Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia

This research aims to evaluate the quality of Indonesian and Malaysian government websites as a communication channel for the COVID-19 pandemic crisis. The evaluation involved three dimensions of WebQual 4.0, an evaluation standard for website quality because it contains the principles of mass commu...

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Published in:SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
Main Author: Kriyantono R.; Kasim A.; Wardasari N.; Swastikawara S.; Rani N.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor's University Lakeside Campus 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187639819&partnerID=40&md5=44162711cac1ff17de0bfb747f6b0d57
id 2-s2.0-85187639819
spelling 2-s2.0-85187639819
Kriyantono R.; Kasim A.; Wardasari N.; Swastikawara S.; Rani N.A.
Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
2023
SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
2023
Special Issue

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187639819&partnerID=40&md5=44162711cac1ff17de0bfb747f6b0d57
This research aims to evaluate the quality of Indonesian and Malaysian government websites as a communication channel for the COVID-19 pandemic crisis. The evaluation involved three dimensions of WebQual 4.0, an evaluation standard for website quality because it contains the principles of mass communication and dialogic face-to-face communication. Government websites can serve as the main source of information for journalists in producing news. If a substantial amount of mass media news is sourced from government websites, then the government public relations practitioner functions as a provider of information subsidies to build a media agenda. A total of 37 Indonesian and 36 Malaysian journalists filled out the study’s online questionnaire. Findings reveal that the interactive quality of both government websites is still low, but aspects of technology or usability and information quality are at a satisfactory level. Further, the Malaysian government website functions better as a provider of agenda-building information subsidies because Malaysian journalists tend to disseminate more information from these websites in the form of news than Indonesian journalists. This is related to the interactive aspect in which the Malaysian government websites are considered by Malaysian journalists to be more interactive. © SEARCH Journal 2023.
Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
26727080
English
Article

author Kriyantono R.; Kasim A.; Wardasari N.; Swastikawara S.; Rani N.A.
spellingShingle Kriyantono R.; Kasim A.; Wardasari N.; Swastikawara S.; Rani N.A.
Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
author_facet Kriyantono R.; Kasim A.; Wardasari N.; Swastikawara S.; Rani N.A.
author_sort Kriyantono R.; Kasim A.; Wardasari N.; Swastikawara S.; Rani N.A.
title Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
title_short Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
title_full Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
title_fullStr Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
title_sort Applying WebQual 4.0 to measure the quality of government websites as a function of agenda building-information subsidies for journalists during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative study between Malaysia and Indonesia
publishDate 2023
container_title SEARCH Journal of Media and Communication Research
container_volume 2023
container_issue Special Issue
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85187639819&partnerID=40&md5=44162711cac1ff17de0bfb747f6b0d57
description This research aims to evaluate the quality of Indonesian and Malaysian government websites as a communication channel for the COVID-19 pandemic crisis. The evaluation involved three dimensions of WebQual 4.0, an evaluation standard for website quality because it contains the principles of mass communication and dialogic face-to-face communication. Government websites can serve as the main source of information for journalists in producing news. If a substantial amount of mass media news is sourced from government websites, then the government public relations practitioner functions as a provider of information subsidies to build a media agenda. A total of 37 Indonesian and 36 Malaysian journalists filled out the study’s online questionnaire. Findings reveal that the interactive quality of both government websites is still low, but aspects of technology or usability and information quality are at a satisfactory level. Further, the Malaysian government website functions better as a provider of agenda-building information subsidies because Malaysian journalists tend to disseminate more information from these websites in the form of news than Indonesian journalists. This is related to the interactive aspect in which the Malaysian government websites are considered by Malaysian journalists to be more interactive. © SEARCH Journal 2023.
publisher Taylor's University Lakeside Campus
issn 26727080
language English
format Article
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