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Its hard to predict things,

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as an industry, many of us have been remarkably, unaccountably complacent. ... Craigslist. Taking $50-$65 million/year out of Bay Area class market ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Its hard to predict things,


1
  • Its hard to predict things,
  • particularly things in the future-- Yogi Berra,
    Yankee Great

2
What a Change
3
from April 2005, ASNE
  • One panel on the Future of Newspapers
  • Another on young readers

4
to October 2005, APME
  • New Competitors New Demands
  • The New Normal
  • Our Shrinking Newsrooms
  • New Products for New Readers
  • News on the Web
  • Convergence

5
What Happened in Between?
6
Was it Rupert?
  • as an industry, many of us have been
    remarkably, unaccountably complacent. Certainly,
    I didnt do as much as I should have after all
    the excitement of the late 1990s. I suspect many
    of you in this room did the same, quietly hoping
    that this thing called the digital revolution
    would just limp along.
  • ASNE, April 13, 2005

7
Was it all Those Bloggers?
  • A blogger is just a guy sitting in his living
    room in his pajamas.
  • Jonathan Klein,
  • President, CNN/US

8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
The Blogosphere
  • Technorati (www.technorati.com) reports
  • 19.6 million web logs
  • About 70,000 new blogs tracked each day
  • 1 new blog every second
  • 55 still posting after three months
  • 700,000 -1.3 Million posts each day
  • 33,000 posts per hour
  • Blogosphere doubles in size every 5.5 months

11
(No Transcript)
12
Was it this Man?
  • Craigslist
  • Taking 50-65 million/year out of Bay Area class
    market
  • (Compare that to your newsroom budget)
  • Localizes ad listings in 120 cities in 21
    countries
  • Overall reach 34 countries, 175 cities
  • Visits up 62 since 2004
  • Number tripled in past year to 2.4 billion a month

13
Or Was it This?
14
Whatever the Reason
  • an industry that
  • wouldnt change

15
10 Years Ago
  • Newspapers have made almost every kind of
    radical move except transforming themselves. It's
    as if they've considered every possible option
    but the most urgent change. That makes
    newspapers the biggest and saddest losers in the
    information revolution
  • Jon Katz, Wired magazine, 09/1994
  • http//www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.09/news.suck.
    html

16
or Even Last Year
  • Despite the new demands, there is more evidence
    than ever that the mainstream media are investing
    only cautiously in building new audiences
  • State of the News Media, 2005, Project for
    Excellence in Journalism
  • http//www.stateofthemedia.org/2005/

17
Beginning to Change
  • Communiction
  • Convergence
  • Content
  • Commerce

18
The Audience WAS Listening
19
Now it is Talking Back
20
News is a Conversation
  • So Lets Join In

21
Change Communication
  • Readers and Web site users now feel free to
    challenge decision makers here, a development
    many of us in the newsroom welcome, although some
    editors resent the second-guessing. Get used to
    it. Interactivity is the future. People want to
    be heard.
  • Bob Rivard,
  • Editor, San Antonio Express-News
  • 06/19/05

22
Change Communication
  • Our public editor, Ted Vaden, posted on a
    conference on journalism and blogging. He quotes
    media critic Jay Rosen (whose PressThink blog is
    well-traveled) saying journalists are used to
    being the filter from God, but people don't
    accept that anymore. Heavens. Perhaps Rosen has
    spent too much time peering at journalism through
    the lens of his computer screen.
  • Melanie Sill,
  • Editor, Raleigh News Observer
  • 10/10/05

23
Change Convergence
  • Merging print online
  • One of the biggest long-term challenges facing
    our craft is to invent a digital journalism and
    new services for our readers that both live up to
    our high standards and help carry the cost of a
    great news-gathering organization.
  • Bill Keller
  • Executive Editor, New York Times
  • 08/02/05

24
Readers Seen One Product
  • "A significant percentage of newspaper readers
    have transferred their preference from print to
    online editions"
  • Gerry Davidson, Nielsen//NetRatings

25
Change Content
  • We are going to change the character and
    content of the paper without undermining our
    journalistic principles.
  • Earl Maucker, Editor
  • Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
  • 06/21/05

26
Change Content
  • We gave up on being all things to all people.
    What we hope to be is some very meaningful things
    to the distinct reader groups weve identified.
  • Monica Moses,
  • Deputy M.E.
  • Star Tribune
  • 10/10/05

27
Change Commerce
  • Papers being born
  • The Examiner papers -- the name has been
    trademarked in more than 60 cities around the
    nation -- are attempting to carve out a niche in
    which their snappy graphics and succinct articles
    find a place among busy urban readers.
  • Baltimore Sun, 10/18/05

28
Change Commerce
  • Papers being closed
  • The publications have been losing money
    consistently for several years. Despite our best
    efforts to increase revenue, we simply have not
    been able to gain the level of support to be
    financially viable.''
  • George Riggs,
  • Publisher, Mercury News
  • 10/22/05

29
OK, Smart Guy
  • Now What?

30
No More Accidental Journalism
  • Page 1 is often a happy accident
  • Says editor at a top 20 U.S. newspaper (not this
    one)
  • That means it is
  • Haphazard vs. thoughtful
  • Opportunistic vs. planned
  • Luck of the daily draw vs. drawn from a long-term
    strategy

31
Intentional Journalism
  • Ask yourself this
  • Youre given your current newsroom budget and
    told Make any kind of news operation you want.
  • Would you make the same newspaper?
  • Would you create the same beats, departments,
    production and decision-making processes?
  • Would you hire the same people?
  • Would you design the paper and its web site in
    the same formats?

32
OF COURSE NOT!
  • So how do we overcome the inertia, culture and
    tradition that keep us from changing?

33
Newspaper Culture
  • Aggressive-Defensive
  • People forcefully protect status and security
  • Perfectionistic Avoid all mistakes
  • Oppositional Poor group problem-solving and
    "watered-down" solutions
  • Pervasive in fast-paced environments
  • Passive-Defensive
  • Dependent and conventional behaviors
  • Do what it takes to please others
  • Jobs narrowly defined
  • Success not celebrated, but mistakes punished
  • Protected" organizations government agencies,
    regulated and monopoly industries
  • Readership Institute

34
Explode the Newsroom
  • Re-think, Refocus, Re-invent
  • Seven Ideas to Build On

35
Explode the Newsroom
  • Dont Tinker, Explode
  • Big rewards come from big bets, bold moves into
    new territory tabs, niches, citizen journalism,
    blogs
  • Adding a columnist or rearranging type-faces
    isnt enough
  • Papers that survive will have learned how to
    adapt and exploit current emerging markets.
  • Risk-taking is a learnable skill. Teach it.
    Reward it.

36
Explode the Newsroom
  • The 10 Solution
  • Devote 10 percent of the newsroom budget each
    year to product and staff development
  • Goal Restructuring traditional, content silos
  • Goal People who have the cross-disciplinary
    skills.
  • You cant change your newspaper over night, but
    you can do it in a decade 10 percent at a time

37
Explode the Newsroom
  • Go Horizontal, Not Vertical
  • Tear down the Sports, News, Features and Business
    silos
  • Reconstitute around virtual communities Moms,
    singles, baseball fans, age, etc.
  • Want younger readers, for example? Devote a
    departments worth of editors, reporters,
    photographers, designers and online producers

38
Explode the Newsroom
  • Go Weekly -- Every Day
  • Mass is dead class matters
  • Old A little for everyone
  • New More for fewer
  • Old Mass media
  • New A mass of niches

39
Explode the Newsroom
  • Be the Tip of the Information Iceberg
  • Reverse the print-online priority equation
  • Publish more online than in print
  • Print cant match the
  • Virtual newshole
  • Endless conversation
  • Power of relational advertising

40
Explode the Newsroom
  • Lead from the Middle, Not the Top
  • You cannot lead from behind the desk
  • Reporters and line editors want direction, want
    to learn
  • Edit more, manage less
  • Get the editors out of the offices and onto the
    newsroom floor

41
Explode the Newsroom
  • Dont Cover the Community, Be the Community
  • Empower readers, enable citizen journalism
  • Aggregate and celebrate their voices
  • Get engaged. Lead civic discourse. Be on the side
    of the people
  • Dig, dig, dig into the public officials, civic
    and corporate institutions and the flow of money.
    This is a differentiating capability of
    newspapers.
  • (Thanks to Hodding Carter)

42
Explode the Newsroom
  • Seven Ideas to Build On
  • Dont Tinker, Explode
  • The 10 Solution
  • Structure Horizontally, Not Vertically
  • Go Weekly -- Every Day
  • Be the Tip of the Information Iceberg
  • Lead from the Middle, Not the Top
  • Dont Cover the Community, Be the Community

43
Questions?
  • Tim Porter
  • tim_at_timporter.com
  • www.timporter.com/firstdraft
  • 415-381-9945
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