The new age and conventional communication

kspite 14 joint years of working for two large Parastatal corporations and the largest Financial Services institution on the African continent, and of late three years as an independent communication consultant, I still have no clear-cut answer to the question of what the future holds for conventio...

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Main Author: Marco Roodt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Johannesburg 2022-10-01
Series:Communicare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/1874
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author Marco Roodt
author_facet Marco Roodt
author_sort Marco Roodt
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description kspite 14 joint years of working for two large Parastatal corporations and the largest Financial Services institution on the African continent, and of late three years as an independent communication consultant, I still have no clear-cut answer to the question of what the future holds for conventional communication. Note that I am steering clear of the word communications. Communications would in my view be referring to those information-technology-trained experts driving luxury cars at an age when they had barely qualified for a legal driver's licence, or to the richest person in the world who has, by starting a dot.com business, surpassed in stock wealth the software wunderkid of the eighties. They are indeed also part and parcel of communication. The only thing is that they seem to be successful on a large scale where people electing to qualify and practise in the field of conventional communication appear to have much less to be happy about. This statement would probably further demoralise current students of communication, academia, starter-up practitioners, those who are in fact making it and let us not forget communication advisers. The question is are we making it professionally or are we practising an unnecessary art and science? Let us, explore this issue by looking objectively at some pertinent communication industry (not IT) mind teasers, turning them into statements and then arguing the realities surrounding them.
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spelling doaj-art-163b175fff3e40ba811d392f9a994ca12025-01-20T08:49:04ZengUniversity of JohannesburgCommunicare0259-00692957-79502022-10-0119210.36615/jcsa.v19i2.1874The new age and conventional communication Marco Roodt0University of Johannesburg kspite 14 joint years of working for two large Parastatal corporations and the largest Financial Services institution on the African continent, and of late three years as an independent communication consultant, I still have no clear-cut answer to the question of what the future holds for conventional communication. Note that I am steering clear of the word communications. Communications would in my view be referring to those information-technology-trained experts driving luxury cars at an age when they had barely qualified for a legal driver's licence, or to the richest person in the world who has, by starting a dot.com business, surpassed in stock wealth the software wunderkid of the eighties. They are indeed also part and parcel of communication. The only thing is that they seem to be successful on a large scale where people electing to qualify and practise in the field of conventional communication appear to have much less to be happy about. This statement would probably further demoralise current students of communication, academia, starter-up practitioners, those who are in fact making it and let us not forget communication advisers. The question is are we making it professionally or are we practising an unnecessary art and science? Let us, explore this issue by looking objectively at some pertinent communication industry (not IT) mind teasers, turning them into statements and then arguing the realities surrounding them. https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/1874conventional communication.nformation-technology-trainedacademiastarter-up practitionerscommunication advisers
spellingShingle Marco Roodt
The new age and conventional communication
Communicare
conventional communication.
nformation-technology-trained
academia
starter-up practitioners
communication advisers
title The new age and conventional communication
title_full The new age and conventional communication
title_fullStr The new age and conventional communication
title_full_unstemmed The new age and conventional communication
title_short The new age and conventional communication
title_sort new age and conventional communication
topic conventional communication.
nformation-technology-trained
academia
starter-up practitioners
communication advisers
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/1874
work_keys_str_mv AT marcoroodt thenewageandconventionalcommunication
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