Thursday, 28 April 2022

OSP: Marcus Rashford - Audience and Industry

The second part of our OSP Marcus Rashford case study focuses on Audience and Industry.

This completes our in-depth study of Marcus Rashford's online presence and brings in important questions about social media and regulation. 

Audience

Target audience: demographics and psychographics

What is Marcus Rashford’s target audience: 

  • Demographics: CAGE?
  • Psychographics?

Audience engagement

Instagram engagement rate is a measure of how much audiences engage with posts (e.g. likes, comments). An engagement rate of 1-3% is considered good and anything 6%+ is extremely high.

Marcus Rashford’s power as an influencer is shown by his engagement rate of 6%.

Source: https://starngage.com/app/gb/influencers/marcusrashford

Marcus Rashford's appeal to audiences

What is the appeal of Marcus Rashford to his audience? Think about his campaigns, use of social media and his website. Also, consider his appeal to different audiences.

Use Blumler and Katz Uses and Gratifications theory:

  • Diversion
  • Personal Identity
  • Personal Relationships
  • Surveillance/information


Industry

Marcus Rashford net worth

Marcus Rashford’s net worth has been estimated at around £16m (source: Sunday Times rich list). This includes:

  • £200,000 per week from Manchester United (£10.4m a year)
  • £2m endorsement deal with Nike
  • Additional deals with Burberry, BT Sport, Coca-Cola and others

He is also the youngest person to top the Sunday Times Giving List for raising £20m for good causes.


Marcus Rashford commercial partners

Watch the following promotional videos from brands featuring Marcus Rashford.

  • What do the companies get from an association with Rashford?
  • Thinking about media language, how do these adverts create an emotional connection between the brand and audience using Marcus Rashford? 
  • How do the clips help Marcus Rashford control or build his own brand?


Industries: ownership, control and regulation

Marcus Rashford’s online presence is partly driven by his excellent use of social media.

But who owns Twitter? Who owns Instagram? How much money do they make? How are they regulated?

These are key questions for GCSE Media students.

Twitter

  • Twitter was started by Jack Dorsey in 2006. It now has over 200 million active users worldwide. 
  • Twitter’s 2020 revenue was $3.72 billion. 
  • Twitter makes most of its money through advertising – promoted tweets or ‘trend takeovers’.
  • Marcus Rashford has over 5m Twitter followers.


Instagram

  • Instagram is an image and video sharing site launched in 2010. 
  • In 2012 it was bought by Facebook for $1 billion. Facebook and Instagram’s parent company is now called Meta – a global conglomerate.
  • Instagram has over a billion active users worldwide and more than 25 million users in the UK alone.
  • Instagram revenue in 2020 was $24 BILLION.
  • Marcus Rashford has over 12m Instagram followers.


Instagram: a danger to teenagers?
  • Over 40% of Instagram users are aged under 23.
  • Research suggests that Instagram is damaging to mental health – particularly for teenage girls.
  • Facebook’s own research suggested this – but they allegedly kept this secret.
  • The research suggested one in three girls felt bad about their bodies and Instagram made this worse. It is also linked to increased anxiety and depression.

Media regulation: how do you regulate the internet and social media?

The government put forward the Online Safety bill in 2022 to try and add regulation of the internet to Ofcom’s role as media regulator. This includes:

  • Sending threatening posts being punishable by jail sentences.
  • Platforms like Twitter and Instagram having to actively prevent users seeing harmful material – or risk being fined by Ofcom.
  • Platforms paying Ofcom to regulate their content.
Critics of the law have suggested social media is impossible to regulate – there is too much content – or users’ freedom of speech will be compromised.

Internet regulation: key questions

The internet is very difficult to regulate because it is global but governments are national. Also, corporations like Amazon or Facebook are now more powerful than some governments.

Media theorist Clay Shirky describes the change with digital media as going from: “Filter then publish to publish then filter”. 

Anyone can publish almost anything instantly and the audience then has to filter the content they engage with.

Here's Clay Shirky talking about how the internet is changing communication - watch the first three minutes:


Finally, here is Marcus Rashford talking to Sky Sports News about what should be done about online abuse: 


Blog tasks: Marcus Rashford - Audience and Industry

Work through the tasks on Google Classroom to complete your work on Marcus Rashford's online presence.

Extension tasks

How does Marcus Rashford's online presence reflect modern society and culture?

Read this Sky Sports interview with Marcus Rashford saying online abuse should be easier to stop. What does he think the companies should be doing to regulate it?

If you want to test yourself at A Level, try reading this chapter from A Level Media theorist Clay Shirky called Publish, Then Filter. How does Shirky suggest the internet has changed the way we engage with the media?

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