Title: Technologies, techniques and strategies for hyperlocal news coverage
1 Technologies, techniques and strategies for
hyper-local news coverage
- Knight Digital Media Center
- April 18, 2008
2The changing face of Bakersfield
- Huge oil, ag, prison military economies
- Amid massive population growth still has
small-town feel - Growing diversity
- Lots of newcomers, many with zero ties to the
community - Democrats held majority 20 years ago today, its
GOP
3Embracing the niches
- In about a decade, The Californian has evolved
from a single daily newspaper to include - Tehachapi News (weekly newspaper)
- Northwest Voice and Southwest Voice, two biweekly
web-first neighborhood newspapers - Bakotopia, a biweekly alternative magazine
- Bakersfield Life, a monthly lifestyle magazine
- Mas, a weekly Hispanic magazine
- Kern Business, a monthly magazine
- Five phone books serving outlying communities
- 9 local websites
- and more to come
4So, why the dramatic change?
- We knew we needed to diversify our companys
mission quickly because - We have a tough market for a traditional paper
our daily reach was eroding (BUT no time to
read is a BS excuse from customers!) - The digital revolution has changed the rules
- Classifieds and other advertising is threatened
by nimble competitors
5Building marketshare
- Our mission today is not focused on propping up
the daily core newspaper but on increasing our
marketshare through a wide variety of products - We see a future in products that reach niche
audiences AND smaller advertisers who need
affordable advertising options - In some cases, our products compete against one
another - In some ways, our future is in what Chris
Anderson calls The Long Tail.
6At the core of that mission
- ... is a belief that we must open up our products
to our readers, and share our tools and platforms
and audiences. - If were to succeed against existing competition
and nimble newcomers, we need our customers to
feel like our products are their products. - This is where contributed content enters the
picture in a big way.
7Adopting a new mindset
- In order to improve our local coverage and truly
serve our market, we had to acknowledge - Our readers are as smart as we are
- Our readers are well-connected
- Our coverage often was boring and stale
- We should listen to our readers, not lecture
- We shouldnt be chained to tradition
- We should be more transparent in our decisions
- We must share our publishing tools and space
8The benefits of hyperlocal
- Stickiness -- community content is the
fastest-growing part of our sites - Diverse, often lively stories about real people
by real people - Community contributions often fill holes in staff
coverage - Viral marketing of content
- Goodwill, sense of ownership in your products
- Diversity of revenue and profits
9So is it working?
- Survey says
- Our niche products are now read by 40 of our
local market. - The Californians market reach has fallen to 71
- But when you do the math the total market reach
of our products (Californian plus niche products
minus overlap) 78 percent.
10Building community and hyperlocal content
11How we started transforming
- Consistent message from top executives
- Companywide business literacy
- Readers kept telling us they loved this new
stuff - Launched satellite products separate from the
newsroom so we werent chained to tradition - Devote at least 1 percent of our revenue to new
product development. - Created our own social-networking and publishing
platform
12The Voices
- Northwest Voice and Southwest Voice
- Serve fast-growing areas filled with
time-starved readers - Narrowly focused neighborhood news
- One editor at each 95 percent of content is
reader generated - Nearly everything is published online the best
is reprinted in the print version\ - Free, with a mix of mail, home and rack delivery
- Ad base is small businesses
13Californian newsroom reaction
- Northwest Voice was created outside the core
because there was a fear that if we did it, the
result would be traditional, lifeless and
hampered with traditional workflows - Our newsroom was skeptical -- until it got
scooped on a major story. Then we created a NW
beat - Even today, our products compete against one
another, although theres little competition for
enterprise or investigative reporting - Were more comfortable with contributed content,
but buy-in isnt universal
14Newroom buy-in
- Getting scooped countered some initial skepticism
- We learned that CJ could fill voids in our
coverage that we didnt feel warranted a FT beat - We hired a contributions editor to coordinate
outreach, manage submissions - Readers responded warmly to reader submissions,
particularly in coordinated packages - Reporters no longer fear theyre going to be
replaced by citizen journalists - We havent had issues with major errors, ethical
lapses, libel, etc.
15Community content in the mainsheet
- Stuff that works well local history, travel,
first person pieces - Contributed stories, including top of A1 (Wheres
George Lynch?) - More topical special packages built around
contributed content - Daily reader column on editorial pages
- Expanded letters to the editor
- Blog scrapes on hot topics gives coverage
added dimension - Publishing community content in print
confirmation of quality and commitment to readers
16Home-grown publishing platform
- Bakomatic allows us to create niche sites that
are marketed to different audiences, but are all
on the same database. - Social networking and interactivity are at the
core of product development - Scalable (now runs all or part of 10 local sites)
- Ongoing development, steady schedule of new
features - Licensing to other sites (Arizona Republic,
Sacramento Bee, Pioneer Newspapers)
17The lessons of Bakotopia.com
- Bakotopia was created several years ago to
compete against Craigslist - Readers turned it into something else and were
OK with it - Blogs, profiles, photo galleries, unique stories,
streaming local music - A print biweekly just celebrated its first
anniversary contains the best of the web - Web version didnt draw advertising but the print
version did
18Más
- Concept Más, a free weekly magazine in English
focused on Latino style, culture and community. - Replaced a traditional bilingual weekly
newspaper - Mas launched in September 2005 as an independent
brand, with 20,000 copies home delivered and
5,000 in racks.
19Bakomatic now powers
- Bakotopia
- Northwest Voice
- Southwest Voice
- Tehachapi News
- Mas
- New to Bakersfield
- Bakersfield Life
- CIE Bakersfield
- The Californian
- intranet
- and part of bakersfield.com
20Embracing interactivity
- When readers can share in the ownership of
content, theyre building a powerful
psychological tether to your product.
21Blogging
- More than 1,100 community blogs
- More than 50 staff blogs (not just news)
- Most news is broken in our beat blogs
- Topical blogs (barbecuing, living green
lifestyles) - Bakosphere spotlight on competing media
- Some content scraped for print
22Social networking through Bakomatic
- Fastest growing source of traffic on our sites
- More than 22,000 unique personal profiles across
our network of 10 sites - Each profile features a guestbook, favorite
links, personal interests - Friend lists
- Staff and community blogs
- Contributors tag content with keywords (more
than 3,259 different interests) - Photo galleries
23Interactive Business Directory
- Reader reviews and ratings, all tied into social
networking - Trusted reviewers
- Reviews reprinted in newspaper
- Platform allows businesses to interact with
readers, advertise at low cost - Long Tail of advertising, with base of 15,000
local businesses
24Layering in interactivity
- We asked readers to plot potholes
- Added ability to ping local government
- Voila! Some got fixed.
25Some maps have legs
26Mapping
- Great way to get hyperlocal
- More than 50 standing maps on a wide variety of
topics - More and more are interactive and tap into
peoples passions - Weve used three vendors (ZeeMaps, QuikMaps,
Atlas) - Started slow, then layered in some complexity
27Have some fun!
- Weird stuff has wide appeal
- Earning a smile is priceless
- stickiness
28Tools for community art
29Snap!
- Community photos of real people
- Focus is on happy events
- Freelance photographers hand out cards directing
people to see Snap! galleries on bakersfield.com
30Whats next?
31Raising Bakersfield
- Web site will target young parents
- Site centered around building an online community
- Quarterly print magazine
- Strong events marketing tied to product brand
- Inexpensive but targeted and value-added
advertising
32Content interest groups
- Interest Groups will take hyperlocal to a new
depth and power - Tagging and category structure will pull content
throughout our Bakomatic network to into specific
topic categories - Were creating the high-level taxonomy but
readers will dictate the subcategories - As they tag their content with keywords, theyll
be contributing to dynamically created verticals
built around topics of interest - Will allow us to deliver personalized advertising
33Whats next?
- Personalization engine
- Facebook-style tools
- Greater integration of community feedback into
daily coverage - Lots of mobile photos
- Contributed video
- Expanded geotagging
34What we learned
- Check your egos at the door develop a thick skin
- Dont overthink everything. Just try something
- Dont be afraid to go low-fi at first (in an era
of YouTube, sophistication isnt always required)
- Celebrate failure, particularly when you have to
pull the plug on a product. - Redefine whats news respect the media thats
being produced in your backyard - Link to your new competition especially if they
scoop you
35What we learned
- Building a strong community costs money. Invest
in staff and treat the investment as you would
the price of a top-notch journalist. - Tell new hires youre hiring journalists -- not
specialists chained to one beat -- and that their
jobs will constantly evolve. - Embrace the early adopters, give them room to
roam. - Recognize that stubborness to change often is
anxiousness about change. Most people want to do
the right thing.
36What we learned
- Dont underestimate your markets tolerance to
push the envelope. - Case in point Our 2006 print redesign disturbed
some staffers and offended design purists
worldwide. - Our readers? 3 months after the new design, they
told us, Dont you dare go back to that boring
old design.
37Dont let workflows strangle you
You must understand your companys process flows
and legacy systems if you expect to get
anywhere in a 24-7 digital age where the target
moves daily
38Unanswered questions
- Large-scale revenue models are uncertain
- Advertising is still too expensive for many
businesses how can we lower the cost of sale? - Should we pay for reader contributions? If so,
whats the model? - Just how many community contributors are there?
- Delivery has been challenging
- How many new products can we handle?
39Thank you!
- Logan Molen
- Vice president / Interactive Media
- The Bakersfield Californian
- lmolen_at_bakersfield.com