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Utilising stakeholder theory for social marketing process evaluation in a food waste context

Utilising stakeholder theory for social marketing process evaluation in a food waste context PurposeCalls for theoretically informed interventions and a more reflexive stance are apparent in social marketing. Moving from a “prove” to “improve” mentality requires evaluations that learn from experience gained to identify improvements to inform future programme success. This paper considers the value of inclusion of stakeholders in process evaluation.Design/methodology/approachTwo participant groups (n = 90, n = 182) and one key stakeholder group (n = 22) were surveyed in person, over the phone and online. Open-ended qualitative responses were analysed for recurring themes.FindingsKey stakeholders contribute unique and valuable insight into programme implementation and engagement, expanding evaluation beyond participant feedback. Most notably, the process evaluation illuminated the engagement insight of programme volunteers, mid-level expansion opportunities offered by participating chefs and the perceived value of involvement across all stakeholder groups.Research limitations/implicationsThe study is limited by a lack of systematic stakeholder identification and to a single context, namely food waste.Practical implicationsThis paper affirms the importance of process evaluation and application of stakeholder theory to social marketing. These contributions suggest a widened focus for the widely accepted NSMC benchmark criteria which centre attention on the end users targeted for change. Stakeholders should be included in process evaluations given they contribute important and unique partnership insights.Originality/valueThis paper extends stakeholder theory use in social marketing providing showcasing potential for this approach to deliver a more reflexive stance. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Social Marketing Emerald Publishing

Utilising stakeholder theory for social marketing process evaluation in a food waste context

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References (64)

Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
Copyright © Emerald Group Publishing Limited
ISSN
2042-6763
DOI
10.1108/JSOCM-12-2017-0088
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

PurposeCalls for theoretically informed interventions and a more reflexive stance are apparent in social marketing. Moving from a “prove” to “improve” mentality requires evaluations that learn from experience gained to identify improvements to inform future programme success. This paper considers the value of inclusion of stakeholders in process evaluation.Design/methodology/approachTwo participant groups (n = 90, n = 182) and one key stakeholder group (n = 22) were surveyed in person, over the phone and online. Open-ended qualitative responses were analysed for recurring themes.FindingsKey stakeholders contribute unique and valuable insight into programme implementation and engagement, expanding evaluation beyond participant feedback. Most notably, the process evaluation illuminated the engagement insight of programme volunteers, mid-level expansion opportunities offered by participating chefs and the perceived value of involvement across all stakeholder groups.Research limitations/implicationsThe study is limited by a lack of systematic stakeholder identification and to a single context, namely food waste.Practical implicationsThis paper affirms the importance of process evaluation and application of stakeholder theory to social marketing. These contributions suggest a widened focus for the widely accepted NSMC benchmark criteria which centre attention on the end users targeted for change. Stakeholders should be included in process evaluations given they contribute important and unique partnership insights.Originality/valueThis paper extends stakeholder theory use in social marketing providing showcasing potential for this approach to deliver a more reflexive stance.

Journal

Journal of Social MarketingEmerald Publishing

Published: Jul 15, 2019

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