Friday, December 18, 2009

Future of News: Collaboration not that easy

In the November-December issue of The Quill, the magazine by the Society of Professional Journalists, an article entitled "Newshole" again spotlighted the effect cutting newsrooms would have on community coverage and watchdog journalism.
However, deep into the article was a summary of what the author said were predictions for the future of news. While there's nothing new here, I was struck that one of the options while credible already is meeting opposition.
-A mix of online news from foundations, professional and amateur sites and big papers capitalizing on their brands to create and aggregate news.
-Ever closer collaboration between papers, competitors and readers to generate content, avoid redundant stories and pool coverage resources.

These last two, while possible, will be more difficult just because of the competitive nature of some news organizations. Witness the saber-rattling from the Minneapolis Star-Tribune against Minnesota Public Radio declaring MPR its chief competitor and unfairly so because it receives taxpayer funds.
Our own preliminary agreement with MPR to share news so both can have better regional coverage caused great concern from at least one publisher (who saw this as a pact with the devil) and the Associated Press (who worried the arrangement threatened their services for which we pay a healthy sum). An official announcement of this pact should be coming in January.
Without a doubt, we in the news business have to recognize that while a percentage of our problem is cyclical because of the economy, a larger amount is tectonic. And our continued success will rely upon our ability to adapt. While I'm not proposing we should ignore caution with any arrangement, the market is telling us we need to be more open to collaboration and sharing of resources.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Report: User-generated content won't hurt credibility

A recently released report on user-generated content on newspaper websites found people want to participate, they don't think it diminishes the credibility of the news organization and they want the newsgroup to block inappropriate behavior -- no free for all.
The report, entitled "Striking a Balance Between Community Journalism and Citizen Participation: A Research Study About User-Generated Content on Newspaper Websites" was funded by the Suburban Newspapers of America Foundation.
Conducted by American Opinion Research, the report shows users want to contribute to a newspaper’s website.

Newspaper website users say they are more likely to visit and enjoy sites that allow them to share opinions and content.
Users also make some fairly clear distinctions about what they want to post on a newspaper website.
Perhaps given the broad use of social networking sites, far fewer would post personal information (including photos and videos) than want to comment on stories or give their opinions about issues in the news.
However, users do not want newspaper websites to become a “free for all;” most favor some specific requirements or restrictions on postings.
Simply put, users want to post content to newspaper websites; it will increase their use and appreciation of these vehicles. But, they want the newspaper to create a framework for this sharing of information with some mechanism to ensure crude or inappropriate content do not appear.
Finally, most users reject the argument that allowing user-generated content diminishes a newspaper’s credibility or journalistic integrity.

The full report can be found here

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Future of News: A small newspaper perspective

Last weekend, my presentation for the "Other Future of News" in Minneapolis was focused a representing the "small newspaper" challenges. The event was co-hosted by David Brauer of MinnPost.com, and Taylor Carik of BringMeTheNews.com.
This event came on the heels of another Future of News conference with Minnesota Public Radio that had a lot of big dogs, very heavy solution discussions but didn't really get into the entrepreneurial spirit that is emerging. OFON I felt did that well. The best blog on it (while incomplete) is from Julio Ojeda-Zapata of the Pioneer Press
I had five minutes and couldn't completely cover even all that I was prepared to talk about so here is a little more of my presentation:
There is too much discussion floating around about the decline of news organizations taken solely from the perspective of the major news organizations.
The metros have the larger megaphone. They are laboring under a different set of circumstances than the non-metros. Metros have huge and isolated debt loads. They had (and still have) very high advertising rates as well as operating costs. They are limited in their ability to respond quickly because their size forces the creation of more "silos" in departments which means collaboration is minimized.
Non-metros, on the other had, are suffering from limited investments, lower salaries and a move for more centralization. However, they still retain the ability to move faster and more collaboratively within their own walls. They also are much closer to the communities they cover and subsequently have more emotion invested by readers and advertisers. Anything small news organizations try in a community will get you instant feedback. That's a plus.
That said, conspicuously missing from the discussions on the future of news is a representative voice from vast majority of community newspapers that are trying some innovation albeit on a shoestring.
At the Free Press, we don't have the most modern of equipment and we are hard-wired to our awful corporate online design from which we will be freed by late January 2010. My newsroom is slaving away with the old bubble iMacs operating on an antiquated OS9 system. To compensate for the lack of tools, we have peppered some PCs and laptops around the newsroom to give them access to what they need.
The evolution here is slow both in the newsroom and more importantly with our sales department. In the newsroom, I would venture that about 20% are fully engaged and, frankly, that's the segment I spend time with. We are encouraging moving to "mobile journalism" (mojos) to expand our territory.
And yet our sales force is still grasping to fully comprehend how to intertwine both print and online as a multimedia package. We also are struggling with online advertising design that moves away from print design principles.
Contrary to some belief, news organizations are not trying to catch up with innovation. In the late '80s and early '90s, news organizations were exploring new opportunities with such groups as New Directions for News with Jean Gaddy Wilson. The problem is we didn't come up with any silver bullet then either.
So what's the urgency now? It's not readership which has been slowly migrating to other media over time; it's advertising. And everyone in all media is suffering from the lack of it.
Yet, discussion about our future is focused chiefly on how to deliver content. That is misplaced (Later, I will argue it's not HOW the content is delivered but WHAT kind of content is delivered.) Yes, content needs have changed but we are finding newspapers are raising rates and increasing revenue. So content is not the major issue.
Secondly, no discussion should be seriously considered without a viable plan on how to monetize it.
One of the suggestions I offered was for reporters and editors to take an advertising rep out for lunch to learn what challenges they face and advertisers are telling them about why they aren't advertising.
That prompted a "tweet" from SPJ_DMC that said "Uh, got ethics?"
Is it really the preference of journalists to keep an arms distance away from those people who bring in the money to help pay the salaries of our news organizations? Why? Is it because they fear trust in our reporting will be tainted. Well, sorry, but that bus has already left the station and it had nothing to do with perceived coziness with the ad staff.
Then there's the demeaning stereotype that salespeople have no ethics. If journos would talk with the ad staff, I'm certain they would learn that ethical behavior is just as important for them. Their clients have to trust them or they won't get the business.
And while I wasn't suggesting reporters should talk to advertisers, I'm warming up to that idea. As one tweet following the OFON conference said "Have journos closed themselves to valuable resources by refusing to talk to advertisers?"
Journalists should treat all sources regardless of who or where they are with some skepticism but not avoidance. I think reporters have enough backbone to say no when presented with a proposal that doesn't smell right.
I'm asking that journalists listen not negotiate for stories.
In an earlier life, I was with a group of very talented journalists with our own regional magazine. We wrote the stories, shot the photos, sold the advertising and handled distribution. The entrepreneurs of today and survivors of the decline will need to be a jack of all trades. T.D. Mischke found that out when he lost his job at KSTP and moved to City Pages.
As one participant at OFON said, "Now it sounds like journos have to be tweeters, videographers, bloggers AND marketers." Yep. Probably.
One of the major initiatives we started this year was something very simple and yet will mean the very survival of our business. Listening.
For our advertisers, we started a feedback loop on the effectiveness of their ads. We are asking them "Did if work for you?" Knowing that an expectation like that is paramount, our designers and ad reps pay closer attention to what the ad will say, how it is designed, when it will appear. They have a vested interest in the success of that ad, just as much as the advertiser does.
We then will collect what common principles appear to make an advertisement effective and use them on further designs.
For the newsroom, that means listening to our readers. We have commissioned the Organizational Effectiveness Research Group at Minnesota State University-Mankato to do a consumer study that asks specifically what information they need to plan their day, choose their entertainment preferences, make decisions about work, get engaged with their child's school, become more involved in local politics. We wanted research from the consumer perspective, not the newspaper which typically asks do you want more state news, national news, movie reviews, etc.
We then will look at how we can provide those pieces so we can be relevant.
We hope to have the results of that study by the first quarter of 2010.

Future of News: Better include talk on advertising

It's the Monday after a day-long weekend conference in Minneapolis titled "The Other Future of News" crafted by David Brauer, MinnPost's local media reporter, and Taylor Carik, with BringMeTheNews.com. As the early morning speaker, I had a fresh crowd and thankful for it. But I had five minutes and rushed through a lot of points. Only later could I see what was being "said" (Tweeted) about the remarks. It was eye-opening to see your passion distilled to 140 characters or less. Later, I will expound on that presentation but one point quickly for the OFON participants.
One of my suggestions was our news folks should take an advertising sales rep out to lunch to find out what the world is like from their perspective. What are advertisers telling them about why they are or are not advertising.
Some thought I was suggesting reporters should sit down with advertisers. Not so; that maneuver should be reserved only for the stout-hearted and preferably management such as editors. What I was suggesting was getting to know more about those people -- the people who bring in the advertising money for your news organization and who have a direct impact on your livelihood.
Journos should talk to circulation people to find out what people are saying when asked to buy a subscription. Page Designers should talk to press people to find out if their color screens choices are best for reproduction on newsprint.
Journos should collect information from as many sources as they can especially if they are wondering why some decisions are being made that affect them and their livelihood.
But we should challenge long-held notions about news organizations and separation of departments. Many of our news entrepreneurs (some forced into their situation by the economy) aren't going to have the luxury of isolation and comfort of a well-heeled organization. They will be reporting and collecting information, disseminating in lots of various ways but most importantly they will be finding a way to make a living off of it.
Shouldn't journalists of today know the Business 101 of newspapering, TV and radio broadcast? If for no other reason than to prepare themselves should they need to be their own boss. T.D. Mischke of City Pages and formerly of KSTP, and another morning speaker at OFON, shared what he found out moving from traditional radio and then finding out what he needed to do to monetize his talent.
But we'll go into that more in a later post.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Finding out what readers want: Stage One

In an earlier post, I took up the challenge by Alan Mutter who said
"It’s time for editors, publishers, academics and foundations to pony up for serious, in depth and disciplined study of what consumers want, what they need and how journalists and media companies can provide it."

While it may not be to the scale Mutter is suggesting, we have commissioned a study with the Organizational Effectiveness Research Group at Minnesota State University in Mankato for such a study. Breaking away from the templates usually employed by research firms used by newspapers is no small feat and some feedback would be welcomed.
We were trying to get away from the traditional survey questions: "Do you want more orless of ..." "Are we doing a good job reporting on...." These types of questions are drawn from the perspective of the newspaper than the reader.
Instead, the charge to OERG was to ask as though you were a consumer. We also are using motivators drafted from the Readership Study conducted by Northwestern University.
Here are summaries of some categories being explored:
What information do you need to:
-- Help plan your day?
-- Assist when thinking of dining out?
-- Know more about working in south central Minnesota?
-- Help better understand what is happening at your child's school?
-- Help decide your entertainment and cultural choices?
-- Get a closer perspective on local higher education (we are in a university community)
-- Better understand local and state government actions or decisions that affect you?
-- Get closer to what is happening in your neighborhoods?

We do offer some suggestions on what those pieces may be. For instance, on local K-12 schools we suggested: Features on local teachers, unique classroom activities, after school activities, local school funding, school board meetings, standardized test results, advances in effective teaching methods, etc.
We also left an open-ended slot for further advice.
For each category we then will ask what medium (newspaper, radio, tv, internet, friends, family) is best used to provide that information now and how well that medium is performing.
This is not meant to replace the newsrooms ability to spot and choose what stories are occurring in our communities but help us understand what our readers are telling us they need.
This is a draft so we welcome any additional suggestions on questions. The one requirement we gave to our research team was the result has to be actionable. So such things as "Reading the Free Press makes me feel good about myself" while is nice to know doesn't get to the heart of what changes need to be made to be more relevant.