Nektarios S Makrydakis, Dimitris Spiliotopoulos and Afroditi Lymperi
The effectiveness of a national strategy depends not only on its policy design but also on its strategic communication and promotion planning. This study synthesizes two major sources: the marketing plan of a national strategy, which operationalizes communication through defined target groups, multipliers, phases, and evaluation metrics; and international research on the strategic communication, which identifies how governments build sector reputations and balance similarity and differentiation in their messaging. By systematically comparing these frameworks, the paper identifies four critical elements Strategic Communication, Digital and Media Engagement, Public Trust, and Stakeholder Collaboration that underpin successful dissemination of national strategies. The findings contribute to the literature by offering an evidence-informed conceptual framework that policymakers can adapt to enhance public acceptance, stakeholder alignment, and long-term policy sustainability.
Pages: 916-924 | 47 Views 21 Downloads