension.
Topics may include, but are not limited to:
Audiences and consumption
Changes to revenue models and general issues of newsroom sustainability
Amateurs vs. professionals: the new kinds of news providers and the
multiplatform traditional media
Public service media management in the digital age
The management of creativity
Rebranding strategies of traditional media
Innovative approaches to advertising
Non-profit news
Paying for news online
Political economy of media concentration: incumbents v. startups
Other Details
Proposals are welcome for research articles of 6,000 to 8,000 words and
commentaries (http://www.westminsterpapers.org/about/submissions up to
3000 words) or book reviews (up to 3000 words).
Proposal deadline: 1 December 2015
Deadline for full text submission: 1 March 2016
They can be sent direct editor Anthony McNicholas
((mcnichc /at/ westminster.ac.uk) <mailto:(mcnichc /at/ westminster.ac.uk)>) or via
www.westminsterpapers.org/about/submissions
Anthony McNicholas ((mcnichc /at/ westminster.ac.uk)
<mailto:(mcnichc /at/ westminster.ac.uk)>)
Communication and Media Research Institute
University of Westminster
Harrow Campus
Watford Road
Harrow
Middlesex
HA1 3TP
Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture is published by the
University of Westminster Press (http://www.uwestminsterpress.co.uk)
(contact: (a.lockett /at/ westminster.ac.uk))
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