Entries Tagged as 'Journalism'

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Survey asks: Would you pay for online news?

Back from a summer hiatus, and I have some interesting stuff for you from my jaunts around the blogosphere:
Would you pay for online news? Who wants to know? Well, Chas Hartman, a former newspaper reporter and now Ph.D. candidate at the University of Kentucky for one. And, well, pretty much everyone else who cares about [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

News readers are driven by need for information, not loyalty to a brand

The Pew Research Center released an interesting study last week that offers some sobering — although not surprising — insights for the news business.
Researchers examined top news stories in the mainstream press as well as what news got traction on blogs, Twitter and YouTube. A main finding was that what’s hot on social media differs [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Part 2 from Amber Smith: What to keep — and get rid off — in journalism

Today I’m again handing my blog over to veteran journalist Amber Smith, a friend and former colleague of mine at The Post-Standard in Syracuse. In her free time, she blogs about dementia at DementiAwareness. She offers Part 2 of how old-time journalism relates to  the changing world of media.
As a veteran-journalist-but-newbie-blogger, I’m learning something new [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Society of Professional Journalists names 20 ‘industry thinkers’ to follow

Quill online, of the Society of Professional Journalists, released its list of 20 “industry thinkers, innovators, and practitioners” to follow, and I’m humbled and honored to be one of them.
But what’s way more important that my tiny moment of fame is the list itself. It’s chock full of folks I want to know more about. [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

Five Twitter etiquette rules you should never (ever) break

I offered a list of Twitter etiquette tips for journalists — or anyone — a while back, and it got quite a buzz around the Twitterverse. Here’s round two: My updated list of what not to do on Twitter.
1. Don’t send an automated welcome direct message. I am not a fan of automated anything on Twitter [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

What it means to leave the newspaper business

Dear neglected blog readers, I’m sorry I’ve been ignoring you. But I do have some tidbits that are worth a read:
Q and A with Steve Buttry: Brian Cubbison features an interview with Buttry on his blog this week that’s truly worth a read. (Full disclosure, Brian is a friend and former colleague; Buttry is a “virtual” friend.) [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Help readers make sense of the world

A concept that gets bandied about a great deal is that news organizations need to help people “make sense of the world.”  I’ve used the idea myself to show how news organizations need to realize they sell convenience, not news. We all kind of know what we mean by this concept, but it doesn’t have a [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Journalism’s relationship with social media has matured

Time for some short-takes of cool journalism-related stuff you should be reading around the blogosphere:
Social media goes mainstream: So finally, being on social media has stopped being gee whiz and started being, well, normal. Manish Mehtma sums this point up well in this Huffington Post blog item. He notes that this process of normalizing will [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Monday, January 4th, 2010

News organizations’ goal for 2010: Imagine world that doesn’t exist

The legacy press or the traditional media or whatever we’re calling newspapers these days has one main challenge for 2010. And it’s not finding a new business model, although, of course, that’s important, too.
But the main challenge has nothing to do with business plans. It has to do with vision. It has to do with [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Hopes for journalists in 2010

Happy 2010, readers! Wow. We survived what was quite the troubling year in journalism, and, I think, really, that journalism is better for it. Yes, there’s been too many layoffs, pay cuts, buyouts. But I think the economic woes have forced news organizations to rethink how they gather and deliver news — and that’s a [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Twitter links powered by Tweet This v1.6.1, a WordPress plugin for Twitter.