Journalism

Exclusives

  • Special Report: Apps

    The app genie is out of the bottle. Local news organizations have moved past the stage of merely having an app and are moving on to the tricky challenge of monetizing those apps, and to do that, they will have to build on the momentum of local mobile search, unlock the power of geolocation and push for better app metrics. Part one of a two-part series. Tomorrow: Part two of the special report will focus on content. More | Add comment
  • Digital DMA: WVBT Raises Ante In Norfolk Digital Battle

    In a market that spreads across 10 cities and has a heavy military presence, two newspapers rule the digital roost, but the area’s TV stations, which expect to see a 65% rise in online revenue by 2015, are trying out new ways to bring more visitors to their websites. Among them is LIN TV-owned WVBT, which has launched an online-only show about the local entertainment scene. More | Add comment
  • AppCheck: Cocktail Compass Pours A Round Of Revenue

    The Portland Mercury's Cocktail Compass barfinder app is not only helping users find nearby watering holes and drink specials but it's also helping the alt weekly use its extensive trove of bar listings to generate new revenue streams. More | Add comment
  • Site Specific: Classifieds, Video Help Seven Days Thrive

    Burlington, Vt.-based alt weekly Seven Days built a decent online following on the strength of its quirky, personality-driven video series "Stuck in Vermont," and has turned the site into a money maker primarily from display ads and classifieds. More | Add comment
  • Exec. Session: Alt Weeklies Tap Roots To Drive Web Rev

    Alternative newsweeklies may have gotten off to a slow start on the digital front, but according to Tim Keck, publisher of Seattle's The Stranger and Portland, Ore.'s Mercury, such newspapers can draw on their iconoclastic voice, strong local entertainment coverage and close relationships with local businesses, to take the online lead in their communities and build their online revenue. More | Comments (1)
  • Agile Alt Media Adapting to Digital Challenges

    Like all media entities, alternative newsweeklies have taken their hits over the past few years but now they are taking advantage of their flexibility and experimenting with social media, video and blogs in an effort to catch up in the digital world, and in some markets, challenge the local daily for dominance. More | Add comment
  • Online Metrics Take A Step Closer To Standardization

    Plagued by inconsistent measurement systems, the industry is seeking to standardize online audience measurements. The IAB, ANA and 4As are working on the Making Measurement Make Sense initiative that could hellp boost digital and cross-platform ad growth. More | Add comment
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Special Reports

  • Apps: The app genie is out of the bottle. Local news organizations have moved past the stage of merely having an app and are moving on to the tricky challenge of monetizing those apps, and to do that, they will have to build on the momentum of local mobile search, unlock the power of geolocation and push for better app metrics.
  • Daily Deals: Local media companies are turning to white-label platform providers so that they can build their own brand in the marketplace and potentially make more money.

Industry Calendar

February 2012
Mo
We
27-29
March 2012
Tu
Th
13-15
American Cable Association
ACA’s 19th Annual Summit
Washington, D.C., DC
April 2012
Fr
13
National Association of Broadcasters
NABShow
Las Vegas, NV
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Ex-NoW Journo Debuts Newsgathering Tool
Journalism.co.uk, Feb 22, 2012, 8:24 AM EST
A former Web journalist at the now-defunct News of the World has released News Sucker, a tool he built to track breaking news headlines and releases of U.K. government data. Link | Add comment
Syrian Live Streaming Citizen Journalist Killed
NewTeeVee, Feb 22, 2012, 7:59 AM EST
NY Times Obit For Adventurer Goes Viral On Twitter
Romenesko, Feb 21, 2012, 7:30 AM EST
How One Journalist Is Using Twitter In Afghanistan
Mashable, Feb 21, 2012, 7:12 AM EST
Special Report: Apps
Apps Under Gun In Hotly Competitive Market
NetNewsCheck, Feb 20, 2012, 5:15 PM EST
With consumers spoiled by choice, app providers are forced to innovate in order to keep pace. This year, the cutting edge lies in highly relevant content, social media integration, streaming media and smart aggregation. In part two of NetNewsCheck's Special Report on Apps, we turn to content. Yesterday's story examined the challenge of monetization. Full Story | Add comment
New Haven Independent Reboots Comments
Nieman Journalism Lab, Feb 20, 2012, 3:39 PM EST
The news site debuted new rules and a new approach to keep comments civil: "We will be culling comments that not only violate the rules but that violate the spirit of the rules; that denigrate personalities; that are attempting to use the Independent to spar with those who disagree with them, or to try to settle scores." Link | Add comment
Commentary
Newsrooms, Not Papers Need To Be Saved
Newsworks, Feb 20, 2012, 3:09 PM EST
Chris Satullo: "Great newsrooms used to be supported by gushers of newspaper ad revenue. But no more. And that's the great loss, the threatening void, not the loss of a product that leaves black smudges on your fingers. It is newsrooms that produce great work. ... And the days when one company could support a great newsroom by itself are gone." Link | Add comment
Commentary: the Chicago News Cooperative
Jarvis: Journalists Don't Know Business
BuzzMachine, Feb 20, 2012, 8:42 AM EST
Jeff Jarvis: "I'm not against not-for-profit, charitably supported journalism any more than I'm against pay walls. ... But I do not believe that begging for money from foundations, the public, or especially government is the solution to journalism's problems." Link | Add comment
Facebook Offers Journalists Verified Accounts
Poynter, Feb 17, 2012, 3:21 PM EST
How We Can Reform Our Media Diets
Nieman Journalism Lab, Feb 17, 2012, 3:24 PM EST
Clay Johnson, author of The Information Diet, says America's information problem is one of overconsumption, not overload. It's a business model encapsulated in last year's leaked memo "The AOL Way." Link | Add comment
St. Louis Beacon Tries Out iBooks Author
Nieman Journalism Lab, Feb 17, 2012, 2:50 PM EST
The nonprofit news site is one of the first to try Apple's new app to compile its writing, photos, videos and more into an ebook on last year's Midwestern floods called Meandering Mississippi. Link | Add comment
Reuters' Taps Yahoo, AOL, MSNBC.com
Advertising Age, Feb 17, 2012, 8:10 AM EST
Reuters introduced its general U.S. news service, Reuters America, in late 2010 with one client, the Tribune Co. Now three major portals — Yahoo, AOL and MSNBC.com — have signed on to Reuters' U.S. news push. Link | Add comment
Journo Standards, Media Regs In Digital Age
Editors Weblog, Feb 17, 2012, 7:54 AM EST
In the wake of the News of the World phone-hacking scandal and Wikileaks, journalistic standards have been thrust into the spotlight, and were the subject of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's conference this week. Link | Add comment
Can Robots Fish Twitter Stream For Stories?
All Things Digital, Feb 16, 2012, 3:53 PM EST
Startup Narrative Science is working on a system that uses unstructured data, such as the thousands of messages put out on Twitter each second, to produce robot-written news stories. Link | Add comment
Bay Citizen Aims To Regroup, Turn Page
The Wall Street Journal, Feb 16, 2012, 3:42 PM EST
San Francisco-based nonprofit news site The Bay Citizen which recently announced its intent to merge with another Bay Area-base nonprofit, the Center for Investigative Reporting, is looking to use the move as a chance to regroup and ensure the survival of its mission to deliver civic and community news. WSJ subscribers can read the full story here. Link | Add comment
CIR Wins MacArthur Foundation Grant
NetNewsCheck, Feb 16, 2012, 3:34 PM EST
The nonprofit Center for Investigative Reporting was awarded $1 million for producing disseminating multimedia stories that engage the public and spark policy change. Full Story | Add comment
Commentary
Investing In Better Tech May Beat More Staff
Street Fight, Feb 16, 2012, 12:33 PM EST
Tom Grubisich: "Fast-improving digital technology can lead to better content, more engaged users and open the way to new advertisers, including sponsors. Technology is also less expensive than staff." Link | Add comment
Politifact Errors Undermine Its Credibility
American Journalism Review, Feb 16, 2012, 8:38 AM EST
New Haven Indie Takes Stand On Comments
Nieman Journalism Lab, Feb 15, 2012, 2:22 PM EST
Nonprofit news site the New Haven Independent last week decided to suspend comments over the lack of civility from readers. Northeastern University journalism professor Dan Kennedy: "What made Bass’s decision especially disconcerting is that the Independent enjoyed a well-deserved reputation for the way it managed comments, building a genuine community around its journalism." Link | Add comment
Commentary
Twitter: Often First, Not Always Right
CNN, Feb 15, 2012, 7:49 AM EST
Pete Cashmore on breaking and verifying news in the Twitter era: "This, I think, is the role of news organizations in the social era — to establish trust, to verify, and to make sense of the chaotic flood of information we receive from social networks. Sometimes that means seeking confirmation, but much of the time it simply means to curate the stream of Tweets and Facebook messages — to craft them into a meaningful story." Link | Add comment
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Classifieds

The Market

Symbol Last Change (%)
Nasdaq 2936.33 -12.24 (-0.42%)
NYSE 8102.06 -13.37 (-0.16%)
S&P 500 1358.56 -3.65 (-0.27%)
Updated 02/22 3:29p ET Quotes delayed at least 20 mins.
Source: Financial Content
Opinions
Features
Ideas
  • For Future Of News, Killer App Is Credibility

    Robert Hernandez, an assistant professor of professional practice in journalism at USC Annenberg: "With technology empowering everyone with the ability to create and to distribute, I predict — and wish — that in 2012 the new dominating factor will be Credibility. Actually, earned Credibility."

  • Layoffs, Cutbacks Lead To News Deserts

    Tom Stites: "Desertification is on the march, claiming more and more communities as newspapers continue to wither and few Web efforts manage to replace more than a fraction of the original reporting that newspapers have abandoned."

  • Moneyball: Fixing Newspaper Web Sales

    Mel Taylor: "Today's Newspaper industry is like that once great, but now struggling baseball team playing on a new, hyper-competitive field called the Internet. The veteran print team is stuck in a rut using the same, tired strategy that did serve them well for years, but no longer. Today, they get trounced by those with more money and muscle."

  • You Should Only Work This Hard If You Own The Business

    Howard Owens, digital media pioneer and author of HowardOwens.com, writes on Patch editors: "But here’s the thing about the work load for Patch editors: They’re not owners. They are expected to do all of the things they would have to do if they owned their own web sites, but merely in service of building wealth for AOL shareholders. Sure, work hard and keep your job is a nice benefit, and as a former corporate employee I think employees have an ethical obligation to help build shareholder value. That’s what they’re paid to do. ... However, if what we’re hearing is true about the Patch workload, I can only ask: Why are you doing it?"

  • The Metric For Missed Expectations

    Matthew Shanahan: "Here’s the problem: [Click-through rates don't] take into account audience engagement, not to mention the fact that other advertisers are competing for the click-through on the same page."

  • Debate Over Naming Commenters Rages On

    Eric Pfanner on real-name commenting policies: "The complications are enormous. Even self-contained Internet services like Facebook have had difficulty enforcing 'real name' systems. To achieve this on the borderless Internet would be impossible."

  • Communities Lose Out When Papers Close

    Author Ken Doctor on MediaNews Group's decision to consolidate its Bay Area newspapers: "It isn’t simply the sad loss of middle-class journalism jobs, as lamentable as that is, just as so many other good jobs that have disappeared in recent years. It’s a community loss, and points to the wider impact of news cuts on the society in which we live. That’s often forgotten as we focus too narrow on industry loss."

  • Why AOL Should Double Down On Patch

    Maxwell Wessel, member of Harvard Business School think tank Forum for Growth, on AOL's Patch: "Patch is AOL's last, best chance to build a growth engine. Investors shouldn't be calling for AOL to back off the business. They should be calling for AOL to double down ... by increasing commitment."

  • News Orgs Should Use Innovation As A Tool

    Frédéric Filloux: "News organizations ... should view innovation as their main weapon against direct competitors and emerging players such as tech startups."

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