MTU Cork Library Catalogue

Beauty brand versus new media : how have communications tactics changed within a large cosmetic brand & how have they incorporated new media PR tactics / Ruth Walsh.

By: Walsh, Ruth [author.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: M.A. - Public relations with new media.Publisher: Cork : Cork Institute of Technology, 2017Description: 60 pages : illustration ; 30 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeSubject(s): Advertising -- Cosmetics | Social media | Public relationsDDC classification: THESES PRESS Dissertation note: Thesis (M.A.) - Cork Institute of Technology, 2017. Summary: This research study aims to investigate and analyse what is working in the cosmetic PR industry for beauty brands; bloggers; beauty consumers. There has been limited research conducted into this important topic and less so into the PR tactics used by large cosmetic brands. This thesis first examines that said limited scope of literature that relates to the cosmetic PR industry but not well and it further examines the viewpoints of well-known PR professionals. From this research, a triangulation approach to data collecting was outlined and conducted that included two interviews with beauty industry experts: a PR professional, a large scale Irish blogger with over 60 thousand followers: and a survey that was targeted at social media beauty consumers. The results indicate that traditional media is still a valued PR tactic that is as important to both brand and consumer even as new media or social media seems to have taken over. The results also highlighted that beauty consumers primarily use Youtube when researching new beauty products and over 70% of those participants do not believe that larger scale beauty bloggers are reliable for product reviews.
List(s) this item appears in: Masters Theses

Thesis (M.A.) - Cork Institute of Technology, 2017.

Bibliography: pages 29-32.

This research study aims to investigate and analyse what is working in the cosmetic PR industry for beauty brands; bloggers; beauty consumers. There has been limited research conducted into this important topic and less so into the PR tactics used by large cosmetic brands. This thesis first examines that said limited scope of literature that relates to the cosmetic PR industry but not well and it further examines the viewpoints of well-known PR professionals. From this research, a triangulation approach to data collecting was outlined and conducted that included two interviews with beauty industry experts: a PR professional, a large scale Irish blogger with over 60 thousand followers: and a survey that was targeted at social media beauty consumers. The results indicate that traditional media is still a valued PR tactic that is as important to both brand and consumer even as new media or social media seems to have taken over. The results also highlighted that beauty consumers primarily use Youtube when researching new beauty products and over 70% of those participants do not believe that larger scale beauty bloggers are reliable for product reviews.

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