1 / 52

Communication Research: Where Airmen Get Information

Communication Research: Where Airmen Get Information. Major Rob Pope SAF/CMA. Overview. Noteworthy third-party data Where Airmen Get Information (WAGI) Other research projects. Info Preferences: Noteworthy Third-party Data. Newspapers: readership fell 1.7% from last year, to ~52%

belle
Download Presentation

Communication Research: Where Airmen Get Information

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Communication Research:Where Airmen Get Information Major Rob Pope SAF/CMA

  2. Overview • Noteworthy third-party data • Where Airmen Get Information (WAGI) • Other research projects

  3. Info Preferences:Noteworthy Third-party Data • Newspapers: readership fell 1.7% from last year, to ~52% • TV: audience numbers are down, primarily due to lifestyle changes (longer commutes, etc.), Internet usage, and some decline in interest in news • Radio: audience remains stable w/ >93% of people listening at least some each week; news/talk/info audience stable at 15.9% • Online: while online use rose more than an hour last year, the number of Americans who go online for news every day dropped 7% last year, to 27% • Blogs: audience has increased 12% in a year, to 39% • New media: • Only 8% of MP3 player owners listen to news podcasts • Only 6% of cell phone owners get news on their phones • 18.5% of PDA owners get news on them • 12% of Internet users had downloaded a podcast; many were teenagers • Just 5% have used RSS, while 88% don’t know what RSS is • Nearly 75% of people are not interested in watching TV on handheld devices Source: Pew Research Center’s “State of the News Media 2007 Report, As reported by OSD PA Research & Analysis’ 20 Mar 07 “Public Affairs by the Numbers”

  4. Where Airmen Get Information • Purpose • Explore where and how Airmen and AF civilians prefer to get info about the Air Force • Results will drive decisions on which channels to retain and improve and which channels to discontinue • Methodology • Focus groups with 91 Total Force Airmen and AF civilians at 3 bases, Nov 06 – Jan 07 • Web-based survey, answered by ~1,600 Airmen and AF civilians, Mar 07

  5. WAGI:Survey Questions • Overall satisfaction with AF communication • Info-gathering preferences • Fifteen specified AF communication products / channels • Other (non-AF) sources of info • New communication technologies / media

  6. WAGI:General Observations & Conclusions • The communication environment: focus group participants… • Are interested only in info that affects them personally • Receive too much info, yet rely on receiving a message via multiple channels for it to register as important • Don’t want more info pushed to them, but are unwilling to seek (or pull) info themselves

  7. WAGI:General Observations & Conclusions • The good news • Top-down emails within the chain of command are viewed as a highly valuable source of AF-specific info (though many also complain of too much email) • In-person meetings or briefings from the Commander, supervisor, or First Sergeant are valued sources of AF info • Commander’s Call is perceived as a slow but reliable source of important AF info; “If it’s important, it will be brought up at commander’s call” • Audience uses (94%) and values the base newspaper; prefers hardcopy (61%) over electronic (14%); may not be using paper primarily for news • AF Portal, AF Link, and Airman magazine are also highly used and valued • The rest of the story… • Many other AF products not highly used or valued by internal audience; radio, TV, and streaming audio and video fared poorly • Little interest in or use of new media technologies

  8. WAGI:Overall Satisfaction Average Rating = 6.8 N=1,040

  9. WAGI: Info gathering preferences

  10. WAGI: Info gathering preferences How audience would prefer to get info about AF-wide programs (matrix of channels and sources w/ 84 possible answers; multiple responses possible) Top 9 preferences are email or in person

  11. WAGI: Info-gathering preferences How audience would prefer to get info about AF-wide programs (matrix of channels and sources w/ 84 possible answers; multiple responses possible) Getting info from USAF HQ Least preferred channels (any source)

  12. WAGI:Info-gathering Preferences N=997

  13. WAGI: Info-gathering preferences

  14. WAGI: Info-gathering preferences

  15. Where Airmen Get Information 2007 Survey N=1,331

  16. Where Airmen Get Information 2007 Survey N=1,331

  17. WAGI:1/15 – Air Force Portal • Appears to be used more for career activities than AF info / news • Most Airmen use Portal because they have to (65%), not voluntarily (32%) • Portal needs improvement • 36% - It’s great, wouldn’t change a thing • 57% - Some parts are great, others need work • 7% - Very little I like about the Portal • Focus group feedback: • Use Portal primarily for personnel, training, and finance • Frustration with non-applicable info that “clutters” workspace – “I don’t need to see what CSAF is saying every time I log in” • Access is a major obstacle to Portal use – CAC, changing passwords • Finding info is a problem – poor search engine • Very little use or awareness of the Communities of Practice or AFKN

  18. WAGI:Air Force Portal Potential news / info sources N=1,349

  19. WAGI:2/15 – Air Force Link • Surveyed use of all links across top and right side of home page (28 total) • Most used links: News (50%), Photos (36%), Careers (35%) • Least used links: AF Bandstand Player (1%), Senior Leader Soundbites (1%), AF Posture Statement (2%) • 28% cannot or do not use streaming media from AF Link (of those who know what streaming media is) • Focus group feedback: • Very few knew of or used • Of the few who had seen it, most had only visited once or twice • Typically used to find out about the Air Force before entering the service • Some only used it as a resource for photos or biographies

  20. WAGI:Air Force Link N=1,305

  21. WAGI:Air Force Link N=1,305

  22. WAGI:Air Force Link N=1,305

  23. WAGI:Air Force Link N=1,305

  24. WAGI:Air Force Link N=1,209

  25. WAGI:3/15 – Base Newspaper • On average, audience disagrees with statement, “If the base paper went away, I’d still be able to get the info I want and need without much trouble” • Prefer hardcopy (61%) over electronic (14%) • Focus group feedback: • Most would not read online or via email • The most popular sections were the classifieds, police blotter, man-on-the-street interviews, upcoming MWR offerings, and unit sports scores • Often described as “boring” and “not pertinent” – “If it’s important, it will be brought up at commander’s call” • Perception by Airmen in the Reserve and Air Guard wings was that the base paper serves only active-duty Airmen • Base newspapers and their associated web-based versions seem to be more important for deployed Airmen

  26. WAGI:Base Newspaper N=1,071 N=1,061

  27. WAGI:Base Newspaper N=1,067

  28. WAGI:4/15 – Airman Magazine • Prefer hardcopy (47%) over electronic (19%) • On average, audience is neutral on the statement, “I would read more issues of Airman magazine, but sometimes I never see a copy to read” • Readership compared to last year: 14% more, 59% same, 27% less • On average, audience disagrees with statement, “I think Airman magazine is written with me in mind as the target audience” • Focus group feedback: • Many couldn’t recall ever having seen a copy • Seen by many as leisure-time reading – “entertainment, not news” or “the pictures are nice” • Some described as a window into the lives of other Airmen – useful for seeing what life is like in other units, bases, MAJCOMs, and career fields • A few indicated that “The Book” (Airman’s annual almanac issue) is a valuable resource that they keep on hand

  29. Use of Airman Magazine N=1,085

  30. Use of Airman Magazine N=1,078

  31. WAGI:5/15 – Commander’s Call Topics • 9% subscribe to CC Call Topics via email • 10% forward CC Call Topics to others via email (61% forward to < 5 others) • Focus group feedback: • Commander’s calls are perceived as a slow but reliable source of important AF info Researcher comment: may be confusion between product and event

  32. WAGI:6/15 – AF Print News (AFPN) N=646

  33. WAGI:7/15 – Commander’s Access Channel • On average, audience agrees with the statement, “If the Commander’s Access Channel went away, I’d still be able to get the information I need from other sources” • Focus group feedback: the vast majority did not know what a Commander’s Access Channel is or whether one exists on their base

  34. WAGI: 8/15 – AIM Points • Readership compared to last year: 17% more, 56% same, 27% less • Focus group feedback: very limited use or awareness N=506

  35. WAGI: 9/15 – Around the Air Force (TV) N=483 N=489

  36. WAGI:10/15 – USAF Highlights N=413

  37. WAGI:11/15 – Air Force Report (TV) N=404 N=405

  38. WAGI:12/15 – Today’s Air Force (TV) N=1,119

  39. WAGI:13/15 – AF Policy Letter Digest • Frequency of use: 5% read every issue, 14% read most issues, 82% read an occasional issue N=329

  40. WAGI:14/15 – Chief’s View (TV)

  41. WAGI:15/15 – Around the AF (Radio) N=269

  42. WAGI:Other Sources of Information

  43. WAGI:Other Sources of Info • General – Focus groups: • CNN, BBC, and FOX News were the most-cited civilian news sources • Not much use of radio, except during commute • Air Force Times – Focus groups: • Seen as both a primary info source and a sensationalist tabloid • Approximately half indicated they read it • Seen as a useful source for “the rest of the story” about negative AF stories Airmen won’t hear in official channels • Many said it is one of the first places they look for info such as pay charts, force shaping, promotions, retirements, and deaths

  44. WAGI: New technologies / media

  45. WAGI: New technologies / media

  46. WAGI: New technologies / media • Focus group feedback: in general, very low usage of new info technologies • Streaming video • A small number reported watching streaming video from AF TV News, AFN, or the Pentagon Channel • More reported streaming video from commercial sites • Internet instant messaging: • Much higher use among younger Airmen than older Airmen • Cell phone text messaging: • First-term Airmen and younger CGOs indicated a much higher use • NCOs, FGOs, and older civilians indicated almost no use • Blogging • Very few use blogs • Many indicated they don’t know what blogging is • Other indicated blogging is nothing more than “unfiltered ranting” or an online diary

  47. WAGI:Airmen as Communicators N=1,082

  48. WAGI:Computer Access at Work N=1,082

  49. WAGI:Product Summary

  50. WAGI:Summary of Key Findings • Feel overloaded with info, yet rely on receiving a message via multiple channels for it to register as important • Don’t want more info pushed to them, but are unwilling to seek (or pull) info themselves • Interested only in info that affects them personally • Satisfied overall with job AF does informing them (6.8 on 10-point scale) • The most valued communication channels are e-mail and in person from chain of command • Audience uses (94%) and values the base newspaper; prefers hardcopy (61%) over electronic (14%); may not be using paper primarily for news • AF Portal (99%), AF Link (96%), and Airman magazine (92%) also used and valued • AF radio (24%), TV (27 - 41%), and streaming audio & video fared poorly • Little interest in or use of new media technologies to get info about the Air Force (single digits)

More Related