Media economics research: Accessing and working with official and non-official statistics

Voci Denise , Nölleke-Przybylski Pamela

Review article (book contribution) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

This chapter describes and reflects on official and non-official statistics as data sources for media economics research. To this end, it outlines and lists different types of data source, their informative value, and their potential limitations. The focus is on industry associations, market research firms, and financial databases as non-official sources and on the peculiarities of data generation and statistical processing by official sources. In addition, a distinction is made between a market and an industry perspective of media economic research, since the media can be quantified at different levels and to different extents depending on the approach chosen, and correspondingly different questions can be addressed. By considering the potential and the limitations of both official and non-official statistical data, and concluding with some premises that should be considered when using them, this chapter provides researchers with an overview of resources that are potentially relevant to their specific research.

Details about the publication

PublisherRohn, Ulrike; von Rimscha, M. Bjørn; Raats, Tim
Book titleDe Gruyter Handbook of Media Economics
Page range61-75
Publishing companyDe Gruyter
Place of publicationBerlin/Boston
StatusPublished
Release year2024 (05/06/2024)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
ISBN9783110793444
DOI10.1515/9783110793444-005
Keywordsmedia economics research; official statistics; non-official statistics; data sources; market data; industry data

Authors from the University of Münster

Nölleke-Przybylski, Pamela
Institute Communication Studies