Saturday, October 24, 2009

Student Journalism is the Future, Now.

If you are a news editor, reporter or anyone involved with media, it's likely you've missed one of the greatest resources you have. It's always been there and it's always been valuable. But now, now is the time to look down for guidance. Here's five reasons to visit your local college or high school journalism department.

1. Tool kit: It will not take long to figure out what tools students are interested in and which they are ignoring. Even if they do not have the latest technology in their hands, they will be quick to tell you what they would like to see. Too many are quick to assume they know what the kids are into. Go have a look. It will be enlightening.

2. News Focus: What types of stories are the students choosing to focus on? This can be very telling. Many are more interested in storytelling, than providing a stage for gossip and fear. Student journalists are often optimistic and commonly take pride in the place they report for. When is the last time you saw a local newscast that appeared "optimistic" and seemed to have "pride" for the place they reported on?

3. They Are Media Consumers: Ignore them at your own peril. They are your target market. If you do not consider them to be your target market, they will very soon be in your sweet spot. You are wasting your time being irritated with their habits(texting, social networking, etc.). Their habits are the norms of tomorrow.

4. Land of the Lost: You've lost them as consumers. You've lost many of their parents. If Mom or Dad has been telling them they don't watch the news because "...", then that is their experience. Discuss why they ignore you, and why many of their parents have dropped you.

5. Your Rules Don't Matter to Them: For students, it is not revolutionary to mix video with written reporting. It's not an award-winning concept to implement Twitter and Facebook into their news strategy. It is just how they operate. Take a look at how they operate without the constraints of what journalism "should" be.

Do you have a number six, or an issue with any of this? Let me know in the comments. Thanks for reading.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Journalism Will Not Die

If you are not following @jasonfalls on Twitter or reading his blog Social Media Explorer, you should. He is one of the best minds out there commenting on social media. He is also a great writer and keeps the discussion entertaining.


"Journalism Will Not Die - Media is changing because of social media, but as much as I've picked on old-school journalism, there's still a need for accuracy, ethics and quality in reporting. Newspapers may very well die. Traditional media outlets that don't shift their focus to a web-first approach certainly will. But journalism will never go away. We need it as a society because it keeps our world - government, industry and more - honest. Where will the journalists go? That I'm not so clear about, though it will certainly be in web-centric opportunities. But all the social media evangelists and bloggers in the world can't tear down one of the world's most noble professions."

Agree/disagree? What do you think?

Monday, December 1, 2008

Tools: Zemanta.





Here's a few words from Andraz Tori, the founder of Zemanta, on how his research tool can help you. (Follow him on Twitter: @andraz)

"Here's a proper answer, mostly compiled from what our users said:
-it lets journalists do research while they are writing (by checking out related articles - widens journalist's horizon)
-it makes it easy for readers to do further discovery on their own (in-text links for in-depth info and related articles for other views and thoughts on the topic)
-it reduces journalist's non-creative workload (images, tagging)
Bottom line is: Better articles both content-wise and form-wise while reducing the workload."

Here's a screenshot from the tour of Zemanta.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Twitter Presentation.

Special thanks to Robert French(@rdfrench) for pointing out this Twitter presentation by public radio journalists in Alaska.  Also, if you've never seen Slideshare, now is a good time.

Twitter for Alaska Public Radio
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: radio public)

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

How can your newspaper blog be successful?

Editor: I've decided you are going to blog now.
Reporter: Why? 
Editor: We need to stay current.
Reporter: Is anyone going to read it?
Editor: We'll advertise it on our Web site. Of course they will.
Reporter: I'm on it.(nervous smile)

On several occasions, media friends have asked me to please read their blog and tell all my friends about their blog. I'll admit, I was once guilty of this behavior, as well. The likelihood is not high that simply asking someone to read your blog is going to be effective. It requires too much legwork and most people are generally just too busy. Also, not all newspaper readers are natural blog readers. In fact, some are turned off and/or intimidated by the label "blog." And your brand only means something to people who have lived in your community for a few years and are newspaper readers, so you can't assume people will be naturally attracted to you as a news source. All that said, I'm here to help, not to bring you down. Please read on...

So, how can your newspaper blog be successful?

1. Engage, engage, engage. The blogs that experience the most success are run by individuals who engage the audience. They read and post comments on other blogs. They interact regularly on Twitter. They are part of the conversation, not just shouting at an audience.

2. Content. Unique content drives users to blogs. Users will help you by forwarding interesting posts to their friends, posting them on their own blogs, etc. Think of a blog post as a short conversation. Are you more likely to want to talk to someone regularly who blabs on and on about every detail of a story? Or, would you prefer to talk to someone who gives you a short explanation with a little of their own spin/humor/accent?

3. Cover more. Being first has always been a push for local news, especially in a crowded market. But, the blogosphere is full of news hounds. Did they do their time in J-school? Did they work at the Armonk Pennysaver for two years before they landed a news job? No, but the audience isn't extremely interested in credentials. They want information. Cover as much as you can, and try to think and write like every blog is a tiny feature article.

4. Not everyone should be blogging. Some writers do not make good bloggers. A certain voice and style works for blogging. If a writer is not good at this, keep them on your hard news content. You are not winning new blog readers with their stuff.

5. Your best voices must blog. You know who they are. Blog readers love personality and individualism.

6. Do not simply re-post newsy articles and call it a blog post. A little of this is okay, but too much and people lose interest.

7. Be honest. Everyone knows newspapers are struggling. Talk about it. Honest discussions with consumers may lead to some positive developments. 

8. Make commenting easy. Do not make it difficult for people to read or comment on your blogs. The simple barrier of a log in and password could lose you large amounts of would-be readers. Once they are there, make it really easy for them to share your posts.

Photo gracias: Flickr user suanie.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Veterans Day Features

I'm collecting Veterans Day features here. Comment or email me at pressconn@gmail.com if you'd like to add one.




















Monday, November 10, 2008

From the trenches: John E. McIntyre (Baltimore Sun)

A thoughtful post from John E. McIntyre of the Baltimore Sun offering advice for surviving and thriving in the modern newsroom. Read the full post here
His six points are great:
1. Show your work.
2. Work on what matters.
3. Make yourself useful.
4. Don't let writers evade responsibility.
5. Write about what people want to read.
6. Don't give up the ship.