Posts Tagged ‘Rocky Mountain News’

Some people don’t get it.

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Metro Detroit has a new daily newspaper:  the Detroit Daily Press, which is scheduled to be online Nov. 23.  Well not online, they don’t have a Web site yet. This new publication will be available in print for daily delivery to Metro Detroit newspaper readers. You’ve got to be kidding me.

I love newspapers. I spent almost 20 years of my life photographing for print media.  I wish there was hope for the survival of the industry.

The day I presented my New Media Secrets talk to the Denver Press Club last winter,  the Rocky Mountain News shut down.  I knew about this before many others. Why? Credit the immediacy of social media.  News was coming directly from the Rocky Mountain newsroom via tweets and  Facebook status updates from employees who’d just learned it was their last day on the job.

That was the day I declared myself free of my dependence on old media for my income.  I’ve not solicited any of the local media for work since.  It has been a rough transition, but my career is better off for it.

I know a number of local writers jumping on board this new publishing venture. I sincerely wish them the best.  But, all I’ve heard through the grapevine are old attitudes about the need for print media.  The investors are outsourcing many of the services and setting up the paper like they would have in the 1970s. I’ve not heard any concern for photography, video, Internet or new media concepts.

In other words, nothing new is being created and there’s  little commitment to the growth and innovation of the industry.

I understand the owners have committed two months’ worth of capital to support the project. Even in a good economy, two months of capital is not enough to support a start-up publication. In a declining media market, with few advertising dollars available in the depressed market we have here in Detroit,  it appears destined for failure.

According to the recent Razorfish digital brand experience report, 84 percent of consumers get their current information and news online.

This upward trend will continue. The two traditional major daily papers in metro Detroit now only offer home delivery three times a week, which is the impetus for the launch of this new daily paper.  This doesn’t even take into consideration all the other newspapers and magazines that have closed this past year in Michigan.

Another concern about the health of this endeavor is the lack of buzz, marketing or community-building strategies. The only reason I knew about the new newspaper is because friends of mine where applying for positions with cheap rates and no benefits.  They have only offered a few traditional old school press releases.

Their Web presence seems to be a secondary concern. Their target market goal is the more than 100,000 baby boomers missing their traditional daily paper. Are baby boomers really missing their newspaper? While boomers don’t seem to be embracing the online editions, returning to old-school methods doesn’t seem the answer.

I hear the Daily Press now has a Facebook page. Do they know what to do with it? Do they have a plan? Are these extremely misguided people wasting a lot of money?

Rosh

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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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