sipa uk 2011 - presentation by patrick smith

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Curation, aggregation and communities in journalism SIPA UK 17th Annual Congress 13 July 2011 @psmith

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Page 1: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Curation, aggregation and communities in journalism

SIPA UK 17th Annual Congress13 July 2011

@psmith

Page 2: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

About me

• Editor of TheMediaBriefing.com• Digital journalist since 2008• Specialist in media industry news / analysis• Twitterholic – follow me at @psmith and

@mediabrief

@psmith

Page 3: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

TheMediaBriefing.com

@psmith

Page 4: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

What is curation?

“Do what you do best and link to the rest”- Jeff Jarvis, Buzzmachine.com“In the rearchitecture of news, what needs to happen is that people are driven to the best coverage, not the 87th version of the same coverage”

@psmith

Page 5: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

A matter of resources and quality

• You can’t cover everything – and why should you?• Weekly B2B mags, newspapers try to cover

everything they physically can• Compete with national newspapers (why?)• Led by external news agenda, not internal analysis

• Moving from “what happened?” to “why did it happen?”

@psmith

Page 6: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

A weak link?

“Why link? You’re just sending traffic elsewhere!” – A news publisher, (1997-2007)*

“If I link more, Google will like me and I’ll get traffic” – A publisher, (2007-2011)

“Linking is our product”- ? (2011-)

*entirely made up statements

@psmith

Page 7: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Transparency

• Links build trust and create better journalism:

– Tell your readers where the facts are from– Link to original sources (e.g. press releases)– Be clear when you didn’t break the story– Use your own archive to add context

@psmith

Page 8: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Ben Goldacre, BadScience.net

“But more than anything, because linking sources is such an easy thing to do, and the motivations for avoiding links are so dubious, I’ve detected myself using a new rule of thumb: if you don’t link to primary sources, I just don’t trust you.”

@psmith

Page 9: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Link to quality – the expert filter

TheMediaBriefing.com’s and our newsletters, every weekday, links to articles from across the web, not just our original pieces.

We choose news sources we think people will like to see.

We encourage media to suggest feeds and articles we can index

We follow trends by tagging each issue, person, company etc…

@psmith

Page 10: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Using newsletter intros to tell readers why something matters and why it’s worth their time:

@psmith

Page 11: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Guardian.co.uk/technology

@psmith

Reading through hundreds of posts and links every day to them so you don’t have to. Aggregation as time-saving device.

Page 12: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Emediavitals.com as expert filtering tool

@psmith

Page 13: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Huffingtonpost.co.uk’s live, social aggregation

@psmith

Page 14: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

But there are rules…

@psmith

Page 15: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

@SimonDumenco, AdAge.com:

“HuffPo's aggregation… consisted of basically a short but thorough paraphrasing/rewriting of the Ad Age post -- using the same set-up… and the bulk of the data presented in the original Ad Age piece.

“HuffPo closed out its post with ‘See more stats from Ad Age here’ -- a disingenuous link, because HuffPo had already cherrypicked all the essential content. HuffPo clearly wanted readers to stay on its site instead of clicking through to AdAge.com.

@psmith

Page 16: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

The Journal Register example

@psmith

Page 17: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

More at http://jxpaton.wordpress.com/2011/06/08/wan_ifra/

@psmith

Page 18: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

The Google newsroom

Via Benoît Raphaël, Owni.fr

Online-savvy curators at the centre, working with external sources to create a good experience for their readers

@psmith

Page 19: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Google newsroom: Curation and journalism

Reporters (Journalists + bloggers): they don’t “cover” news, they don’t replicate press agencies wires, they bring original stories.

They go on the real or virtual ground... live tweeting, articles, videos, data, in-depth investigation… They can also manage a community of bloggers/users with whom they can co-produce the news.

Curators (journalists + amateurs) : they “cover” the news by sorting, verifying and editing live everything good existing on the web and in the media. They make link journalism, they make the news more accessible.

(Just one idea….)@psmith

Page 20: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Moving beyond the article

Is 400 words of text always the best format?• Text, video, audio, forums, graphs, data, your own archive• Is the article still the building block of journalism?• Are readers being served by re-written press releases?• Liveblogs growing in importance (but not a moneyspinner)

(n.b. there’s nothing wrong with the written word!)

@psmith

Page 21: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Real-time conversationYou need to know what readers are saying, so you can:-- REACT with relevant content-- ENGAGE them in conversation-- BE the centre for debate-- Talk about your PRODUCTS in an organic way

@psmith

Page 22: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Tweeting matters!

• Take your official account seriously• TWEET OFTEN! 10/15 a day minimum• Encourage reporters to engage and promote

their own stories• Have a policy – even a simple one– e.g. Humour is fine within limits– Standard structure for tweeting links– Spelling/factual errors not tolerated– Be careful mixing personal and professional

@psmith

Page 23: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

“But our readers don’t tweet”

“Those who believe that Twitter is mainly about “broadcast” for mainstream organisations are not just wrong, they are wilfully ignoring the successes and failures of many others… Some people will work very hard to exclude the experiences of others that challenge their own preconceptions of their working environment.

I’ve called this “special pleading” in the past. Every single market we serve at RBI has given me reasons why social media won’t work in their market… Every single piece of special pleading has been proved to be false.”

- Adam Tinworth, RBI, Onemanandhisblog.com

@psmith

Page 24: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Setting goals

• Replenishment or growth?• Newsletter signups, unique users?• Improved quality of conversation?

• Social media/community goals shouldn’t be separate from your main business objectives

@psmith

Page 25: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Focus on valuable products

Two full-day conferences, two full-length research reports, within seven months of launch.

One editorial member of staff.

@psmith

Page 26: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

Join us

TheMediaBriefing.comTheMediaBriefing.com/[email protected] - search for TheMediaBriefingFacebook.com/themediabriefing

@psmith

Page 27: SIPA UK 2011 - Presentation by Patrick Smith

See the full list of links and slides at psmithjournalist.com now

Flickr credits:

• Books pic from heathermariekosur

• Typewriter from 500CPM

• Crowd shot from laubarnes

@psmith