Archive for March 10th, 2008

Newspapers: The Innovation Challenge

On Friday Dan Gillmor wrote here about bringing an entrepreneurial mindset to today’s journalism.On Friday, Dan’s former employer, the San Jose Mercury News, laid off 15 newsroom staffers and lost five other editors through buyouts, shaving the editorial staff by about 10 percent, on top of a larger set of layoffs a few months ago. Or, to be more precise, the paper’s corporate owners, MediaNews, did so.

This is at once both troubling and ironic.

Troubling, because the downsizing is indicative of deep-seated financial and circulation troubles in the newspaper industry as a whole. (As newspaper analyst Dave Morgan observed last year: “Ad revenue in most large newspaper markets will keep dropping 3-5% per year for the next five years. Real circulation — excluding the tons of papers dumped on schools, hotels and the constantly-churning “free ten-week trial” — will keep dropping 3-7% per year for the next five years.”)

Ironic, because the Mercury News should know better. No other newspaper is so well situated to emulate the culture of Silicon Valley. Here in the Valley, the Merc has spent years reporting on the cyclical ups and downs of the technology sector. But more significant is the ethos of 21st century capitalism that the Valley embodies.

Some of those lessons might be summarized as:

  • Experiment. Take risks. Think outside the box. The Valley’s mantra could be summed up in a phrase: “Innovate or die.”
  • Dare to fail. Build on the rubble of others’ failures.
  • Embrace uncertainty. Embrace change.
  • See where the marketplace is going, get there first and offer something of immense value.
  • Build for the long term, not for short-term returns.

(I blogged about forecaster Paul Saffo’s rules for success here and here.)

Innovation or inertia?

On Friday, Beatblogging.org’s David Cohn pointed to Clay Shirky’s new book, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations, and quoted this excerpt from Shirky’s book:

A good deal of user-generated content isn’t actually “content” at all, at least not in the sense of material designed for an audience. Instead, a lot of it is just part of a conversation.

Mainstream media has often missed this, because they are used to thinking of any group of people as an audience. Audience, though, is just one pattern a group can exist in; another is community. Most amateur media unfolds in a community setting, and a community isn’t just a small audience; it has a social density, a pattern of users talking to one another, that audiences lack. An audience isn’t just a big community either; it’s more anonymous, with many fewer ties between users. Now, though, the technological distinction between media made for an audience and media made for a community is evaporating; instead of having one kind of media come in through the TV and another kind come in through the phone, it all comes in over the internet.

University of Florida new media professor Mindy McAdams chimed in:

Newspapers used to be centered in communities. Now they are mostly not. People in much of North America don’t even live in communities.

Is this why newspapers are dying? Because there are no communities? …

It’s about what Shirky said: Audiences are not the same as communities, and communities are made up of people talking to one another.

What does a community need? How should journalists supply what communities need? …

Indeed, this is perhaps the key question for the survival of newspapers, but one that’s rarely heard in newsrooms or corporate media offices.

I was once optimistic about the resiliency of newspapers and the promise of their online news divisions. But that optimism has faded as media companies circle the wagons and hunker down, intent on shoring up short-term profits with few attempts to boldly experiment.

A handful of exceptions like the Beat Blogging project — a collaboration among 13 news organizations to determine how social networks can improve beat reporting — only prove the rule. The Mercury News seemed on course to embrace a new direction with its Next Newsroom Project, coming to Duke University on April 3-4. I hope I’m proved wrong, but the odds appear stacked against the paper’s Denver-based corporate owners embracing the kinds of still-evolving, far-reaching, disruptive changes on the table at Next Newsroom.

Most of the innovation in news continues to occur outside of the newspaper industry, ranging from Digg, Newsvine, NowPublic and Facebook (rivers of personalized news) to Placeblogger’s list of citizen media sites and David Cohn’s citizen newspaper network BrooWaha.

News organizations need to begin thinking of news as an ongoing process rather than a finished product, as broadcast news consultant Terry Heaton has written. The new era is not about mass products but serving niche markets and repositioning your core business for the new economy. It’s about engagement, participation and conversation rather than monetizing audiences or eyeballs. It’s about taking journalism in new directions. It’s about studying people from the future — young people — and their radically different media habits.

Chiefly, it’s about taking chances, and building value for communities, and innovating for the new information age.

Or perishing.

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Report: CNN citizen journalism site close to launch

CNN is close to expanding its “iReport” user-generated reporting initiative into a separate Web site, MediaWeek wrote Monday.The new site, to be hosted at iReport.com, will be a repository for user-submitted news content–video, audio, and photos. Visitors can navigate through categories of news (like sports, weather, and politics), rate content, and embed it elsewhere on the Web. Contributors will be able to create profiles, and regulars can build up individual followings. As for filtering, the new site will be moderated once content has already been posted to the site; this is a change from CNN’s current strategy with iReport, in which only select contributions are posted to CNN’s Web site. This obviously means that the news runs the risk of inaccuracies and pranksters, but one could assume that moderation as well as community interaction could keep the fake-news factor to a minimum.

Right now, hubs for “citizen journalism” on the Web include well-backed companies like Current Media, which recently filed for an IPO, as well as start-ups of varying size like NowPublic and GroundReport.

CNN first launched the iReport project in August 2006, and since then has received over 100,000 photo and video submissions, according to MediaWeek. In October, the Time Warner-owned news brand established a presence for the initiative in virtual world Second Life.

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CNN iReport: Citizen Journalism Makes it Big

There are a number of citizen journalism sites out there that let everyday people eport on the events in their neighborhoods and communities. Those sites range from the weak and rant-filled like LiveLeak to the professional and well organized like NowPublic.CNN is stepping into the fray with its new citizen journalism site, iReport. The site was launched yesterday, and offers a host of tools that let the public share their thoughts and video on issues ranging from local news and community updates to national and international.

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