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Subject:

AEJ 95 GustafsR ADV Teaching advertising and public relations on the Information Highway

From:

Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Sun, 4 Feb 1996 15:03:23 EST

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text/plain

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Parts/Attachments

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Teaching on the Information Superhighway
MERGING THE TEACHING
OF ADVERTISING AND PUBLIC RELATIONS CAMPAIGNS
ONTO THE INFORMATION SUPERHIGHWAY
 
 
 
Robert L. Gustafson, Assistant Professor--Advertising
Steven R. Thomsen, Ph.D., Assistant Professor--Public Relations
Department of Journalism
Ball State University
Muncie, Indiana 47306
317-285-8200
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Submitted to: Association for Education in Journalism and Mass
 
 Communication
Advertising Division, Teaching Research-In-Brief Session
1995 Conference--Washington, D.C.
Abstract
 
The American Association for Higher Education is interested in how
 
    computers and online communication technologies can help contribute to the
 
          teaching and learning process. There are ways, it believes, for
professors
 
          to incorporate the use online services into their courses without
having to
 rethink their approaches to teaching. The authors raise the issue as to
 
          whether advertising and public relations curricula have kept up with
the
 
          advances in this technology. They argue and discuss the need for, and
the
 
          merits of, incorporating the Internet and related services into the
 
     teaching of campaigns and techniques courses and offer some applications.
 
 
 
 
 
Introduction
                A leading business magazine recently featured a cover story which
 
     proclaimed that the Internet would change the way business is conducted
 
         around the world ("The Internet," 1994). Indeed, we know that it will,
 
        because the process has begun and has started to accelerate.
                When Bell Atlantic opened its World Wide Web (WWW) site on the Internet
 
          in the fall of 1994, for example, the Philadelphia-based
telecommunication
 
          and information services provider joined a growing number of business
users
 that are quickly converting what was once the exclusive domain of
 
    academics and government scientists into what they hope will become the
 
         "virtual mall" of the next century.
                Bell Atlantic's WWW site was installed only months after the company had
 
          gone online with an e-mail "listserv," which it uses to distribute
press
 
          releases and public relations materials to the media, government
officials
 
          and interested Internet "surfers." According to Eric Rabe, who was
 
    responsible for Bell Atlantic's entrance into cyber-public relations, the
 
          e-mail distribution program has signed up more than 400
individuals--four
 
          times the number of people reached in the days when the company relied
exc
 
          lusively on the postal service to mail press releases to the media (E.
 
        Rabe, personal communication, September 28, 1994). Rabe, Bell Atlantic's
 
          director of corporate relations, is aware that those 400 individuals
 
      include government regulators, Clinton Administration officials,
academics,
 consumer advocates, and even competitors. The goal of the service, he
 
        explained, was to extend the company's influence among communication
 
      policy-makers and to project the image that the company is on the cutting
 
          edge of technology.
                In the fall of 1993, Bell Atlantic made its first entrance on the
 
     information superhighway with the establishment of a gopher server--a
 
       location on the Internet that allows users to browse through documents
and
 
          materials stored by an organization in a public site--and an "ftp"
 
    archive--a site that allows users to download documents from a remote
 
       computer system to their own. In one 60-day period, shortly after the
 
       gopher server was launched, more than 20,000 "connections"--individuals
who
 logged onto the server--were made and more than 60,000 documents were
 
        examined. "We were actually stunned by that," Rabe explained (E. Rabe,
 
        personal communication, September, 28, 1994).
                The "Web" site, ftp archive, and gopher site provides users with access
 
          to company histories, recent press releases, profiles of corporate
 
    officers, texts of testimonies given by Bell Atlantic executives to
 
     Congressional committees, product and service information, and the names
 
          and e-mail addresses of FCC commissioners. The "Web" server even
provides a
 sample letter supporting Bell Atlantic's position on a FCC-related
 
     regulatory issue and allows the user to electronically send the letter with
 his or her name attached.
                As many as 21,700 commercial domains or "storefronts"--from J.C. Penneys
 
          to Embassy Suites Hotels to Tupperware--are available on the "Web."
That
 
          represents more than a 200 percent increase in the past three years
("The
 
          Internet," 1994). The Web allows users to see video, hear the voice of
a
 
          sales person, and to scan through attractively designed "ads" of
products
 
          that range from cars, to boxer shorts, to fine art. By clicking their
mouse
 on a photograph, for example, they are reconnected instantly to another
 
          system that allows them to see and hear video footage related to the
photo.
 By clicking on the name of a product, users receive additional information
 about the product as well as information on how to order it.
                The popularity of the "Web" as a "business address" has spawned cottage
 
          industries that include "Internet entrepreneurs," marketing experts,
and
 
          advertising agencies that specialize in getting customers to enter the
 
        world of "digital commerce" ("The Internet," 1994; Lewis, 1995; Wiseman,
 
          1994). The "Web" has been described as the Internet's "business
district,"
 
          with the cost of setting up shop online ranging from about $14,000 to
 
       $50,000 (Bollinger, 1995).
                Thousands of businesses flocked to the Internet in 1994, and giant
 
      corporations are investing billions of dollars in digital technology
 
        needed to link them with their
                customers and suppliers through all sorts of "interactive" services. All
 
          are chasing an emerging market of millions of affluent and
computer-savvy
 customers--as many as 200 million by the end of the next decade--in a
 
          rapidly expanding global marketplace.
                (Lewis, 1995, p. C1)
 
                While the online market may be in its infancy, business users are
 
     encouraged by the slow, but steady diffusion rate. Currently, about 33
 
        percent of U.S. households have personal computers and that number is
 
        expected to reach 60 percent by 1998. Twelve percent of those household
 
         users have modems, and 6 percent subscribe to online
services--one-fifth to
 two or more (Decker, 1994). Several company's are now racing to develop
 
          technology to allow for the encryption of credit card numbers in hopes
of
 
          simplifying online transactions (Smith, 1994; Kim, 1994). One expert
 
      predicts that by the year 2000 commerce on the Internet will exceed $2
 
        billion (Forbes, 1994).
                In the world of advertising, for example, the e-mail capabilities of the
 
          Internet and online communication services have created "virtual
offices,"
 
          facilitating changes in the way staffers interact with their "office."
                Much has been written about the remodeling of Chiat/Day's offices. Last
 
          year, Chiat/Day went "virtual" using technology to let staffers
complete
 
          work without assigned work spaces, often on half-day intervals. When
 
      they're not in the office, they are connected by the Internet and e-mail.
 
          People are free to work at home or out of their car and are encouraged
to
 
          spend more time at their clients' businesses. This way, according to
 
      Chiat/Day, the company's assets ar more likely to be working 24 hours a
 
         day. Good work requires thinking and access to information. Showing up
for
 
          work doesn't necessarily get the job done ("Making virtual office,"
1994).
 
          Laurie Coots, director of business development at Chait/Day,
explained:
                It really doesn't matter where you are at 9 a.m. or 5 p.m.; what matters
 
          is that the
                client's needs are being met. Sometimes that means a team meeting;
 
      sometimes that
                means e-mail from the beach. ("Re-engineering," 1994)
 
                Schell/Mullaney claims to be the world's smallest global agency and,
 
        according to Advertising Age, it might be right. The 30-person New
 
    York-based agency in one week produces advertising that runs in 29
 
    countries. Thanks to the Internet, and various online services, the agency
 
          communicates with its clients via e-mail worldwide ("Re-engineering,"
1994)
 
          .
                Richard Grove, chief executive officer of the public relations and
 
      media-consulting firm, Primetime, has created a "virtual" boardroom for a
 
          "virtual corporation." Without formal offices, Primetime employees
work up
 
          their clients' publicity campaigns in their "virtual" environment of
e-mail
 networks and faxes, usually working from their houses. "I can offer
 
      something most other public relations firms can't--freedom," explains
 
       Grove. By passing problems and information through time zones, companies
 
          can work around the clock to deliver solutions. And, according to
Grove,
 
          "The one who gets there first with the information is the winner"
("For
 
         techno nomads," 1994).
                "The Internet is not just a process; it's potential," wrote Agency
 
       magazine editor Geoffrey Precourt. "As it will clearly change the way we
 
          communicate with one another, so it will change the ways that agencies
find
 to make a connection with their customers" ("Networking," 1995,
p. 8).
                It should be no surprise then that Darin Richins, product public
 
    relations manager for Utah-based WordPerfect Corporation, suggests that
 
         future advertising and public relations professionals will spend
 
  increasingly more time managing and using database and information services
 as well as going online to connect with clients, the media, and customers
 
          (D. Richins, personal communication, August 11, 1993) .
 
 
Purpose of this Paper
                This raises the issue, however, as to whether public relations and
 
      advertising curricula have kept up with the advances in technology.
 
     Further, it raises questions as to how online technologies, and the
 
     Internet in particular, can be incorporated into classroom instruction. The
 purpose of this article is to suggest ways in which the Internet, e-mail,
 
          and online services can be used as an effective teaching tools in
 
   undergraduate courses. The paper draws upon the experiences of the authors,
 who have incorporated the use of this technology in capstone advertising
 
          and public relations courses in their department. In one sense,
students
 
          may be introduced to the virtual office of the future, by being
exposed to
 
          a virtual classroom experience today.
 
Where the Highway Begins
                The Information Superhighway may be an unfortunate metaphor. A recent
 
          Freedom Forum study reports that the term is not clearly descriptive
of the
 broad communication system and uses it tries to describe. However, this
 
          is the name commonly used to label the advanced technological
connections
 
          of the telephone, television and computer, resulting in an interactive
 
        media system. On one side of the highway there are those interested in
 
         creating media and messaging. On the other side there are those
interested
 in receiving information ("Separating fact," 1994).
                At a panel discussion sponsored by the Freedom Forum Media Studies Center
 in February, 1994, Philip Elmer-Dewitt of TIME noted that the Information
 
          Superhighway means different things to different people. For example:
 
                RBOCs
                The regional Bell operating companies (RBOCs) view the highway as a way
 
          to increase sales by providing people with new ways to transmit
voice,
 
          data and graphics over their network. They are also eyeing the
future
 
          transmission of video
                and entertainment.
 
                Cable and Broadcast
                The cable and broadcast companies are interested in distribution of their
 content in
                new forms. They are particularly interested in expanding the number of
 
          cable channels and programs and interactive technology.
 
                Computer Industry
                Computer-related companies see the highway as a connection of computer
 
          users
                who connect online with databases, interest groups and bulletin boards.
 
          This
                aspect is the most fully developed through the Internet and recent
 
       introduction of consumer online services such as CompuServe, Prodigy
and
 
          America Online.
                ("For techno nomads," 1994)
 
About the Internet
                The Internet is a global web of approximately 30,000 computer networks,
 
          2.2 million computers and 20 million people in more than 70 countries.
It
 
          connects users to thousands of databases and allows people to
communicate
 
          worldwide almost instantaneously. No one really runs the Internet;
it is
 
          more of a cooperative. Internet was established by the U.S. Defense
 
      Department in 1969 to connect the Pentagon with defense researchers in
 
        academia and business.
                In 1986, the National Science Foundation promoted the non-defense use of
 
          the Internet by creating a special network, NSFNet. Universities
started
 
          plugging into NSFNet and by the late 1980s, students at many colleges
 
       obtained Internet access. As new technology and on-line services made it
 
          easier to use, more individuals and businesses started using Internet
for
 
          communication, selling, shopping and research ("The Internet," 1994).
                Anyone with a personal computer and a modem can get connected to the Net
 
          for as little as $15 a month. Online services such as CompuServe,
America
 
          Online and Prodigy offer limited access to the Internet. Other
companies
 
          such as Delphi Internet provide direct Internet accounts.
                Perhaps one part of the Internet that is now the easiest to use is the
 
          World Wide Web, which operates like the "help" screens on a Windows or
 
        Macintosh computer. The World Wide Web is useful for "cyber surfing"
for
 
          information and is quickly being expanded for commercial purposes by
the
 
          media and marketers.
                Like Bell Atlantic, both advertising agencies and public relations firms
 
          are starting to realize the more and more consumers are collecting
 
    information from the Internet. Most have targeted the World Wide Web, an
 
          information-retrieval system that allows the use of multimedia.
Rather
 
         than broadcasting messages, which are loathed in cyberspace, many
marketers
 are setting up databases which allow consumers to browse at will. The
 
        databases combine graphics and sound plus a variety of files that can be
 
          opened for additional information.
                Communication or e-mail is probably the easiest and most powerful
 
     application of the Internet that a company can employ. Because the virtual
 electronic post is so much faster than telephone calling and traditional
 
          postal services, people are doing things with e-mail they never could
 
       before. E-mail users can share their thoughts with dozens of others
almost
 instantaneously around the world. It is typically no more expensive that
 
          postal mail. It saves trees. It eliminates phone tag and can be
delivered
 at any time. It is a key contributor to the "Information Revolution."
 
Merging onto the Information Superhighway
        The American Association for Higher Education is seriously interested in
 
          how computers and other technologies can help contribute to teaching.
 
        There are ways, it believes, for professors to incorporate the use of
 
       computers in coursework without necessarily rethinking their approaches
to
 
          teaching ("Making higher education," 1994).
                The authors' premise is that Advertising and Public Relations Campaigns
 
          courses offer professors and students a variety of opportunities to
combine
 computer-related technology and traditional coursework. Further, this
 
         range of opportunities can rather easily be tailored to fit an
individual
 
          university's available resources.
                The majority of four year colleges and universities and a smaller
 
     percentage of community colleges already are connected to the Internet.
 
          Access to the Information Superhighway will soon be universal. The
goal of
 the Clinton administration is to have all the nation's schools and
 
     libraries connected by the year 2,000 (Boldt, Gustafson, & Johnson, 1994).
                Some of the benefits of incorporating the use of e-mail and the Internet
 
          in marketing and economics courses have been discussed in several
recent
 
          articles. These overall benefits also apply to Advertising and Public
 
        Relations Campaigns. Three strong pedagogical reasons are:
 
                1. The use of the Net increases students' knowledge of
          telecommunications and computer networks.
 
                2. The use of the Net requires writing. And, according to the Writing
 
          Across Curriculum (WAC), the more writing students do, the better
their
 
          writing and analytical skills become. (Hansen, 1994)
 
                3. The use of e-mail and the virtual classroom increases the opportunity
 for student-teacher involvement. Students may be less intimidated about
 asking questions via e-mail and instructors may reply confidentially.
 
          E-mail may also
                foster more student teamwork as it increases contact and collaborative
        opportunities. (Baker, 1994)
 
                Unquestionably, the use of the Internet requires and improves upon a
 
        number of skills including: verbal, written, critical thinking,
computer
 
          and telecommunications. Educators have an obligation to students and
 
       employers to develop these essential skills (Hansen, 1994).
 
Suggestions for Steering a Campaigns Course
                In the past year, both authors (one advertising professor and the other a
 public relations professor) have experimented with and incorporated the
 
          use of e-mail and certain aspects of the Internet in their upper-level
 
        Advertising Campaigns and Public Relations Techniques courses. The
 
     following discussion will include the various applications/assignments
 
        implemented, the benefits incurred, student reactions and additional
uses
 
          of the "Net "yet to be tried.
 
        1. Electronic Mail--Reporting
                For an Advertising Campaigns class the use of e-mail communication was
 
          written into the syllabus as a course requirement and grading
          consideration. The class was divided into competitive "agency teams"
and
 
          assigned a semester-long project to develop an integrated marketing
 
     communications campaign for a national brand.
                Each student was given his or her own individual e-mail address as well
 
          as a team distribution e-mail address. The instructor listed his
e-mail
 
          address on the course syllabus. Consequently, the instructor could
 
     communicate via e-mail with all team members privately or collectively.
 
          Personal and group e-mail communications were possible among each team
of
 
          students. In effect, we created a virtual classroom and virtual
agency
 
         teams.
                Each team was required to file contact/status reports via e-mail within
 
          48 hours after weekly meetings with the instructor (client). These
reports
 were considered as part of "account service" and were factored into the
 
          team's final grade.
                The contact e-mail reports help the students organize their work and stay
 on top of projects. Students learn how to write effective reports and
 
         grow more familiar with the Internet and virtual office concept.
 
   Importantly, e-mail reporting allows the instructor to monitor each team's
 
          progress more effectively and provide immediate feedback.
        2. Electronic Mail--Collaboration
                Beyond the benefits of more frequent status reports, tighter control,
 
         clearer expectations and immediacy, there was a noticeable increase in
 
        instructor-student involvement and group teamwork. Both individuals and
 
          teams frequently contacted the instructor via e-mail to ask questions
or
 
          "bounce ideas around." The Net seems to be a less intimidating outlet
for
 
          some students to ask questions or contribute ideas. If responses get
 
       lengthy or complicated, they can be stored on the computer or printed out
 
          for future use.
                One complaint often heard when teaching a campaigns class is that
 
     students have trouble finding a convenient time to meet as a team. Some
 
          have conflicting class schedules, others work and so on. While e-mail
 
        cannot replace the need for team meetings, it certainly can contribute
to
 
          better communication and teamwork. The instructors found that the
students
 appreciated the opportunity to establish closer working relationships with
 their teammates via the Net and to have "around the clock" access. Teams
 
          often met in the evening or late night and on many occasions would
compose
 
          e-mail messages for the instructor to be read first thing in the
morning,
 
          "so everyone could be on the same page."
 
        3. Computer-Assisted Research
                When most people talk about the Internet, or the Information
          Superhighway, they usually refer only to the e-mail capabilities of
the
 
         network. That is like driving across country and never stopping to
check
 
          out the scenery, sample the local cuisine, or visit the local
landmarks.
 
          Learning how to use the Internet to conduct research "searches" is
vitally
 
          important to advertising and public relations students and employers.
 
        Campaigns students, especially, need recent information not found in
 
      textbooks. Both of the authors devised a number of exercises designed to
 
          help their students get on and off the superhighway in order to assist
 
        their research activities.
                In an upper-division public relations writing and techniques course,
 
        students were given a series of "case" situations involving actual
 
    companies. Although fictitious products were used in the assignments,
 
       students were expected to obtain actual company information. This
included
 
          historical background, data on current senior-level company officers,
 
       product and service information, and company background information
 
     relating to key issues and actions.
                A frequent "client," for example, has been Apple Computer. In one "case"
 situation, the students were told they were required develop a media kit
 
          to be distributed at a press conference to unveil a new line of
computers.
 
          In order to complete the assignment, students were required to produce
a
 
          corporate history and biographical sketches of key Apple executives.
 
      Students were instructed on how to access the Apple information online,
 
         which they used to collect the information needed to produce the
various w
 
          ritten assignments. Students were also able to access company
information
 
          that was incorporated into the press releases which appeared in their
 
        media kits. Another recent assignment involved writing press releases
 
       announcing the appointment of senior-level executives. Students were
shown
 
          how to access the Bell-Atlantic "Web" page and how to connect to the
 
      biographical sketches of key executives with that company.
                In order to teach students to use the Internet for research purposes, the
 instructor has developed a guide, "Computer-Assisted Research: A (Very
 
         Modest) Guide to Surfing the Internet." In this guide students are
 
    instructed on how to access gopher servers, the Usenet and other
 
  newsgroups, ftp archive sites, and how to conduct an "Archie" search.
 
       Telnet and "finger" commands also are reviewed. The students also are
 
       introduced to WWW sites.
                For example, students are provided step-by-step directions on how to
 
        access the gopher sites maintained by NASA and the National Institute of
 
          Standards and Technology (NIST), where they are directed to archives
for
 
          press releases, media advisories, additional story ideas and contact
 
      sources, and general information. The NIST, for example, maintains a
 
      section on its server called the "NIST Science Beat," where it "pitches"
 
          story ideas and provides background for reporters who cover that
 
  governmental agency. Students are also shown how to access the "Electronic
 
          Newsstand," a gopher server that allows them to conduct, by topic and
 
       publication, online searches of more than 100 current and recent news and
 
          trade publications, such as Business Week, Computerworld, The
Economist,
 
          Inc. Magazine, the Internet Letter, Labor Trends, and the Western
Journal
 
          of Medicine, to name just a few. The guide also instructs students on
how
 
          to access government information available at ftp sites, such as the
 
      complete text of the original Clinton Health Care Reform Proposal.
                The goal of the exercises are to familiarize students with the resources
 
          available online. They learn to search for information about their
 
    "clients," their competitors, and about issues and background information
 
          that might directly or indirectly impact their clients. Student
reaction
 
          has been very positive. One measure of success is the quality of
materials
 
          being produced for the written projects and assignments. Students are
able
 
          to produce "professional quality" materials using real world
information
 
          and scenarios. Many include the assignments from this class in their
 
      portfolios.
 
        4. Electronic Information Services
                This summer the authors' university will make available another
 
   computer-assisted research application--Lexis/Nexis from Mead Data General,
 Inc. For more than 15 years, Lexis-Nexis has provided computer-assisted
 
          research services to business and universities. Users simply ask the
 
       system to look for documents containing key words of their choice. The
 
         system then scans hundreds of databases for documents and can provide
 
       full-text or references only. Sources include: business and trade
 
     information, news and current events, regional information, company
 
     financials, regulatory data, government information and legal records.
                Lexis/Nexis is a proverbial gold mine of information for a campaigns
 
        class and offers a "real-world" opportunity of experience in that many
 
        companies currently use it as a primary information resource. In one
trial
 run, the authors looked at a search of 1994 business articles containing
 
          three key words: CHRYSLER and NEON and ADVERTISING. Our search found
282
 
          articles. In future semesters, student teams will be assigned time to
use
 
          Lexis-Nexis to assist their situation analyses of industries,
companies and
 brands.
                In addition to Lexis/Nexis, public relations students are also exposed to
 information about other online services such as Dow Jones News/Retrieval,
 
          DataTimes, Dialog, and a number of industry-manufacturing specific
 
    services, such as EEI-Online, which is operated by the Edison Electrical
 
          Institute. In the Public Relations Techniques course, for example,
students
 are shown how these online services are used in media relations, news
 
        tracking, and issues management. In addition to the news archives
 
   maintained by these services, the students are also shown how "real-time"
 
          searches are conducted using these services. "Real-time" searching
allows
 
          practitioners to track stories as they move across dozens of different
news
 and business wires, reducing a process that once took days and weeks down
 
          to just hours and minutes.
 
Student Reactions
                Overall, students embraced the idea of incorporating the Internet and use
 of e-mail in their campaigns classes. They used the system throughout the
 semester to file status reports, ask questions, collaborate on ideas and
 
          schedule meeting dates with their instructor and among themselves.
Most
 
          reported that e-mail made communication easier and fostered better
 
    teamwork.
                An informal classroom survey was conducted in one Advertising Campaigns
 
          class in order to learn more about student attitudes toward e-mail.
On a
 
          5-point scale (from #1 strongly disagree to #5 strongly agree),
students
 
          were asked to respond to two statements:
 
                1. It is important to learn how to use e-mail and Internet as
                many companies will expect employees to use it in the future.
 
                2. Writing e-mail conference reports is one more way to develop
                good writing skills.
 
The mean score for the first question (n = 38) was 4.5 and 3.8 for the
 
        second, indicating that students, overall, felt that the use of e-mail
and
 
          the Internet were valuable learning experiences.
 
Conclusions
                As has been argued and discussed in the paper, the authors believe that
 
          advertising and public relations instructors must find innovative ways
to
 
          incorporate the "Information Superhighway" and its services into our
 
      curricula. Students must be introduced to the services available online
and
 shown how those services will be applied in their work-a-day worlds.
                The Internet will gradually change the way business is conducted around
 
          the world. It will affect the physical corporate structure and
staffing. It
 will affect the way companies communicate internally and externally. It
 
          will create new markets. These changes provide both new challenges and
 
        opportunities to advertising and public relations instructors. As
 
   discussed, there is a myriad of ways to meaningfully incorporate the use of
 the Internet in campaign and techniques courses. The results are better
 
          teamwork, an improved end-product, and a more real-world experience.
In
 
         effect, as we've explained, students are introduced to the virtual
office
 
          of tomorrow by being exposed to a virtual classroom environment today.
                We recommend that future research seek to establish an empirical link
 
         between e-mail and Internet use and students' satisfaction, writing and
 
         research performance. We encourage the additional sharing of "case
studies"
 explicating the creative and innovative ways in which online technologies
 
          have been incorporated into classroom instruction. Students and
teachers
 
          alike will benefit from these exchanges.
 References
Baker, H. (1994). Promoting interaction and teamwork with electronic mail.
 
          Business
                Education Forum, October, 30-31.
Boldt, D., Gustafson, L., & Johnson, J. (1994). A resource in the teaching
 
          of economics and
                beyond the Internet. Business Education Forum, October, 23-26.
Bollinger, C. (1995). Approaching the speed of light. Agency, winter, pp.
 
          46-50.
Decker, S. (1994, October 20). Online Marketing Notes/Statistics. E-mail
 
          from
                [log in to unmask]
Forbes, T. (1995). Ads in cyberspace: Light your beacon, but don't get
 
        flamed. Agency,
                winter, pp. 24-38.
Hansen, R. (1994). Using the Internet in marketing classes. Marketing
 
       Educator, 13 (4), 3.
Kim, J. (1994, November 28). MCI will connect customers to Internet. USA
 
          Today, p. B1.
Lewis, P. H. (1995, January 3). Trying to find gold with the Internet. The
 
          New York Times,
                p. C15, C18.
Rabe, E. (personal communication, September 28, 1994).
Richins,. D. (personal communication, August 11, 1993).
Schoch, E. B. (1994, November 26). Internet's singing a siren's song to
 
         small businesses.
                The Indianapolis Star, p. A1-2.
Smith, L. B. (1994, November 28). Internet "nowhere near" ready for big
 
         business.
                PCWeek, 11 (47), p. 1.
Thall, N. (1995, February 11). Project McLuhan Report. E-mail from
 
    McLuhan-List%
                [log in to unmask]
Wiseman, P. (1994, July 7). The Internet snares more businesses. USA Today,
 p. A1-2.
Bell Atlantic Public Affairs Archive, http://www.ba.com.
Bell Atlantic opens information post on the internet. A press release from
 
          Bell Atlantic posted
                to [log in to unmask], October 4, 1994.
For techno nomads; whole new ballgame, ballpark. Chicago Tribune, May 8,
 
          1994, p. B1.
Major higher-education group to explore technology for teachign and
 
     learning. The
                Chronicle of Higher Education, May 11, 1994, p. A16.
Making virtual office reality coast-to-coast. Advertising Age, September
 
          12, 1994, S12.
Networking takes on a brand-new spin. Agency, Winter 1995, p. 8.
Re-engineering the advertising agency. Agency, Spring 1994, pp. 34-42.
Separating fact from fiction on the Information Superhighway. The Freedom
 
          Fourm Media
                Study Center, Columbia University, April 1994, p. 3.
Site-seeing on the World Wide Web. The New York Times, January 3, 1995, p.
 
          C18.
The Internet: How it will change the way you do business. Business Week,
 
          November 14, 1994,
                p. 80-85.


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