Revision with unchanged content. In recent years, organizations have
demanded evidence that communication management is effective.
Consequently, professionals and scholars alike have looked for the key
concepts to establish the value of communiction management practice. The
terms "relationships" and "reputation" have emerged as the focal
concepts in explaining the purpose and value of organizational
communication management. When those concepts are integrated in a model,
the role of communication management can be captured more clearly than
when there is a separate focus on each of the concepts. This book
examined the link between organization-public relation-ships and
organizational reputation. In the proposed model, organi-zation-public
relationship outcomes and types of relationships (communal and exchange
relationships) predicted organizational reputation, taking into account
influences of communication behaviors of publics, experience, and
familiarity with the organizations studied. The book is ad-dressed to
profes-sionals in communication management and public relations as well
as to researchers in public relations, communications, and marketing.