Title: Innovation and technology at The Bakersfield Californian
1Innovation and technology at The Bakersfield
Californian
2Two very different approaches
- A very high-tech approach at the corporate level
- A very low-tech approach in the newsroom
3What makes us different
- Family owned, independent
- A determined owner
- Passionate about
- Community service
- Stewardship
- Long-term strategic
- positioning vs.
- short-term profits
4What makes us different
- A focused, highly evolved leadership group
- A shared vision
- Act like owners
- No silos, no intersibling squabbles allowed
- Innovation is prized
- Ten years of focus on the future
- A culture of innovation
5Long-term strategic plan
- Maximize the core extend the glide path
- Develop new products built around audiences and
niches with readership and revenue potential - Grow market share vertically, horizontally
- Grow revenue so we can support our core mission
and reinvest in the future - Maintain a strong editorial voice and our news
values
6Find the technology to fit new products
- Buy it off the shelf if we can
- If we have to, build it
- Dont let technology get it in the way
- Its about reaching audiences with relevant
content and utility, not technology
7Example The Northwest Voice
- Readers upload content to website
- Everything is posted automatically
- Editor exports content for print
- We needed an easy process for readers and editor
alike - Off-the-shelf solution was flawed, but it allowed
us to launch
8A local answer to Craigslist
- In 2004 we anticipated the arrival of Craigslist
in Bakersfield - We wanted to beat them to market
- We wanted to offer something that would allow
users to upload listings, content and would allow
social networking
9A local answer to Craigslist
- We couldnt find an off-the-shelf solution, so we
built our own social networking site with open
source developers - The day we launched, Craigslist turned on their
Bakersfield list
10Bakotopia quickly evolves
- Bakotopia morphs into a youth and music site
- Free band uploads
- Social networking 2,500 profiles
- Users are taking the site where they want to take
it
11Local Online Network
12Our home-grown solution
- Applying Bakomatic, with its social networking
and publishing tools, to our other sites. - We envision an online community publishing
platform for multiple brands to - Let community members publish their own content
- Allow individual sites to have different features
and levels of control - Keep everything in one database, though sites may
look quite different - Make it fast and easy to create lots of
mini-sites - Collect data on consumers and activity that paves
the way for advertising models of the future
13How this affects our main site
- Bakersfield.com, our main site, is on a polyglot
of platforms - Content management system is provided by
McClatchy Interactive - Were still not fully utilizing all the tools,
but weve made progress - Weve bolted on Bakomatic to give our users
social networking tools
14Harnessing the power of databasing
- The next steps Tagging and geocoding
- Our bloggers are tagging their content
- Reporters will tag stories with keywords
- This will allow us to
- Create dynamic sections on the fly
- Improve search so Google and Yahoo can find our
stuff - Free the content to go where the user wants it to
go
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17Harnessing the power of databasing
- We plan to be geocode everything stories, data,
listings - Will allow us to create maps on the fly
- Will allow us to sort geographically and create
microsites
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20Technology in the newsroom
- A very different approach
- Not sophisticated, but the level of staff
engagement is near-universal - More than 70 percent of staff created multimedia
of some sort in 2006 - Every reporter produces video
- Six regular podcasts a week
- All staff columnists record audio columns
21How weve succeeded (continued)
- Everyone is a part of the web effort
- Nearly every member of the copy desk everyone on
sports desk involved in posting - About 18 Californian blogs
- More than a half-dozen reporters have their own
blogs
22Our experience
- If you want a broader swath of people using and
adopting, its got to be simple - If wed introduced video with HD cameras and
weeks of training, wed be crawling instead of
running.
23Video by reporters
- A different kind of reporting
- Reporters tend to tell stories, rather than get
hung up on the technology and the editing
24Key principle Simplicity
25Key principle Simplicity
- Sony Cybershots and Casio cameras
- Free software
- Windows MovieMaker (free)
- Apples iMovie (free)
- Audacity (audio program) free _at_ download.com
- Flash video encoder is free and works better than
the 1,000 program we bought
26Starting small is okay
- Three years ago, we got our toe in the water with
SMS alerts, sending out Super Bowl scores. - In 2006, we sent out 54,627 messages to 2,104
subscribers. - Breaking news alerts
- Prep sports scores (using citizen journalists)
- Fog delays
- Concert alerts
- Daily news headlines
27Our experience
- The staff has to understand the level of urgency
and commitment - The technology must be accessible
it cant get in the way - Training is vital
- Training can be affordable
- Training needs to be fun
- Encourage your staffers to push the limits
28Positive reinforcement
29Positive reinforcement
30Positive reinforcement
31Encourage innovation at every level
- A major trial was moved out of Bakersfield on a
change of venue. We staffed it every day. - We wanted to do a daily midday audio update. Web
editor remembered our phones create digital
(.wav) files when recording voicemail. - Sometimes the technology you have at your desk is
all the technology you need.
32Dont be afraid to fail
- Now is the time to be making mistakes
- Mistakes we made six months ago we arent making
today - Staff is growing more sophisticated together
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