Posts Tagged ‘newspaper’

Ten years too late

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Yahoo! launched its new front page about a week ago.  It’s clean, it integrates social media, and it offers local news on the front page. This is a great deal for local print media; unfortunately, it is 10 years too late.

Yahoo has enough issues of its own. They have made a lot of bad moves over the last few years. But, the addition of local news as part of the front page news stream is something I believe viewers will appreciate. It should have been there a long time ago.

Local news and advertising have become a focus again over the last few years. Google finally jumped into the local news game in February 2008.  Although I’m sure it’s easily accessible, I don’t believe I’ve actually looked at their  news offerings. But, it has been hard to miss their aggressive efforts to display local searches in the last year.

In the social media realm, Facebook has been very successful with its local focus,  earning a majority of its revenue from local advertising.

Yahoo has been working on the process of developing local news for years.  They started testing as early as 2004 with limited sources.  In 2006 they softly launched their local news and have continued to develop more sources since then. But the main focus has been national news. This is what has finally changed.

I’m excited to see the connections on Yahoo. Especially since I’ve worked at a few of the smaller daily newspapers that the Yahoo aggregator is now sourcing. It should be a real traffic driver for local media and added support for generating loyal yahoo.com viewers.

This alliance and prominent display of smaller local newspapers should have happened years ago when both Yahoo and the local print media had some strength left in them.   Local news aggregation is the starting point in a long process.  At this point I have to ask: Do Yahoo and local print have enough time to develop the relationship?  Is it too late to forge this new alliance toward new levels of necessary innovation and success?

I don’t know how this recent relationship developed. I do know that local newsprint media would have never bought into this idea a decade ago. Newspapers would have considered it a loss to share local content. If Yahoo had streamed local feeds to their front page,  the papers would have sued rather than celebrate the additional traffic directed to their Web sites.

Newspapers have traditionally devalued the Web.  They gave away advertising space for pennies if advertisers chose their medium of delivery.  The world continued to change and newsprint had no realistic plan.

I checked the unique visitors to the Web sites of the newspapers mentioned above.  They received two to three times the Web traffic each month compared to their print circulation.  Why can’t they monetize that?

Now that local media seem to have their heads out of the sand, can they make more deals with traffic-driving Web sites? Will they take advantage of the new traffic coming from Yahoo? Can sites such as Yahoo build more quality relationships with local media that would build loyalty?

Does anyone care anymore?

Rosh

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Newspapers must die

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

After years of the newspaper’s decline from crown jewel of the local community to corporate investment, it is time to let the newsprint medium die. If we let the traditional resource die, we can invent the news source of the future.

The traditional media are killing themselves slowly every day with a short-sighted need to make a 30 percent profit on their product. The pressure of quarterly profits does not allow CEOs to create and develop a future for their products.

They have cut resources to the bone and little is left, except for a dire need for quality investigative journalism.

My local newspaper, the Detroit Free Press, won a Pulizer  prize this year for local reporting. I’m concerned that this might be the last. How can newspapers and magazines compete against free news? It is troubling that the public seems to feel that news should be free and provided by bloggers and citizen journalists who are happy to work for the same rate.

Bloggers and citizen journalists are fine for providing opinion or breaking-news content. Any accident, police situation or public event in the range of a camera phone can be documented easily. However, quality, in-depth reporting is best done by trained professionals, supported with a paycheck,  backed by an organization and legal counsel.

The average citizen journalist is not going to take the time, money and effort to investigate a city hall scandal.  Bloggers tend to use personal opinion, Google, fellow blogs and Wikipedia for fact checking.

I don’t know many photojournalists willing to risk their lives to capture war images for a photo credit or byline.

Even more of a concern is who the hell is willing to sit though a local city council or board of education meeting for free?

Newspapers must die quickly.

We don’t have time to test gimmicks that might save the print medium. The people in charge only know mass media. They are doing all they can to stuff a clunky old model into a sleek new media bag. It’s not going to fit.

Once print dies, it will be reinvented out of the ashes of necessity. Once the public is without quality resources — its value will be redeemed.

Demand and value will spark an innovative person or group of people to discover the way to make news reporting and distribution a viable venture.

No matter the outcome, news distribution will not look like it does today. If it does, they didn’t get it right and we will have to kill it again.

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Understand or be irrelevant

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Baby new year arrived this year wearing a smiling face, a party hat, and 2009 glasses. After the fanfare came a stampede of fingers on keyboards, as folks signed up for social media accounts. Social media is here. The tipping point has arrived.
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It seems like every week the death knell sounds for another traditional media outlet. New and social media are winning the information wars.

A good example of that happened on Feb. 27, when Twitter and Facebook users, many of them Rocky Mountain News employees, scooped their own paper with information about its final edition.

Marketing departments are fielding calls from demanding managers and clients. Everyone wants to know: Does the company have a Linkedin account? Do they have a  Facebook page? They’re asking if Twitter is worth their time. Last year’s business coaches and SEO experts are now popping up as social media strategists.

The world is not changing. It has already changed.

Not everyone has a social media account. But, if you are not learning the basics now, you will be left behind. Some people still refuse to use computers or cell phones. But from now on, your address should be found at Facebook.com.

Here’s how it’s working right now:

We share information and receive the news of the world faster than ever via Twitter.

Stories of your life are posted on Flickr and YouTube. You may even participate in niche forums and unique social sites that pertain to your interests.

Your favorite RSS (Real Simple Syndication) reader is designed by you to deliver feeds from your favorite, blogs, podcasts, and news outlets. It’s a one-stop information source. It’s perfect.

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Social media is new, exciting and cutting edge for the masses. But, before you know it, the thrill will be gone and this crazy new world will be normal.

Over the next few years the technology will continue to form and shape. New platforms will emerge and replace the old. Just like e-mail and cell-phones, initially they will be resisted and called a waste of time.

Whatever your opinion, the new standards of communication and information distribution have arrived. Understand or be irrelevant.

Rosh

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Reflections, another epitaph

Friday, February 27th, 2009

I spoke at the Denver Press Club Thursday evening for ASMP (The American Society of Media Photographers) about New Media Secrets. Sadly, this was the same day E.W. Scripps announced the closing of Denver’s 150-year-old newspaper, the Rocky Mountain News. 

How ironic.

When I arrived at the press club, a local TV crew was setting up for a live shoot. Not everyone knew what it was about.  The closing had just been announced a couple hours earlier and had not been disseminated fully via traditional media channels.

How did I find out? Twitter via a PDN (Photo District News) Tweet.  How did PDN find out? Twitter via the Tweets of the saddened reporters sharing their thoughts. They tweeted throughout the afternoon describing the details of the shutdown and memories of their beloved newspaper.

Chances are people on Twitter as well as other new and social media channels knew of the closing before it was announced by any of the mainstream media sources. 

New and social media are relevant.

I’ve already written about some of the reasons why I believe newspapers (Epitaph: Here lies 30 percent profit) are dying. Having been a victim of newspaper downsizing, I have no desire to kick people when they are down. 

But, I do have to say, the owners of the newspapers failed the communities that entrusted them with such an important resource many years ago. We are now paying the price.

New media is here to stay.  I spent a lot of time last night trying to convince a room of about 50 people that their voice is more  important than ever. Social media is our future. We need to care and find the time to contribute to the conversation.

I include myself in the group of new and social media advocates who  still believe in traditional media.

One of my favorite podcasters and digital marketing expert,  Mitch Joel,  started writing a bi-weekly newspaper column within the last year and will have a book published in the fall.  Guru C.C. Chapman was the social media hero after being interview on CNN on Inauguration Day. 

Mainstream media are still beneficial, powerful and necessary.

As for me, last night I joined group of photographers who decided to take the seats at the empty bar behind the TV reporter during his live report, allowing the backs of our heads their 15 seconds of fame.  It was fun, hey, did you see me? 

Rosh 

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