Raja Jasti’s Blog - Renaissance Thinking

November 13, 2009

News Corp wants to opt out of Google

Filed under: Internet, Media — Tags: — Raja @ 12:40 pm

Rupert Murdoch wants to remove all of News corp’s content from Google index ‘within months’.

Rupert Murdoch to remove News Corps content from Google 'within months'
Rupert Murdoch has warned that his paywall plans could be delayed

Jonathan Miller, News Corp’s chief digital officer, said the media mogul was ready to block Google’s access to his sites soon and that the company would lead the media industry in this direction.

“There is real tension surrounding the free versus pay debate,” Mr Miller told the Monaco Media Forum on Friday. “It will play out in the next two years. We believe that the value of high quality content is not recognised online [by giving its away for free) so something needs to happen.

“I don’t believe the media industry can continue to exist in this way.”

When asked how long it would be before Mr Murdoch took the step to block Google, which every media company relies upon to send them high levels of web traffic, Mr Miller said it would be soon – “months and quarters – not weeks”.

He also said that News Corporation, which owns The Times and The Sun newspapers in Britain, could survive both economically and audience-wise without the search giant driving traffic to its sites.

“The traffic which comes in from Google brings a consumer who more often than not read one article and then leaves the site. That is the least valuable of traffic to us… the economic impact [of not having content indexed by Google] is not as great as you might think. You can survive without it.”

However, Mr Miller admitted News Corporation could not make the bold step alone but was prepared to lead other media companies in this direction. “We will lead. There is a pent up need for this. There has to be a resolution for the free versus pay debate otherwise we cannot afford to pay for things like news bureaus in Kabul.”

A Google spokesperson said earlier this week: “Google News and web search are a tremendous source of promotion for news organisations, sending them about 100,000 clicks every minute.

“Publishers put their content on the web because they want it to be found, so very few choose not to include their material in Google News and web search. But if they tell us not to include it, we don’t.”

I think if this does come true, it could have mammoth impact on the Newspaper industry’s future. If News corp’s bold move can bring google to share revenues with the news content owners, it could be a real shot in the arm for the industry. More likely though google would shrug at this as it has plenty of other sources in their index. It is a simple matter of supply and demand. Google holds the cards right now. But if the most of top news companies band together then may be they would have some leverage. Would this move by News corp rally others do the same? It will be interesting to see. The other thing it could do is to play MS against Google to get someone to pay to index their content (that would most probably be MS).

October 22, 2009

Newsday goes to paid model

Filed under: Internet, Media, Trends — Tags: — Raja @ 8:22 am

Another news site bites the bullet. Newsday moves to subscriber model.

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Beginning Wednesday, most of Newsday.com content will only be available to subscribers of Optimum Online, Newsday, or those willing to pay for it.

Newsday described the move as one that would create a “pioneering Web model,” combining the newspaper’s newsgathering services with Cablevision’s electronic distribution capabilities. About 75 percent of Long Island households are Newsday home delivery or Cablevision online customers or both, according to Newsday. Optimum Online customers total 2.5 million in the New York area, the paper said.

“We are excited about this model because in addition to a unique ability to immediately reach about 75 percent of Long Island households, we believe the hyper-local approach is right for Long Island,” said Debby Krenek, Newsday managing editor and senior vice president/digital.

The new strategy comes as newspapers have been scrambling to replace the advertising-based model after years of steep revenue decline. Charging viewers for online content has been debated in the newspaper industry in the past few years.

Jack Myers of Jack Myers Media Business Report, a Manhattan-based economic research firm, said, “In the long term, it’s a zero-sum game. Basically what you are doing is you are shutting off younger audiences from getting access and becoming fans of your content, so it strikes me as a pretty short-term protective measure that will be a great case study for the industry.”

However, John Morton, head of the Morton Research Inc., a Silver Spring, Md.-based media consulting firm, said the current model of free online content is not a “rational model.”

“Despite the false premise that has been floating around for the last 19 years, that information on the Internet wants to be free, [it] is just not true,” Morton said. “People have always been willing to pay for information they have felt was useful to them.”

Clearly they do not have enough audience to support a ad based model. Unfortunately subscription is a difficult model to make it work. Users are only willing pay for certain type of information. There are plenty of other free news sources for people to go to. Good luck to Newsday!

October 10, 2009

Disrupting News

Filed under: Internet, Media, Trends — Tags: — Raja @ 1:09 pm

Here is a great story. A 19 year old from the netherlands starts a news aggregation service called Breaking News Online. It is shaking the online media industry.

BNOScreen.jpg 

Michael van Poppel used to be like a lot of young people, trawling the internet for interesting news about the world. Just like many others have considered doing, he created a place where he could post the most interesting news he finds, as fast as he can. Today he’s one of the most-watched movers and shakers in online news media - and he’s not yet twenty years old.In September 2007, when seventeen years old and living in the Netherlands, van Poppel decided to launch a news aggregation business called Breaking News Online. Months later, somehow, he came into possession of a full video of an Osama Bin Laden statement before any of the major news outlets had it, and sold it to Reuters.

That was just the first strange chapter in a very strange story leading up to today, when van Poppel announced plans to release a push iPhone app for his fast-growing Breaking News Online network next month. A 19-year old announced that he would be releasing an iPhone app in a month and many people around the world took pause and noticed. How did this all happen? Asking that question illuminates some of the most interesting trends on the web today.

Paidcontent.org thinks media companies should buy BNO. Now!

The kid from Netherlands is hands down eating everyone’s lunch when it comes to pushing out breaking news first, bar none. He and his team’s news judgement on what’s-really-important is impeccable. The nascent service has lot more Twitter subscribers than almost all big news media companies, except maybe CNN and NYTimes. And now it is generating revenues through the paid iPhone app, and among the first to launch a subscription service on top of the paid app. It has also started syndicating its wire stories to some online pubs. List of its services is here.

Beyond its micro-news service, which essentially is about staying on top of worldwide news reports from other sources—and no small feat, it does that better than anyone—it has also started doing some original reports as well, most recently around the tsunami warnings in New Zealand, if I am remembering it right (it doesn’t archive the stories). And I feel I am a lot more informed about international developments than by reading or getting any other online/U.S. source. Sure, it is not groundbreaking original reporting like NYT or BBC, and it is aggregating third parties, and it gets it wrong sometimes in the quest for speed, but that’s the point of the service. The currency here is speed in a multiplatform environment, followed by news judgement. This is the web native news creature we all have been waiting for.

So Jon Miller, if you haven’t considered this already as part of your news consortium idea, here’s what you should do: e-mail the kid, or call him, catch the next flight to Netherlands, and give him a buyout offer. It will be a lot better way to spend $5 million than the $5 million your company has spent hiring all these new hotshot execs for MySpace…

 

August 17, 2009

The Newspaper that doesn’t want to be free

Filed under: Media — Tags: — Raja @ 8:51 am

NYT has a feature on how the Financial Times buckled the conventional wisdom and charged for access to its site.

The Financial Times, read by business people, has gladly kept its online content behind a pay wall. Pinched by falling advertising revenue, even mainstream newspapers may follow its lead.

Not long ago, when other media executives were convinced that the only way to succeed on the Web was to give away their content, The Financial Times played the eccentric.

“We were regarded as slightly freakish,” says John Ridding, the newspaper’s chief executive.

Indeed, the newspaper started charging readers for access to its Web site in 2002. Now, with few signs that advertising is rebounding from a deep slump, and with other publishers moving to imitate FT.com by erecting so-called pay walls, Mr. Ridding feels vindicated.

“It was pretty lonely out there for a while in paid land,” he said last week. “But it has become pretty clear that advertising alone is not going to sustain online business models. Quality journalism has to be paid for.”

Now The Financial Times is adding to its paid-content strategy with a plan to accept micropayments for individual articles, as an alternative to a subscription.

And one by one, other publishers are starting to see wisdom in the paper’s ways. Rupert Murdoch, chief executive of the News Corporation, said this month that the company intended to charge for all its news Web sites. That plan would have the company’s major newspapers in the United States, Britain and Australia joining their sister newspaper, The Wall Street Journal, which already charges for access to most of its site.

Executives of The New York Times have said they are considering ways to get readers to pay for online access, though they have yet to disclose specific plans.

That is a big change from 2007, when The Times site abandoned a pay wall for some content, concluding that it was restricting the potential for online advertising, despite the site’s having attracted 227,000 paying customers.

Around the same time, Mr. Murdoch was saying publicly that he might drop the pay wall around the Web site of The Wall Street Journal, which the News Corporation was in the process of acquiring.

Pearson said last month that operating profit at FT Publishing, the unit that includes The Financial Times, had fallen 40 percent in the first half of the year, with revenue down 13 percent.

The print circulation has also fallen, with sales in June down 7 percent from a year earlier, to about 412,000 copies, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations in Britain.

FT.com has not attracted a huge paying audience, with about 117,000 worldwide, up from 101,000 in 2007. That is far short of the one million paying customers of The Journal’s Web site.

Yet FT.com is lucrative because it charges a premium for its content. A premium subscription to the Web site, with access to all content, costs $300 a year in the United States. Adding the print version costs $100 more.

Because of rate increases by FT.com, revenue from Web subscriptions has risen 30 percent over the last year, Mr. Ridding said. The Financial Times has also raised the price of its print editions.

In another effort to generate additional digital revenue, the newspaper restricted access last year to its content through databases like Factiva and LexisNexis, requiring users to buy special licenses to read archived articles. More than 600 corporate customers, with a total of about 50,000 users, have done so.

The price of a subscription to the databases “wasn’t reflecting the value of what we were producing,” Mr. Ridding said. “So we took control of the pricing,” he said, adding that the change led to “robust revenue growth.”

While FT.com is certainly a trendsetter and should be complimented for it, it’s pay wall strategy may not work well for other types of newspapers. It is clear that people are willing to pay for information that directly relates to money such as WSJ and FT. But would they be willing to pay for general news? There is no past evidence to support this.

August 15, 2009

Value of an inbound link

Filed under: Media, Trends — Tags: — Raja @ 9:06 pm

Recently there seems to be growing sentiment among news media that aggregators are parasites that destroy value . Here is another such argument made by Arnon Mishikin in a post Paidcontent.org.

Arnon Mishkin is a partner with Mitchell Madison Group, where he consults for media companies on improving legacy businesses as well as making the internet profitable. Prior to MMG, he was a partner at the Boston Consulting Group, where he did some of the firm’s earliest work on the web.

People who “get the web” will explain to you that the economics of the web have everything to do with linking and getting linked to. The more links one can get, the better off one is. Few disagree with that guidepost.

So when the AP and the newspaper owners demanded that they get revenue from the linkers, it was clear that they just didn’t understand the web and didn’t appreciate all the value they were receiving from link traffic. (Here are just a few examples of that critique.)

Well, the data suggests that the web – the “blogosphere”– is less an ecosystem than a one-way street.

The vast majority of the value gets captured by aggregators linking and scraping rather than by the news organizations that get linked and scraped. We did a study of traffic on several sites that aggregate purely a menu of news stories. In all cases, there was at least twice as much traffic on the home page as there were clicks going to the stories that were on it. In other words, a very large share of the people who were visiting the site were merely browsing to read headlines rather than using the aggregation page to decide what they wanted to read in detail. Obviously, this has major ramifications for content creators’ ability to grow ad revenue, as the main benefit of added traffic is the potential for higher CPMs. (Disclosure: I have consulted for the AP and other content creators, though not on this particular issue.)

Even in an absolute best-case scenario for producers of original content, the aggregators get at least as much traffic on linked stories as the creators of those stories because anyone who clicks on the link does so from the aggregator’s site (so each site gets a page view). If you don’t believe the data, consider how often in an average day you visit the home page of your favorite news site vs. how often you click through to the underlying story. 

Actually, it shouldn’t be surprising to anyone who’s thought about how people have historically read a newspaper: They’ve scanned the headlines and then turned to the sports, movie listings or recipe pages, depending on their real interest. As the saying goes, “People don’t check the news to read about the fire, they check it to learn that there wasn’t a fire.”

Historically, the value of those casual browsers was captured by the newspaper because the readers would have to buy a copy.  Now all the value gets captured by the aggregator that scrapes the copy and creates a front page that a set of readers choose to scan. And because creating content costs much more scraping it, there is little rational economic reason to create content.

This is an interesting debate. I wonder if Arnon and others think all aggregators are same or if there are some that actually add value. In other words are all the inbound links the same? More specifically google is the one I am most interested in. If these media people believe in this argument then they should find a way to not be listed on the google index. Then I would say they are walking the walk. That is the acid test for me. Until these media companies do that this argument doesn’t hold water for me.

August 13, 2009

$100B Market

Filed under: Internet, Media — Tags: , — Raja @ 7:18 am

Local media advertsiing is a $100B market. Though most of the media is getting disrupted by the web, hyperlocal is one area which no one is able to crack online. Fast Company writes about the large media companies such as NewYorkTimes and AOL going after the market.

Outside the local train station, the Maplewood Civic Association maintains a bulletin board plastered with news of jazz festivals and yoga classes for this small, affluent New Jersey town. One day last winter, an unassuming new flyer appeared, nestled between ones hawking a fish tank and a drum set, titled, “Introducing the Local.” The flyer describes the Local as “a community Web site by you and for these communities, mentored by The New York Times.”

Why is a media titan like The New York Times Co. — already stretched thin by the challenges of a faltering business model — dabbling in community news, traditionally the bottom of the journalistic food chain? Call it the Google Effect. The search giant’s model, described by author John Battelle as “a billion dollars, one nickel at a time,” is a perfect description of how media companies hope to take tiny sources of local revenue and roll them up into big money.

Hyperlocal sites — covering cities, towns, or just a neighborhood — can deliver precision-targeted advertising to local and global businesses. As the once-exponential growth rate for most Internet advertising in the United States grinds to a halt, the online local-advertising market is projected to grow 5.4% in 2009 to $13.3 billion, according to media research firm Borrell Associates.

As it happens, one of the architects of Google’s success, former head of advertising Tim Armstrong, founded a community-news site called Patch that intends to collect those nickels. Armstrong, in his new role as the CEO of AOL, acquired Patch in one of his first moves. And where, of all places, has Patch set up shop? Maplewood.

Hyperlocal seems like a can’t-miss proposition. “There is real demand for good information about our neighborhoods, our children’s schools, our streets, our blocks,” says Jay Rosen, an NYU journalism professor and media blogger. Except for one thing: Success remains perpetually around the corner, constantly predicted yet never fulfilled. While different people have named hyperlocal as a trend to watch every year since 2004, “everybody’s groping for a business model,” says Gordon Joseloff, who fits the all-too-typical norm for this space with his popular, distinguished, and unprofitable site in Westport, Connecticut. The Local and Patch — and by extension, the Times and AOL — may, too, be destined to find the same trouble.

Carpetbaggers’ Quest for Gold

It is no accident that the Local and Patch each selected Maplewood as its hyperlocal testing ground. Patch engineers “had a computer model of the different factors they wanted,” says Adam Bulger, the self-described “midlevel reporter” who covers Maplewood for Patch. The algorithm looks for civic-minded towns with a central business district instead of a series of strip malls, and high broadband penetration, which correlates with a burg’s affluence.

The Local’s Maplewood editor, Times metro-desk alumna Tina Kelley, lists the same traits, as well as the fact that the town is something of a “reporter’s enclave.” This combination of local features means, of course, that these neighborhoods are likely to have an already-crowded local blogosphere, poised to brand the new ventures as carpetbaggers. When the Local was first announced in Maplewood, the largest of the town’s many home-brewed sites, Maplewood Online, hosted a very active conversation in the “Now the NY Times Invades MOL’s Turf” thread of its community message board. In one of Bulger’s first weeks on the job, a prankster annoyed with Patch’s colonial ambitions tried to trick him into posting a story about local gangs whose leaders happened to share the names of characters from the movie Ghostbusters. The Local has encountered similar resistance to its two sites in blog-filled Brooklyn as well. “They’re worried,” explains the Local’s Kelley, “about the big media companies coming in and taking up [their local sites'] advertising dollars.”

When AOL announced the Patch deal, CEO Armstrong called local advertising “the largest white space” for the company moving forward. “Hyperlocal is going to be a huge, huge market,” says Mark Josephson, CEO of the hyperlocal aggregator Outside.in. “Local advertisers are not online in a major way yet — like they’re going to be.”

Boosters routinely note that more than $100 billion is spent annually on local ads — TV, radio, print, outdoor, direct mail, and online. Although the stat’s origins are fuzzy, what’s clear is how aggressively folks believe those ad dollars are migrating to the Web. Borrell Associates projects an online local-ad market worth $15.5 billion by 2013, fueled mostly by small businesses ditching the Yellow Pages and local newspapers.

FT calls hyperlocal $100B market. I think in really it will be smaller than that as internet typically collapses the market not displace it. I also think some startup will be a better candidate to innovate in this area. I think a better strategy for NYT is to partner with the most pomising ones and give them the scale needed to succeed. It will be difficult for these companies to innovate from the inside.

I think the key to cracking the code on the local is to find a scalable model to attract local advertisers. Google cracked this model for online advertisers using adwords. How does it look like for local shops. Of course there has to be a scalable model for aggregating/producing local content which I think would be more straight forward to crack.

August 9, 2009

Cuban advises Murdoch on chaging for content

Filed under: Internet, Media, Trends — Tags: — Raja @ 12:54 pm

mark Cuban, the colorful owner of Dallas Mavericks and a media entrepreneur, has a rambling post advising Rupert Murdoch on how they can charge for content.

Rupert , you didn’t ask my opinion on this, but since when has that ever stopped me.

First the good news.  You can sell content on the internet.  People pay for content on and off the internet every second of every day. It’s easy to do. If you do it right. But before I get to the how to, let me throw out some interim suggestions:

1.  Block  aggregation sites that point to your content.

Too many that’s heresy. The conventional wisdom suggests that all traffic is good traffic. Every page view is more money. Why not take it ?  Because its limited and you aren’t selling it.

The value of the traffic sent by most sites is minimal at best. Lets look at your best friend Michael Wolf’s site Newser.com.  According to Quantcast he gets about 24k unique users every day.  If  1 pct  of those users went to a Fox Site, say the NY Post, and each looked at 5 pages, that would be a total gain of 1.2k Page Views. If you were able to sell 1oopct of those at $15 CPM, which you can’t. You would make $18  per day. About $ 6.5k  per year. Best case.

More likely, in this economy,  you are not selling 90pct of the inventory he sends you. Heck, you aren’t selling a big chuck of the inventory that you get on your sites anyway, so the marginal value of the traffic sent by Newser.com might be about zero.

Why would you help a site, that is a direct competitor for minimal incremental revenue  ? It’s not worth it.  You know what is worth it ?  When someone is sent from the site,let them fall on a page that lets them know that you don’t consider Newser.com a valid news or reference site.  Newser.com has chosen to front end our content and we don’t appreciate it. As a result, we are blocking access. To get up to the minute news, please go directly to NYPost.com  (or whatever site). Of course Newser.com will quickly stop sending you traffic. But the loss will be theirs. There will be stories that you cover better than anyone.  Michael will have to find someone else.

The real question of course is whether other major news site copy what you have done ?  What if the NY Times and the Washington Post do the same thing ? What if CNN, Tribune Papers and MSNBC join in ?  I will tell you what happens. The aggregator sites that try to front end the content you invest a ton of money to create will find themselves all relying on AP, Reuters and individual bloggers.

This is where all the netizens jump in and tell me Im crazy. That news sites won’t ever do this.  Thats not the internet way. Which of course is exactly how they respond to every business question involving the net. The major news sites are keeping the aggregators that don’t originate news content alive. From Drudge Report on down. You are crazy to do so.  Let the search engines send you traffic. Block the rest.  Your revenue impact will be minimal. The competitive impact significant.

2.Other than the WSJ, don’t ever sell content ala carte. It only works for content that impacts company’s and individuals bank accounts  in real time.  The Wall Street Journal can sell subscriptions because if a businessperson or trader doesn’t have the information the minute its published, they could be in serious financial trouble.  The WSJ moves markets. You can charge for it. Page 6 doesn’t move markets. Foxsports doesn’t move markets.  People won’t pay for it by story. They won’t pay for a general interest or newspaper, tv or sports  website by the day, week or month unless they absolutely have to know what you publish for business reasons. There aren’t enough of those people around to pay the bills per site.

Cuban picks mostly unknown news aggregator Newser as an example of sites to block access. How about Google? It is also an aggregation site? Should News Corp. block Google too? I wonder what Cuban thinks about that? According to his advice Newscorp should block Google too. That would be retarded IMHO.

July 9, 2009

NYT mulls $5/mo web access fee

Filed under: Internet, Media — Tags: , — Raja @ 6:01 pm

From Bloomberg:

July 9 (Bloomberg) — New York Times Co. said in a survey of print subscribers that it’s considering a $5 monthly fee for access to its namesake newspaper’s Web site.

Times Co. also asked whether subscribers would be willing to pay a discounted fee of $2.50 a month for access to the site, in the poll confirmed today by Catherine Mathis, a company spokeswoman. Nytimes.com, the most visited among newspapers’ sites, is currently free.

Times Co. is contemplating additional sources of revenue as marketers slow spending on the Internet. Ad sales at the publisher’s sites, also including about.com and boston.com, fell 8 percent and 3.5 percent in the first quarter and fourth quarter of 2008 respectively. They gained 6.5 percent last year.

“The question here for consumers is the psychological barrier of now paying when you were getting it for free before, and you’re going to lose some readers as a result,” said Ken Doctor, an analyst at Outsell Inc. in Burlingame, California. “The New York Times will also have to evaluate what this means for ad rates as they lose readers.”

Times Co., based in New York, lost 11 cents, or 2.2 percent, to $4.80 at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have fallen 35 percent this year.

The New York Times had an average of 647,695 weekday home delivery subscribers as of the 26 weeks ended March 29, according to Audit Bureau of Circulations data. That doesn’t include single-copy sales or third-party sales. Its site is the most visited among news sites, according to ComScore Inc. data.

News Corp.’s Wall Street Journal charges for access to some of its Web site’s content and publishers including Hearst Corp. and E.W. Scripps Co. have said they are considering pay models.

Monthly Fee

Times Co. is selling assets and has cut pay and jobs to save money. First-quarter advertising revenue at the publisher plunged 27 percent, and the company said in April that it expected a similar decline in the second quarter.

The New York Times’s site “is considering charging a monthly fee of $5.00 to access its content, including all its articles, blogs and multimedia,” the survey stated.

In 2007, the New York Times ended a two-year experiment of charging users for some opinion and editorial content. At its peak, 200,000 users paid for the service, called Times Select, and it generated $10 million a year in revenue, Bill Keller, the newspaper’s executive editor, said this year in an online question-and-answer session.

Times Co. will probably begin charging users to access its news on mobile devices before it does so on its Web sites, Martin Nisenholtz, the head of digital operations, said last month. Mobile devices accommodate less advertising than the Web, he said.

June 26, 2009

The price of free news

Filed under: Internet, Media — Tags: — Raja @ 11:54 pm

Alan Cowell writes in NYT:

PARIS — If you are reading this, I am doing my job.

Roughly speaking, that is the compact that has underpinned the ties that bind those who write the news to those who read it.

But as the world hurtles into a digital era, other questions intrude: if you are reading this on paper printed with ink, are we both dinosaurs; and, if you are (still) reading this on your laptop, or P.D.A., or mobile phone, who is paying for it?

The questions have sharpened in recent days, honed by a blizzard of Twitter and Facebook messages and images on YouTube and Flickr from the protests in Iran, demonstrating the limits of the old and the immediacy of the new, all the more evocative for their blurriness and brevity — 140-character dispatches from the front lines of a putative and possibly doomed revolution.

In Tehran, the authorities may have been able to close down mobile-phone and Internet networks, expel or jail correspondents, enforce crude regulations to prevent traditional reporting by traditional reporters as much as they have moved brutally to quell the protests themselves.

But they have not stemmed a flood of video and words from the demonstrators on the streets — the same dark tide as bore the grim image of the dying Neda Agha-Soltan, a 26-year-old Iranian woman shot and killed last weekend. Her staring eyes and spilled blood produced an instant global emblem that no amount of repression or media restriction could deny.

It may be tempting, perhaps, to argue that, finally, that oft-reviled beast — the mainstream media — has been left in history’s wake. After the demise of typewriters and Telexes, the time of the tweet has arrived. The view is not universal, even among tech-friendly journalists.

“My zeal for Twitter knows a limit,” wrote Jack Shafer, editor at large of the online publication Slate, saying the welter of messages from the streets of Tehran was “more noise than signal in understanding the Iranian upheaval.”

Yet as much as those brief messages have become a tool of protester communication, potentially vulnerable to hacking and manipulation, they have entered the lexicon of mainstream reporting.

Bloggers and tweeters are quoted freely as semaphore from the streets. Often enough, those scatter-gun bulletins from Iran have been the only source to survive the void created by the regime’s crackdown: the sharp scrutiny of the 24-hour news cycle has been extinguished.

But there is a counterargument and it relates to this: the old compact between writer and reader needs recasting and reinforcing for a new age.

April 25, 2009

Value Added Journalism

Filed under: Media, Trends — Tags: , — Raja @ 9:12 am

Jeff Jarvis says journalists must ask themselves where they add value.

How much of the dwindling, precious journalism resource we have - on national and local TV, radio, newspapers, and magazines - goes to original reporting, to real journalism? How much goes to repetition and production?

Journalism can’t afford repetition and production anymore.

Every minute of a journalist’s time will need to go to adding unique value to the news ecosystem: reporting, curating, organizing. This efficiency is necessitated by the reduction of resources. But it is also a product of the link and search economy: The only way to stand out is to add unique value and quality. My advice in the past has been: If you can’t imagine why someone would link to what you’re doing, you probably shouldn’t be doing it. And: Do what you do best and link to the rest. The link economy is ruthless in judging value.

The question every journalist must ask is: Am I adding value?

Look at a service such as PaidContent. They have a small (though growing) staff and they choose carefully what they do, whether it’s worth it to send someone to a conference, whether they can add reporting to a story that’s already known, how they can curate links to the best of coverage that already exists. They fire their bullets carefully, economically, to contribute maximum unique value. PaidContent doesn’t - and can’t afford to - record stand-ups or rewrite others’ reporting for the sake of rewriting it or waste money on production and design niceties.

That’s the way that journalism will have to be executed in the future: efficiently.

Once journalism becomes efficient, I think it can do much better than maintain what we have now. When we cut out all the incredible waste - those standups and rewrites and frills and blather - and when we have an ecosystem that rewards unique value, as the internet does, then I think we could end up with more journalism, more reporting.

Jeff asks a good question. But it is not just about efficiency. Journalism needs to adapt, morph and create new ways of telling stories and enagagin us using all new media at our disposal.

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