Media monitoring in crisis and issues management: identifying emerging challenges in the age of mediatization

ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.Authors Tim de Winkel, Wouter Jong, Guusje Jol, Petra Sneijder, Laura Meijer, Dianne Teunisse, Anne Kessels, Annette Klarenbeek
ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.PublishedIn Tijdschrift voor Communicatiewetenschap
ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.PublicationDate 2026
ResearchComponents.InformationTable.Publication.PublicationType Article

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Before the emergence of social media, monitoring public perceptions relied primarily on newspaper articles and online news. Nowadays, communications professionals consider it crucial to engage with users and discussions on social media platforms, which accommodates a significant part of the public debate. Public institutions utilize online platforms as a means to communicate directly with citizens, which is particularly vital in times of crisis. Despite equipping their communications departments with media monitoring software, communications professionals still experience a difficulty to act, due to the cacophonic nature of social media. In this article, we report on a Dutch research project named Goed Gere(a)geerd, which studies the digitalization of communication work through discursive psychology, presenting initial practice-informed insights by end-users in relation to the framework of mediatization, datafication, and platformization. We argue that the rise of social media has not necessarily simplified the understanding of public perceptions within the broader public debate, yet has introduced both new opportunities and challenges. In light of these challenges, we propose that it could be beneficial to shift away from at tempts to monitor every citizen’s expression through increasingly expansive data systems, and instead focus on social interactions that carry a higher risk of escalation. To help prevent the escalation of issues online, or even offline, the communications professional could turn to the discursive psychological framework, which focuses on linguistic patterns indicative of a larger social context.

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researchcomponents.publicationcontent.personslist.publicationauthors

  • Tim de Winkel
    • Researcher
    • researchcomponents.publicationcontent.authorlectoratelabelsingle: Social Interaction in Public Spaces
  • Laura Meijer
    • Researcher
  • Dianne Teunisse
    • Researcher
  • Anne Kessels
    Anne Kessels
    • PhD candidate
    • researchcomponents.publicationcontent.authorlectoratelabelsingle: Social Interaction in Public Spaces
  • Annette Klarenbeek
    • Professor
    • researchcomponents.publicationcontent.authorlectoratelabelsingle: Social Interaction in Public Spaces
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.Language English
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.PublishedIn Tijdschrift voor Communicatiewetenschap
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.YearAndVolume 54 2
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.Keywords crisis communication, media monitoring, datafication, platformization, issue management
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.DigitalObjectIdentifier 10.5117/TCW2026.2.002.WINK
ResearchComponents.DetailedInformation.PageRange 156-174