More news organizations are encouraging their reporters and bloggers to interact with users on social networking services, but when it comes to responding to readers’ comments, they’re drawing a line between how they treat stories and blog posts. More...
Posted by Alisa Cromer |
08/09/09 | No Comments »
“We have taken back breaking news in our area,” says Alan Rosenberg, of the breaking news blog “7to7″ launched by the Providence Journal’s web site, projo.com.
Breaking news blogs are a key vehicle for local media to capture the transformative power of the internet, and several companies have come up with ways to report the the news in real time or as close as it gets. “7 to 7″ blog has not only transformed the news cycle, but also the company culture. Read More »
Posted by Alisa Cromer |
07/26/09 | No Comments »
Super-blog manager Deb Markham makes finding and keeping a stable of free bloggers look easy. In addition to her other job responsibilities as the online community producer for HamptonRoads.com at the Virginian-Pilot newspaper, Markham has developed 35 to 40 community bloggers posting on the site. Together the group posts about a dozen items a day on topics ranging from religious to political to bar stories and the bloggers are equally diverse. She says one key is looking for people with passion, even if they have never blogged. Read More »
Posted by Alisa Cromer |
07/21/09 | 1 Comment »
Instead of “cutting out the middle man,” Steve Buttry wants his media company to become the middleman.
“Instead of eyeballs, we’re selling aunts with credit cards,” Buttry said of the his newspaper’s future online. Buttry who works for Gazette Communications in Eastern Iowa, has long advocated creating user-generated channels for personal content, like a graduation channel that would include a site for each class, plus guestbooks, gift registries and even a job search by interest for graduating students.
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Posted by Alisa Cromer |
07/20/09 | No Comments »
Florida newspaper websites have found that mug shots of people recently booked into jail are a big hit with online readers, according to the Palm Beach Post. But the practice is generating contreversy.
In May, the booking blotter generated about 52 percent of the 45.2 million page views to The Palm Beach Post’s Web sites. For some sites, those hits can translate into ad sales. Read More »
Posted by Alisa Cromer |
06/26/09 | No Comments »
There are some interesting multimedia projects done by local and specialized news organizations you might have missed last year. More..
Posted by Newswire |
06/17/09 | No Comments »
More and more, photojournalists who would never add anything to an image are adding prerecorded music to news stories. Click on a video or audio slideshow on a news site, and under the narration or natural sound, you’ll often hear music. Documentaries and television journalists do it all time. More…
Posted by Newswire |
06/17/09 | No Comments »
Eric Bader gives a great round up of important local uses of mobile technology. More…
Posted by Newswire |
05/28/09 | No Comments »
Media companies are turning themselves into pretzels, partnering with as many as 30 venders as they build digital companies, and many of these venders — from mobile platforms to directories — offer to share revenues instead of charging an upfront cost. Which raises the question, to share or not to share?
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Posted by Alisa Cromer |
04/29/09 | No Comments »
If there’s a culture war inside a media company between change agents and key staff, that means the company is doing one thing right: Actively engaging in pursuing a digital future while preserving the best of an original brand.
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Posted by The Innovator |
04/22/09 | No Comments »