Journalism News, JTM News

Online News Judged as Reliable as Newspapers

Submitted by Steve Hanson on Thu, 03/05/2009 – 11:11am

recent Rasmussen Reports Survey indicates that most people now believe that online news sources are at least as reliable as newspapers.  Notably, it also reports that only 30% of adults read a paper almost every day, and that among younger people the rate is half that.

Fifty-two percent (52%) of Americans say they go online and use the Internet every day or nearly every day, and most of those adults now find online reporting comparable to that in their local newspaper. Seventy-four percent (74%) of these daily Internet users say that reporting from web sources is at least somewhat reliable while 69% say the same about local newspaper reporting.

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COMMENTS

My Father

Submitted by sharkscott on Thu, 03/05/2009 – 11:54am.

My Father, a self professed “I don’t really use computers for anything” guy, is now going online to get the news when he is travelling or out of town, and it has caused him to actually put a computer on his desk at home now because he can get the news he wants faster and easier than sifting through the paper.

I asked him if he can see any difference in the quality, he didn’t understand what I meant..and there was my answer. To him, there is no difference.

He does understand that not every site is as good as every other, but to him that falls right in line with being choosy with what, who and where you get your news from. Which he does/did with regular media before going online.

When someone like my Dad switches over to reading the news online and either doesn’t care or doesn’t notice any difference quality, that says everything to me. My Father may not be technologically savvy, but he is one of the smartest people I have ever known and if he doesn’t see a difference, then there really must not be that big of one.

Scott

Home Page, JTM Findings, JTM News, Resources

Value Network Maps

Created originally for Newstools 2008 in Silicon Valley, we re-made the value network maps for Journalism in the New News Ecology at the Poynter Institute.  Here are the new images, along with the original text.

Old News Story: Value Network Map

For 150 years the editors of American newspapers ruled the media landscape.
The men at the helm of newsrooms, and most editors are male, set agendas.
They directed massive staffs of journalists whose work poured through an assembly line of cultivating sources, writing, editing, production, printing and delivery.
They operated as esteemed members of The Fourth Estate, imagining themselves as independent counterbalances to the forces of power.
The work of reportersphotographers, and editors became more than a craft. It grew to be a profession, with professional wages, benefits and perks.
The public’s appetite and loyalty to their work was immense.
Huge consumer audiences built around the newspapers at the first half of the 20th century. The newspapers pronounced, and the masses listened.
Later, as audiences shifted to television, which broadcast one way, and every household in America tuned in.
Through it all, the words, photos and editorial judgments of the newspaper and television newsrooms, editors, and reporters continued to set local and national agendas.
And it was a hugely profitable business model. Major department stores, auto dealers, and job-seekers aggregated around the news pages and the news content.
Profits for both commercial television stations and monopolistic newspapers rose to 30% or more as massiveadvertising dollars poured in a mass medium.
Then the world changed.

– Chris Peck

An Emerging News Ecology: Value Network Map

At the beginning of the 21st century, the World Wide Web changed the business and information distribution model for all media.
No longer were printing presses and transmission towers the only means of communication.  A laptop and a broadband hookup did the same work, thank-you.
Journalists for a day, a weekend, or a cause began to supplant journalists at desks, with their pensions and a boss.
The audience formerly known as newspaper readers and television viewers awoke to the freedom of connectivity in a digital age. Virtual communities and international communities of interest transcended geographic communities and the sense of place.
In a flash, media expectations, models and roles all changed.
Media morphed into many-to-many conversations. Content emerged raw and unedited, rather than as carefully parsed verified tidbits produced by trained journalists.
Stories grew on their own, without an editor. Photos were shared without a darkroom.
Bloggers filled content gaps left open or once occupied by paid, professional reporters. User-generated content both encroached on and enriched the media.    Money that once went to news content writers and editors began to flow instead to those who aggregated the news, but did not create it.
Public policy could be shaped by Matt Drudge working in his basement or by a YouTube video captured on a $100 digital camera.
The old media world staggered.

New roles and a new vocabulary have begun emerging.
Some reporters become “beat bloggers” tapping into networks of bloggers to bring complex stories into focus.  “Community weavers” create a sense of community among the former audience and with formal news entities.  “Information architects” make intelligible the vast amounts of data and images now available.  While editorscontinue to be sense makers, connecting facts and making story lines visible, ultimately who filters news from noise, how it happens, and who pays for it is still unfolding.  Even the definition of “news” is up for grabs asmemes — cultural units of information equivalent to genes in the body — replace an event orientation to story.
The new media world has opened the floodgates of opportunity.

– Chris Peck, Peggy Holman, and Stephen Silha

The Map Makers:

  • Kara Andrade, Maynard Institute
  • Sherrin Bennett, Interactive Learning Systems
  • Dave Cohn, spot.us
  • Kaliya Hamlin, Identity Woman
  • Peggy Holman, Journalism that Matters
  • Ytaelena Lopez, Maynard Institute
  • Chris O’Brien, San Jose Mercury News
  • Chris Peck, Memphis Commercial Appeal
  • Martin Reynolds, Oakland Tribune
  • Stephen Silha, Journalism that Matters

Value Network Mapping and Analysis

Prepared by Kaliya Hamlin
www.unconference.net
kaliya@mac.com

Value Network Mapping and Analysis is a tool developed by Verna Allee that displays a holistic picture of a system.  This tool was brought to News Tools 2008 to:

•    give those unfamiliar with the ‘traditional’ newsroom a clear map of how news was produced and value flowed;

•    give those familiar with the “traditional” newsroom an explicit articulation of value flow in that system in contrast to emerging systems of news sourcing and distribution;

•    give everyone a common “language” or “mapping tool” to consider the emerging news ecology and how new roles and value flows can help create a thriving environment.

The first step in the process is to identify roles in a system and the second step is to map the value flows.

Roles are real people or groups of people that generate transactions, send messages, engage in interactions, add value, and make decisions.  The journalism maps include “reporter” “editor” “source” “community weaver” “advertisers”.

Once these roles were identified, we considered two kinds of value exchange:

Tangible value: All exchanges of goods, services or revenue, including all transactions involving contracts, invoices, return receipt of orders, requests for proposals, confirmations and payments are considered to be tangible value. Products or services that generate revenue or are expected as part of a service are also included in the tangible value flow of goods, services, and revenue.

A simple example is a customer (this is a role) goes to a store and buys groceries from the cashier (role). Money is paid in return for goods – vegetables.  If the customer lives in a small town and has an ongoing patronage relationship with the cashier, there might be an intangible value exchange of information about their families and the neighborhood.

Intangible value: Two primary subcategories are included in intangible value: knowledge and benefits. Intangible knowledge exchanges include strategic information, planning knowledge, process knowledge, technical know-how, collaborative design and policy development; which support the product and service tangible value network. Intangible benefits are also considered favors that can be offered from one person to another. Examples include offering political or emotional support to someone. Another example is a research organization asking someone to volunteer their time and expertise in exchange for the intangible benefit of prestige by affiliation.

Once the roles and value flows are mapped, the picture of the whole system can be used to facilitate relationship management in an ecosystem, consider the business web and ecosystem development, consider options for process re-design, support communities of practice, or consider cost benefits and risks in existing and emerging systems.

For more information on Value Network Mapping, visit www.value-networks.com.

Journalism News, JTM News

Software as a Service? Know Who’s Servicing You!

Submitted by Steve Hanson on Fri, 02/20/2009 – 11:09am

As a group, we’re seeing a lot of interest in different platforms for news sites, and general issues about Software as a Service providers. Some recent developments are making it clear that a little caution in choosing a provider is in order, as many sub-par providers are having trouble dealing with their own success and providing sufficient infrastructure.

One example has been the SoapBlox platform. SoapBlox is a very nice turnkey platform, primarily used by progressive political web sites.  A short while back, one of the SoapBlox servers crashed, and the one-man-shop owner made a dramatic announcement that he was throwing in the toweland was going to drop his service.  This turned out to be a rash reaction to a long-term financial struggle for the service, but it threw the progressive blogging community into a tizzy over the possibility of losing a favored platform. A big fundraising effort took place, raising money to fund the company and to improve its infrastructure (backups, anyone??).

More recently, portable book mark provider ma.gnolia fell down and could not get up.  Again, it turns out that this was a very minimally built service, which seems to have kept no backups and had no disaster recovery plan. Attempts to recover the saved bookmarks have apparently failed, and the service is gone, along with all the data.

I’ll grant you that I am sensitive to these issues. Back in the days when I had a reasonable income, I worked largely as a backup and disaster recovery consultant.  And I find it hard to believe that so many companies are providing services that are giving next to no thought to robustness and disaster recovery. But this is undoubtedly just the tip of the iceberg.

So – why am I ranting about this? The world is currently full of news entrepreneurs who are building platforms and services and many of the people reading this site are potential customers.  Please consider that behind the lovely features, graphics, and googly-woogly widgets these companies are providing, there is an underlying infrastructure, and you should care about that too.  Do they do backups?  Can they recover when a server falls on its face?  Do they provide uptime guarantees?  Do you trust and believe them? Ask questions now, before it’s too late.

Journalism News, JTM News

Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel freezes wages, may furlough

Submitted by Steve Hanson on Thu, 02/19/2009 – 2:00pm

With the economy continuing to worsen and conditions eroding in the daily newspaper industry, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinelis freezing employee wages and may institute a one-week unpaid employee furlough.

Journal Sentinel employees received a memo this week from president and publisher Betsy Brenner outlining the actions the daily newspaper’s management will take “to properly structure our business and weather this economic downturn.”

Brenner told employees the company hopes to keep further staff reductions to a minimum, but those decisions will depend on the impact of cost-savings efforts and the newspaper’s revenue performance for the balance of 2009. The newspaper cut about 10 percent of its staff in summer 2008 and 5 percent in fall 2007.

The wage freeze was implemented for the remainder of 2009 for all non-union employees. The company has begun meetings with its seven employee unions to discuss the wage freeze and other steps to reduce costs, Brenner said in the memo.

Greg Pearson, president of newsroom employees’ union Milwaukee Newspaper Guild Local 51, said Wednesday that the guild hopes to avert further layoffs and is open to discussing the issues Brenner has raised.

“To the company’s credit, they’re making efforts to avoid that step (layoffs),” Pearson said.

The guild’s contract expired at the end of 2008, and unionized newsroom employees have received no pay increase so far this year, Pearson said.

Brenner referenced a letter to employees last week from Journal Communications Inc. chairman and CEO Steve Smith about steps the parent company is taking to reduce costs across all the company’s businesses. In addition to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Journal Communications operates radio and television stations, publishes shopper publications and runs a printing business.

Smith told stock analysts Feb. 12 that the company cut its full-time work force by more than 12 percent during 2008. The company’s management also decided to suspend its matching contribution to the Journal 401(k) plan effective immediately, he said.

Journal Communications’ radio station group cut its work force 11.7 percent in 2008 and the television station group reduced employment 12.1 percent, president Doug Kiel told stock analysts.

The company’s fourth-quarter broadcast revenue was down 6.4 percent and publishing, which includes the Journal Sentinel, was down 10.4 percent.

“At our newspaper business we … have talked about the erosion of large portions of our print revenue,” Brenner said in her memo. “We’ve seen that deterioration accelerate in the first weeks of 2009.”

The Journal Sentinel “continues to publish a great newspaper” and grow its Web sites, but “our efforts may well fall short of hitting our revenue targets,” Brenner said.

Journal Communications (NYSE: JRN) owns the Journal Sentinel; 12 television stations including WTMJ-TV (Channel 4) in Milwaukee, and 35 radio stations, including WTMJ-AM (620) and WLWK-FM (94.5) in Milwaukee.

Bill Graffin

MMSD Public Information Manager

(414) 225-2077

Journalism News, JTM News

LINK: Join the RJI Collaboratory: entrepreneurial journalists in action

Submitted by Steve Hanson on Thu, 01/29/2009 – 9:55am

LINK: Join the RJI Collaboratory: entrepreneurial journalists in action – The Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI) has launched a new network, the RJI Collaboratory, to enable entrepreneurial journalists to connect with each other while providing resources and knowledge on how to start successful Web-based news organizations or improve existing ones. On Jan. 21 more than 100 journalists, advertising experts, community activists, technology experts, librarians, educators and students gathered from Washington, D.C. to Hawaii, in person and virtually — to launch this news organization incubator. [JTM Google Group]