What tactics indeed. Where were they? I was very disappointed by this book in both content and presentation.
The synopsis suggested a promising, educational read on strategies for improving one’s own effectiveness at science communication. The book spends the first chapter summarizing various “communication objectives” of competence, integrity, shared values, etc. that a science communicator ought to strive to achieve towards a larger goal (e.g., funding, advising on public/private sector decisions). Sadly, the book wastes the subsequent 10 chapters going laboriously over surveys of how important/ethical/high priority the scientific community views each “communication objective”, and filling the remaining space with smatterings of one-off studies illustrating fairly common sense ideas like “don’t be a jerk to your audience” and “tell them you care about them”. The book highlights these objectives as things to consider when communicating to an audience, which is admittedly useful, but then fails to provide any guidance around how to achieve the objectives with useful tactics-tone, timing, medium, venue, etc. The last chapter acknowledges as much, with the authors making a plea for increased funding and resources to study effective tactics.
The book was also a terrible slog of a read. Despite the authors being communication/public relations researchers, I found their writing style disorganized and hard to understand at several points in each chapter. The disorganization was made worse by overly meandering language. I was constantly forcing myself to continue because I thought I might glean something useful out of the book. I’m still not sure I have.
Save yourself some time and headache—just read the first and last chapter, and then be done with it.