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    Evaluating Military Advertising and Recruiting: Theory and Methodology

    Posted By: MoneyRich
    Evaluating Military Advertising and Recruiting: Theory and Methodology

    Committee on the Youth Population and Military Recruitment, Cognitive, and Sensory Sciences Board on Behavioral, Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, National Research Council, "Evaluating Military Advertising and Recruiting: Theory and Methodology - 1 edition"
    National Academies Press | March 17, 2004 | ISBN: 0309091276 | PDF | 208 pages | 4.3 MB

    It is anticipated that in the coming decade the Department of Defense (DoD) will field and test new advertising and recruiting initiatives designed to improve the recruiting outlook. The DoD needs a comprehensive research and evaluation strategy based on sound research principles that will ensure valid, reliable, and relevant results to discover the most promising policies. The primary objective of this book is to help the DoD improve its research on advertising and recruiting policies.

    Evaluating Military Advertising and Recruiting: Theory and Methodology presents a framework for evaluation that links different types of research questions to various research methodologies. The framework identifies four major categories of research questions and four broad methodological approaches. The first category of research question asks “What does a target audience see as attractive or unattractive features of a program?” It is well suited to examination via qualitative methods, such as focus groups, unstructured or open-ended surveys, and interviews. The second category of research question asks “What is the effect of a program on specified attitudes or behavioral intentions?” It is well suited to examination via surveys, experiments, and quasi experiments. The third category of research question asks “What is the effect of a proposed new program on enlistment?” It is well suited to examination via experiments and quasi experiments. The final category of research question asks “What is the effect of an existing program on enlistment?” It is well suited to examination via econometric modeling.