Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour

Purpose: This paper explores the leisure information behaviour of motor sport enthusiasts, examining: their information needs; their information seeking and sharing; what personal information they had; and their satisfaction with their information seeking and personal information management efforts....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Joseph, Pauline
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/24993
_version_ 1848751582828560384
author Joseph, Pauline
author_facet Joseph, Pauline
author_sort Joseph, Pauline
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose: This paper explores the leisure information behaviour of motor sport enthusiasts, examining: their information needs; their information seeking and sharing; what personal information they had; and their satisfaction with their information seeking and personal information management efforts. Method: This exploratory study examined participants’ information behaviour from a postpositivist and inductive research approach. An online survey was completed by 81 motor sport enthusiasts. Analysis: The quantitative survey data were analysed using descriptive statistics, whilst the qualitative data were analysed using thematic coding. Findings: The research findings highlighted that enthusiasts engaged in mixed serious leisure. They required information before, during, and after race events, and sought this primarily from online sources, as well as from other individuals. Ninety participants shared information about their interest in motor sport with family, friends, and fellow enthusiasts, primarily via emails (69%) and Facebook (49%). They also gathered information about motor sport, including photographs and memorabilia. Participants were satisfied with their information management strategies for their personal collections. Limitations: Participants were limited to motor sport enthusiasts in Australia, hence findings cannot be generalised more broadly. Originality/Value: This study fills a gap in the literature about leisure information behaviour of motor sport enthusiasts in Australia. It identifies and provides a typology of the 12 categories of information needed by enthusiasts. Further, introduces a preliminary Motor Sport Information Behaviour Model. These understandings of enthusiasts’ information behaviour provide information management professionals with insights to work with this user community.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:55:01Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-24993
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:55:01Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-249932017-09-13T15:56:36Z Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour Joseph, Pauline Purpose: This paper explores the leisure information behaviour of motor sport enthusiasts, examining: their information needs; their information seeking and sharing; what personal information they had; and their satisfaction with their information seeking and personal information management efforts. Method: This exploratory study examined participants’ information behaviour from a postpositivist and inductive research approach. An online survey was completed by 81 motor sport enthusiasts. Analysis: The quantitative survey data were analysed using descriptive statistics, whilst the qualitative data were analysed using thematic coding. Findings: The research findings highlighted that enthusiasts engaged in mixed serious leisure. They required information before, during, and after race events, and sought this primarily from online sources, as well as from other individuals. Ninety participants shared information about their interest in motor sport with family, friends, and fellow enthusiasts, primarily via emails (69%) and Facebook (49%). They also gathered information about motor sport, including photographs and memorabilia. Participants were satisfied with their information management strategies for their personal collections. Limitations: Participants were limited to motor sport enthusiasts in Australia, hence findings cannot be generalised more broadly. Originality/Value: This study fills a gap in the literature about leisure information behaviour of motor sport enthusiasts in Australia. It identifies and provides a typology of the 12 categories of information needed by enthusiasts. Further, introduces a preliminary Motor Sport Information Behaviour Model. These understandings of enthusiasts’ information behaviour provide information management professionals with insights to work with this user community. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/24993 10.1108/JD-12-2015-0150 fulltext
spellingShingle Joseph, Pauline
Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour
title Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour
title_full Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour
title_fullStr Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour
title_short Australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour
title_sort australian motor sport enthusiasts’ leisure information behaviour
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/24993