Abstract

Over the last decade, the music industry has adapted its promotional strategy to take advantage of the fluid, contemporary, platform-based transmedia landscape. For researchers of contemporary culture, the multiplicity of promotional activities creates substantial methodological challenges. In this article, we present and discuss such methodological approaches using two studies of contemporary promotional music campaigns as illustrative cases. Inspired by digital and innovative methods and guided by the Association of Internet Researchers’ (AoIR’s) ethical guidelines, we developed two data collection strategies—reversed engineering and live capturing—and applied two analytical approaches—visual mapping and time-based layering. The first case study traced already staged music marketing campaigns across multiple online media platforms, and the second followed an online promotional campaign in real time for six months. Based on these case studies, we first argue for the importance of grounded manual capturing and coding in data collection, especially when working around data access limitations imposed by platforms. Second, we propose reversed engineering and live capturing as methods of capturing fragmented data, in contemporary promotional campaigns. Third, we suggest the visual mapping and time-based layering of data, enabling researchers to oscillate between qualitative and quantitative data. Finally, we argue that researchers must pool their experiences and resources regarding how to transcend platform limitations and question a lack of transparency while respecting ethical norms and guidelines. With these arguments, we assert the researcher’s necessary role in understanding and explaining the complex and hybrid contemporary promotional landscape and provide tools and strategies for further research.

Highlights

  • Over the last decade, the music industry has adapted a specific promotional strategy to take advantage of the fluid and dynamic contemporary platform‐based media landscape

  • Transmedia mar‐ keting refers to promotional campaigns using a range of media formats and activities to provide a coherent marketing narrative that is co‐created with an audience (Scolari, 2009; Zeiser, 2015)

  • 2016; Rogers, 2013; Venturini et al, 2018), and guided by the Association of Internet Researchers’ (AoIR’s) ethical guidelines for internet research (Franzke et al, 2020), we developed two data collection strategies, reversed engineering and live capturing, and applied two analyti‐ cal approaches, visual mapping and time‐based layering

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Summary

Introduction

The music industry has adapted a specific promotional strategy to take advantage of the fluid and dynamic contemporary platform‐based media landscape Such transmedia campaigns are continuously in motion and carried out with significant crossover between online and offline activities with multiple plat‐ forms and venues. To understand a media landscape in flux calls for innovative and sometimes unconventional methods (see, for example, Eriksson et al, 2019) This article addresses this call by developing method‐ ological strategies for capturing complex promotional campaigns across different media formats as well as how to analyse fragmented qualitative and quantitative data of different formats, forms, and scales and collected from different platforms, all of which have specific affordances and conditions for data collection. In the concluding section of the article, we formulate four methodological strategies that we argue will aid researchers in conducting future studies on promotional transmedia campaigns

Digital and Innovative Methods
Reversed Engineering and Visual Mapping
Data Collection and Sampling
Visual Mapping for Data Analysis
Challenges and Limitations of Reversed Engineering and Visual Mapping
Live Capturing and Time‐Based Layering of Data
Time‐Based Data Layering for Analysis
Challenges and Implications of Live Capturing
Ethical Challenges
Conclusions
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