Archive for the ‘Newspaper Web Sites’ Category

Hyperlocal Journalism: Inside the Patch

By Hilary Fosdal | Friday, September 3rd, 2010

WHAT: The Society of Professional Journalists’ Digital Media Committee is proud to present an evening of exploration into the much talked about topic of “hyperlocal journalism.”

To give you an idea of the topics that will be discussed, here are a few questions that the panelists will be asked:

  • How do you make money selling local news?
  • What is a day in the life of a Patch reporter like? What about the editor(s)?
  • What content on Patch sites is being consumed the most?
  • What, if any, multimedia skill sets is Patch looking for when they hire reporters?

The end of the evening will be Q&A with questions from the audience. Questions via Twitter and e-mail are encouraged for those individuals who cannot attend in person. Send your questions to spj_dmc@yahoo.com or use the hashtag #spjpatch

SPJ + Patch

#spjpatch

WHO: 4 staff from Patch (we will update this information with specific names as it becomes available)

WHERE: Illinois Technology Association
200 South Wacker Drive
15th floor
Chicago, IL 60606

WHEN: 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.

LIMITED SPACE: The Illinois Technology Association has generously donated the space for our event. However, seating is limited to the first 125 attendees to sign up. Tickets are FREE! Please bring your ticket with a valid form of ID in order to be admitted into the building.

Get your tickets now -

http://hyperlocalnews.eventbrite.com

WHO SHOULD ATTEND: Journalist, citizen journalists, hackers, programmers, professors

What is PATCH? (in their own words):

“We’re a community-specific news and information platform dedicated to providing comprehensive and trusted local coverage for individual towns and communities.” Read more…

Stop web content thieves from taking your work

By Rebecca Aguilar | Monday, August 30th, 2010

Plagiarism is an ugly word.  Have you ever wondered if you are a victim of web content theft? 

A few months ago, I happen to get on a new internet news site where contributors get paid by the click on their story.  I also happen to discover that a story posted by a babysitter-turn-news contributor actually was written by a reporter friend of mine who works for a major newspaper.

The woman who copied and pasted parts of my friend’s story did not credit him.  Sure she only took parts of his story, but it was taken word for word.    Why the news site managers didn’t look into this; that’s another story.   Of course, I told my reporter friend, and he took care of the rest.

At a social networking conference, I learned about a site called Copyscape.  It’s a free plagiarism checker.  Simple to use and right now appears to be the only web tool out there targeting plagiarism.

How does it work? Just put the URL in the search box that you want to check for plagiarism and submit.

Copyscape does the search for free.  It even offers a banner that you can put on your own website that warns people that you use Copyscape for checking.

If you want more bells and whistles you have to pay for it, but that includes a service that is constantly looking for your work for plagiarism and alerts you.

Copyscape has had several favorable reviews by major publications and internet news sites.  http://www.copyscape.com/press.php

Rebecca Aguilar is a freelance multimedia reporter based in Dallas.  She has 29 years of experience and has numerous awards for her work, including several Emmy awards.  She’s also on the board of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists.  Rebecca conducts reporting workshops around the country (Finding Sources and Stories, Networking, Live Shots, Getting the Best Interview, Writing to Video, and The Basics Of Multimedia.) She can be contacted at aguilar.thereporter@yahoo.com.

BETTER VIDEO: publishing

By Jeff Achen | Sunday, April 4th, 2010

This is the third and final post in a series of mini-tutorials on the basics of shooting video. If you know how to turn on a video camera and press record, this series is intended to help you take it to the next level for better news video results.

When it comes to video, there are three basic areas worth focusing on that will bring the quality of your final product up a notch to look and sound much more professional than Uncle Bob’s 2008 Christmas footage. Technique, planning, & publishing. This post deals with the topic of publishing. Publishing video is all about delivering your video to a “potential” audience of millions. Sure, you can slap the video up on your news organization’s website and cross your fingers for pageviews to go through the roof. The better alternative is to consider a variety of “platforms” for publishing your video in order to reach viewers where they are. These days, video publishing is about more than just posting your video. It’s about making it embeddable, subscribable and mobile. Here are some tips for maximizing news video publishing:

  • Understand that the current trends in digital video distribution now include 1) the web; 2) internet-enabled TVs and; 3) mobile devices (Smart phones, iPods/mp3 players, iPads, etc.)
  • Know which distribution tools will help you reach audiences through web, TV and mobile channels. I recommend the free platforms YouTube.com or Blip.tv. (Paid platforms such as Brightcove.com or Episodic.com offer a bounty of features and publishing capabilities worth checking out if you have a budget).
  • YouTube by far has the most traffic and is the most popular video hosting and sharing site on the planet. It is worth having a presence on YouTube even if you use another video hosting service. Benefits of YouTube, beyond the visibility, include detailed analytics, customizable players, and near universal portability and integration on other websites and mobile devices such as the iPhone. Drawbacks include video uploads limited to 10 min. which rules out longer form newscasts, shows and interviews. Blip.tv is free and designed specifically for regular programming including newscasts, shows, and feature videos. There is no time limit on videos and the Blip.tv player is even more customizable than YouTube’s. Blip.tv is also designed with the modern video distribution landscape in mind. Through your Blip.tv account, you can have one click access to publish your video to iTunes, most WordPress, TypePad, Movable Type, Blogger and Tumblr blogs, TiVo, MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. Blip.tv is also working to bring its videos to internet enabled televisions.
  • Make sure your news videos are portable. This means making the hyperlink to your video a part of the news story. Don’t just post the video on some obscure page on your site. Make sure you use hyperlinks to “point” visitors to your video from the story page and home page of your site. It’s also beneficial to make your news videos embeddable. This means allowing visitors access to the embed code so they can put the video on their own blogs and websites. Some newsroom leaders worry this is giving their content away, but I believe that strong branding in the video itself works for your organization when you allow others to embed the video on their sites. If there is a logo, watermark or “bug” on the lower righthand corner of your  video, then your brand is being represented where ever viewers come across your video. Lastly, make your videos downloadable (syndicate them). This means enabling sites like YouTube and Blip.tv so that visitors can download or subscribe to videos. Blip.tv syndicates to iTunes, an online music and video store where people can subscribe and download audio and video for use on their iPods and other portable devices. We are entering the era when people are demanding this kind of portability. If your content is professional and relevant, folks will want to put it on their iPods.
  • You can also “livestream” your video content. This means using services like Ustream.tv or Livestream.com to cover events or broadcast live to the web. With the right advertising and promotion, it’s possible to get a high number of viewers for live events on the web. Especially panel discussions, prominent speeches and political debates and events.

Jeff Achen is an interactive media strategist for the Minnesota Community Foundation, The Saint Paul Foundation and GiveMN.org, nonprofit organizatons in Minnesota. He is also a consultant, freelance photographer/videographer, and blogger at www.mnvideopro.wordpress.com. You can follow him on Twitter.com/jeffachen or email jeffachen@mac.com.

Using Twitter to bring the reader into the courtroom

By Rebecca Aguilar | Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Most of us have covered more than one trial in our careers.  We go through the same steps–go to the trial, watch the players at work, write what is said and done in the courtroom and meet our deadline. 

Kate Dubinski

London Free Press reporter, Kate Dubinski took it one step further.  She recently used Twitter during a high profile case to give readers a play-by-play on what was going on during the trial. Here a few key points from an article she wrote for The Canadian Journalism Project. 

 1. She started with a few dozen followers and in the end had more than 1,000 followers on Twitter.

2. The newspaper had to assign two reporters to the case: One to tweet and the other to report it for the paper.

3.  Dubinski learned quickly how to prioritize information because she could only tweet 140 characters.

4.  She used links to Google images to show readers images of such things as the type of gun used in the crime.twitter

5.  She also used links to direct followers back to the London Free Press website.

6.  Dubinski also says some of the followers became sources who gave her background information.

 Here’s Kate Dubinski’s story Tweeting a Trial which can teach many of us another way to use Twitter and get more readers interested in our news coverage.

 Rebecca Aguilar is a multiple Emmy Award winner.  She’s has spent much of her 28 years in journalism in television, but is now a freelance multimedia/online reporter based in Dallas. She can be contacted at aguilar.thereporter@yahoo.com

FTC: How Will Journalism Survive the Internet Age?

By Hilary Fosdal | Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Watch snippets of opening remarks from Rupert Murdoch and Arianna Huffington during the first day of the Federal Trade Commission workshop titled ‘How Will Journalism Survive the Internet Age.’

Josh Cohen, Senior Business Product Manager of Google News explains during his 15 minute presentation at the FTC workshop how to prevent Google and search engines from indexing content on websites.

During the FTC workshop “How Will Journalism Survive the Internet Age?” Steven Brill and Karen Dunlap share their thoughts on past and future business models for journalism.

Hilary Fosdal is the Interactive Content Manager for Barrington Broadcasting Group. She attended both days of the FTC workshop. You can read more of her work on Running for Food.

***

Below are selected photos from the workshop. To see the full photoset check out this link.

Photographer: Steve Fosdal

Are you reaching your Total Potential Audience?

By Jeff Achen | Monday, October 19th, 2009
If you can access video hosting web sites on your TV, whats to stop non-broadcast news organizations from getting their content on todays TVs. Photo by Jeff Achen.

If you can access video hosting web sites on your TV, what's to stop non-broadcast news organizations from getting their content on today's TVs. Photo by Jeff Achen.

Web enabled flat screen TVs are here. The technology to bring web videos to those TVs is accelerating and it won’t be long before web show producers will be able to make their programs as accessible from the living room couch as any NBC, ABC or CBS program.

You’ve probably already heard of Internet TV. But, have you considered how technologies are converging in ways that will revolutionize multimedia journalism?

There are some key changes in several critical areas that are leading to this revolution. One is in the affordability and accessability of professional level production equipment and software. Final Cut Pro and Adobe Premiere Pro video editing programs are becoming standard in many non-broadcast newsrooms. Video cameras capable of producing the highest quality video are more affordable than ever. Journalists, thanks to industry trends, are acquiring multimedia/video skills in droves.

Where video is more generally concerned, dramatic changes have been taking place in terms of the distribution landscape and consumer trends.

Content creators (i.e. journalists) have three distribution networks for video:

  1. television
  2. mobile devices
  3. and the Internet.

Web video hosting service providers such as YouTube, Brightcove.tv, and Blip.tv (to name just a few of the more prominent ones) are mobilizing to help web video producers bring their content to larger audiences. I spoke with the folks at Blip.tv and they’ve already made upgrades to their dashboards that enable anyone who has a free account to upload their video and distribute it automatically to YouTube, TiVo, Twitter,Vimeo, iTunes, Facebook, Yahoo! Video, AOL Video, and in the not too distant future to networks like NBC. Whereas Blip.tv is focusing on show producers, Brightcove.tv has begun to focus on business owners. They are encouraging businesses to develop video strategies that embrace this new video distribution landscape.

It’s about this concept of Total Potential Audience, TPA as Blip.tv calls it. It’s the idea their audience doesn’t all watch video in one place or through one medium. Some people watch at home in front of their television sets, others on Facebook and still others who are getting their videos on iTunes to download and watch on their portable media players.

Individual news organizations must develop a strategy to reach their TPA. At my newspaper, we started by posting videos and our weekly public affairs show online. We also partner with a local public television station to get the show on public access at no cost to us. We are still working on our mobile delivery, but our show is accessible on iTunes, thus making it available to MP3 users and iPhone owners.

All of this squares with what’s happening with our audience. Viewership for online video viewership continue to rise as surprising rates. Technology that brings video to smart phones, hand held devices and portable media players like the iPod is driving a sea change in how people watch their favorite programs and movies. As consumers acclimatize to the new and varied video distribution networks, and develop new viewing habits, the line between broadcast and Internet video will blur and eventually disappear.

As I’m so fond of saying, the implications for journalism are profound.

Individual bloggers are proof that even the smallest operation can tap into the Internet to disseminate content to huge audiences worldwide. News organizations can and should position themselves to create rich, local video content and use the emerging distribution landscape to get those videos out to the potential audience that they just aren’t capturing through their current distribution (i.e. print subscriptions and a static web site).

We have to go TO our audience instead of waiting for them to come to us. Sure, we can tout the merits and traditions of the printed word. We can even pimp out our web sites and obsess over the page views. But, we’ll miss out on so much more if we don’t embrace the changes in technology, integrate video into our media organizational structure and distribute through new and exciting channels.

Five New Ways to Use Google

By Emily Sweeney | Thursday, October 15th, 2009

I thought I knew a lot about Google. That is, until Tuesday night, when I attended a workshop for journalists at Google’s offices in Cambridge, MA.  The ubiquitous search engine has dozens upon dozens of features…(don’t worry, I won’t bore you with them all).  Here are five that you may not be aware of:

1. You can use Google to translate entire web pages

2. Analyze search query data by seasonality and geography

3. Search from country-specific domain (results differ from nation to nation)

4. Check out the Wonder Wheel

5. Graph population and employment data:

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Emily Sweeney is a staff reporter at The Boston Globe. You can follow her on Twitter  (@emilysweeney) and find her on Facebook.

Newspaper survival tips: Do they inspire or scare you?

By Amanda Maurer | Sunday, October 11th, 2009

Every so often I’ll come across a blog post titled something along the lines of “[#] things newspapers should do to survive.”

I know they were written with the intention to help the industry, but considering that many newspapers aren’t in a position technologically or financially to implement the ideas, are they just pipe dreams? Or do these posts simply instill fear as “do or die” lists?

Honestly, I don’t think these ideas should be pipe dreams or feared. While not every publication may be able to put these tips into practice, I hope these lists provide inspiring ideas for us to improve our news sites.

Here are some suggestions I’ve come across:

  • Embrace the chaos: Since we can’t control what’s happening to the industry, newspapers must adapt to the Web; that process of implementing change starts with strong leaders who believe in the need for change.
  • Become a Web-first publication: After years of focusing only on the print edition, a news staff should make a priority of updating the Web site with quality, current content. Along with developing a Web-first mentality, reporters should learn about the best ways to present their stories online, on mobile applications and on social sites.
  • Twitter: If you don’t know what to say – or don’t have the time – you can set up basic accounts that update via RSS feeds.
  • Create directories: Pull together a list of all of your reporters’ social media profiles so your audience can find them easily online.
  • Get creative with user-generated content: The Cincinnati Enquirer gathered thousands of UGC photos from readers then published the best ones in a book. Other publications create events and communities around UGC content.
  • Make your print product unique: Focusing on the Web doesn’t mean you have to love your print edition less. A publication’s Web site and paper should be treated differently and contain somewhat different content (based on timeliness for each).
  • Curate other news: Journalists can deliver the complete story to their readers by aggregating and linking to other stories on the Web. Some publications use sites like Publish2 to help share other sites’ links.
  • Take advantage of mobile technology: Today a newspaper’s content is read in a variety of ways – its hard copy, online, Web-enabled phones, e-readers, social sites and more. Learn the best ways to present your news on each.
  • Interact with your audience, build community: It’s time for newspapers to join the conversation online, whether responding to story comments or communicating with readers via social media.
  • Develop social media tools: Some papers have developed their own social sites and widgets.
  • Share buttons: Make it easier for your readers to share your content easily — whether it’s e-mailed, Tweeted, added to Facebook or Dugg.
  • Partner with others: Newspapers can offer mobile, online and social media applications and features to readers (they may not have been able to create themselves) by partnering with companies that are more technologically inclined.

So now that we’ve gone through some of these ideas, what do you think? Has your publication already implemented a few of these ideas – or is it far from checking these off the list? As we continue to blog here on Net Worked, I really want to hear what you have to say, so we can start the conversations you want and need to be a part of. If you have the time, please vote below so we can get a better idea of how we can help – and feel free to leave any other suggestions in the comments.


Amanda Maurer is the online and social media producer at the Chicago Tribune, and blogs at acmaurer.com. You can also follow her on Twitter at acmaurer.

Kicking it Old School

By Hilary Fosdal | Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Digital multi-media features are increasingly commonplace in today’s news outlets as print and electronic media have begun irreversibly cross-dipping into technologies previously exclusive to each other. What we once only read on paper we see and hear in an online video or narrated photo gallery, and the stories behind the broadcast feeds we once accessed only through a television station we also are seeing in words on a TV channel’s Web site.
 
As multi-media practices become the new normal in journalists’ skill set, content — in-depth, meaningful, transformative content — remains the ultimate news goal.
 
This summer I started www.inothernews.us, a blog site devoted to tracking online, community news start-ups following the rapid decline of legacy media. I wondered: Who, if anyone, is taking on the responsibility of bringing news content to areas underserved by established media outlets? As a daily newspaper reporter in Scranton, PA, who was laid off this year, I saw first hand how much news went uncovered in outlying municipalities that not only my former employer claimed to serve, but also the local television news outlets and competing newspapers. With the loss of staff writers over the years through attrition, layoffs and buyouts at my last paper, it was clear there are not enough bodies to generate stories important to a particular populace.
 
And I knew the dwindling news situation in Scranton was identical to that of hundreds of communities around the country. A glance at the rising tally of the laid off or bought out news staff around the country – 13,500 this year so far — at Erica Smith’s Papercuts site tells that story.
 
Inothernews.us so far contains descriptions of 26 new news outlets, and that relatively small collection paints a promising, refreshing picture of the future of news coverage. Each of the listings represent online experiments ranging from commercial endeavors to non-profit organizations; from solo operations to collective efforts of dozens of contributors; from coverage of large metro areas that compete with established media companies to sites serving suburban outposts; and from subscription services to free access.
 
SeattlePostGlobe.org, a start-up following the drastic downsizing of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, one of two major metro dailies, reported on Sept. 7 a local homeless shelter needs a new location; EastsiderLA.com, news site devoted to the Northeast section of Los Angeles, recently notified readers that citrus trees in two neighborhoods will be targeted for pest treatment; and BaltimoreBrew.com on Friday posted a video simulation of a proposed Maryland Transit Authority line running through a section of town.
 
Without digital media opportunities, these sites may not exist as there are few legacy costs associated with them. I pay nothing for the WordPress blog account that runs www.inothernews.us, and I pay less than $10 a year for the domain name. Thanks to fair use provisions, I can post screen shots and pull quotes from each listing’s site at no charge.
 
It is the hope of journalists today that what we are learning about digital media and what we already know about reporting the news will merge seamlessly to provide what matters most to our audience: content that is consistent, convenient and affordable. 
 
Jessica Durkin knows community coverage. Throughout her five-year journalism career in two states, she covered municipal meetings from education to zoning. She is the Mid-Atlantic region director for the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, an SPJ Keystone Pro Chapter member and is interested in media reform.

Print headlines often fail Web readers

By Hilary Fosdal | Saturday, August 29th, 2009
Jennifer Peebles

Jennifer Peebles

By JENNIFER PEEBLES
Staff Writer

“County to raise taxes on property.”

“Smith calls for cleanup of polluted site.”

“City to approve land-use plan tomorrow.”

Headlines like those work just fine for a newspaper — the print kind, the kind you pick up off your lawn in the morning and hold in your hands.

But they don’t work so well online. And that makes it harder for readers to find the content they’re looking for on your site.

When you hold the newspaper in your hands and your eye falls on a specific headline, the physical structure of the newspaper and the conventions of newspaper layout allow your brain to quickly put the headline in context.

For instance, imagine you pick up your newspaper and the headline says “County to raise taxes on property.”

Right under the headline is the lead of the story, which tells you a little bit more.

Maybe the lead starts off with a dateline for a specific city. That tells you even more.

There could be a picture next to the headline — a photo of the county mayor or commission voting to raise taxes.
And there could also be other layout geegaws near the headline that help your brain sort it all out — when I worked at a newspaper, the page designers made use of elements called “graybars,” basically short, column-wide boxes of gray shading with the name of the affected county in white letters. (Other papers probably have something similar in their page-designers’ toolboxes.)

Between the headline, the lead of the story, the photo, the dateline and the graybar, you can look at that story on the newspaper page and quickly discern what it is about and whether you want to read on or flip the page to the funnies.

But online, those headlines just don’t work for me. And I have a feeling they don’t work for a lot of other readers, too.

When you see a headline on a Web site, it is physically divorced from all those other newspaper elements. Online, there are no graybars to tell you what county is being discussed. Even on the Web site of a pick-it-up-off-the-lawn newspaper, you often can’t see the lead, the dateline or the accompanying photo unless you click on the headline and start reading the story. (Maybe a couple of the biggest stories of the day will have photos with them, but for most of the stories, all you see on the newspaper homepage is the headline itself.)

And if the headline is divorced from such supporting elements online, then the marriage is totally annulled for news headlines being read through alternative delivery methods like RSS and Twitter.

An example: As an editor for a news Web site in Houston focusing on state and local government and freedom of information issues, I see scads of headlines every day through RSS (I’m a committed Google Reader user). And at least twice a day I see headlines like these:

“County to raise taxes on property.”

Uh, OK, which county? I can maybe understand this headline appearing in a very small newspaper that really covers only one county — but often these headlines are in much larger papers that cover several counties. I can’t help but think that newspaper’s readers are just as confused as I when they see this headline online.

“Smith calls for cleanup of polluted site.”

OK, so, who’s Smith? Is there only one guy named Smith in that town? Ditto on the polluted site — is this a town so small that it has only one? (I’m sure the newspaper had a graybar or a dateline or something else with that headline, but again, none of those show up with the headline online.)

“City to approve land-use plan tomorrow.”

Rerun: What city? Even most really, really tiny counties contain more than one city. (I clicked on a headline very similar to this the other day via an RSS feed from a small daily paper, assuming the headline was about the city in the newspaper’s name. Come to find out, the city in question was a tiny city in the paper’s circulation area.)

But this isn’t a problem only for those of us who get our news through RSS. More and more people are reading their news on mobile devices, where Web pages can be slower to load — and where users are paying dearly for every second of time needed to download the page. I don’t know about you, but when I’m surfing the Web on my Blackberry, I’m a bit choosier about what links I click on. That headline has to be really strong, and really precise, for me to click on it to read a story. I’m more likely to say to a headline with so-so interest, “I won’t read you now — I’ll try to read you later on, when I get home.” I don’t have the extra time (or money!) to click on every headline that says “County to raise taxes” to find out what county is involved. I’m going to pass that story by. When I get home, I might check it out on my computer, or I might not.

All of those headlines are fine for the newspaper — that’s the way newspaper people have been trained to write headlines for decades now (Anybody out there bought one of those “Area Man” T-shirts from The Onion?) But headlines that work in traditional print media often don’t work online. Those of us who trained as newspaper people will find that our training, and our conventions, sometimes serve us poorly in the new digital sphere. Online, headlines have to stand on their own two feet.

Jennifer Peebles is deputy editor of Texas Watchdog (http://www.texaswatchdog.org), a nonprofit, online newspaper in Houston.

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