Traditional media can learn three things from social media: relevance, interestingness, and engagement. To be relevant, media must deliver content that matters to readers. To be interesting, media should focus on readers rather than awards or page views. Engagement involves deeper interaction between media and readers and among readers. While traditional media faces challenges, blending social and traditional media may ensure its future survival.
3. and this is also not a presentation on how social
media is going to save the day...
4. stuff that DOES save the day
1. relevance
2. interestingness
3. engagement
5. be relevant
http://www.ïŹickr.com/photos/92wardsenatorfe/3126055165/
6. relevance is how well media organizations deliver
what matters to their readership.
7. âThe reports of my death have been greatly
exaggerated.â
Mark Twain
8. Did you know 4.0?
(Content by XPLANE, The Economist, Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod and Laura Bestler)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ILQrUrEWe8
9. How People Get Their News
90.0
67.5
40% get
their news
45.0 online
22.5
0
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Television Newspaper Internet
http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1066/internet-overtakes-newspapers-as-news-source
10. Respondents Aged 18-29 - 2006-2007-2008
68
62
59
59
59% get
their news
online!
34
32
29 28
23
18
16
13
5 6
3 4
1 0
Television Internet Newspapers Radio Magazines Other
11. Up until journalism became a profession rather
than a trade...(p)ublishers paid attention to
readers needs and wants, and hired and trained
editors and reporters accordingly...
Howard Owens, "Maybe it's Journalism Itself That is the Problem"
http://www.howardowens.com/2008/maybe-its-journalism-itself-that-is-the-problem/
12. The Publicâs Opinion of the Media
70
63
59
29
27
21
14
8 9
Get Facts Straight Admit Mistakes Professional
Yes No Donât Know
http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1341/press-accuracy-rating-hits-two-decade-low
13. The goal is to ïŹnd some meaningful measure of
reader satisfaction and fashion a new journalism
that meets reader needs...
Make your focus your audience. Try to ïŹgure
out what readers want, not just what you
think they want.
Howard Owens, "Reporters and editors should develop a reader satisfaction index"
http://www.howardowens.com/2008/reporters-and-editors-should-develop-a-reader-satisfaction-index/
15. Media Top News Stories August 3-9, 2009
16
15
11
5 5
Health Care Economic Crisis North Korea US Auto Industry Sonia Sotomayor
http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1313/social-media-talks-about-social-media
16. Blogger Top News Stories August 3-9, 2009
24
19
11
8
7
College Lawsuit Freed Journalists Radiohead Song Newspaper Troubles Obama Admin.
http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1313/social-media-talks-about-social-media
17. and on Twitter?
7%
7%
9% 35%
19%
Twitter Outage
23% Iran
ITV Sells Site
John Hughes Dies
News Corp Charges 4 Content
Other
http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1313/social-media-talks-about-social-media
26. being part of the community
a) talk to your readers
b) get out to events
c) ïŹnd out what your current readers respond to and do more
of that (not the same subject, but the same kind of story)
29. âthe mostâ e-mailed and most-blogged stories in
the paper, as well as the most-used search terms...
(is) a rough gauge of reader behavior, to be sure,
but as it turns out, a fairly consistent one.â
Michael Hirschorn, "The Pleasure Principle" The Atlantic Monthly Dec 07
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200712/newspaper
30. bloggers won their audiences by ïŹguring out what
is relevant to their readers and then producing
more of it...there are no barriers - customer call in
centers or walls - between a blogger and his/her
audience so the learning is faster and more agile.
32. âStop being important and start being interesting.â
Michael Hirschorn, The Atlantic Monthly
33. itâs not about you, the awards, how awesome you
are, your page views, etc...itâs about...
34.
35. being interesting doesnât mean chasing
ambulances and sensational headlines...it means
that you bring value to your readerâs lives...
36. DELIGHT
Jacek Utko
http://www.utko.com/
âI came to London, and I've seen performance by Cirque du
Soleil. And I had a revelation. I thought, "These guys took some
creepy, run down entertainment, and put it to the highest
possible level of performance art." I thought "Oh my God,
maybe I can do the same with these boring newspapers." And I
did.â
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/jacek_utko_asks_can_design_save_the_newspaper.html
37. Utkoâs Redesign Process
1. Strategy: what is our goal?
2. Content: which content serves the readers better?
3. Design: does the design ïŹow with the content & strategy? whatâs the reader
experience?
4. Testing: how do readers use this? react? is it meeting the readerâs needs?
5. WorkïŹow: how can the organization, itself, change to produce better
products?
6. Branding: how can we tie this together across platforms?
7. Execution: how can we ensure continuous quality?
http://www.utko.com/index.php?id=22
38. SIMPLIFY
http://www.ïŹickr.com/photos/jdlasica/3362224306/
Nate Silver - ïŹvethirtyeight
http://www.ïŹvethirtyeight.com/
âThe uncanny, poll-wrangling, stats-freaking Nate Silver
took it upon himself to demonstrate that some level of
governable, rational reality could be brought to bear on
the confusing world of competing tracking polls, and
along the way all but cemented the geek-chic trajectory
of this election season.â
http://www.hufïŹngtonpost.com/2008/12/24/2008-the-year-in-media-hi_n_153362.html
39. if you can succeed in making your readers feel
smarter, more in control, sexier, excited and
more interesting themselves, you will win.
51. at the end of the day, it is the blending of social
media and traditional media that will produce the
future of media...this is not an âorâ situation, itâs
an âandâ situation...
55. people donât like paying for digital stuff
âEconomically, the print media are in the
business of marking up paper. We can all
imagine an old-style editor getting a scoop and
saying "this will sell a lot of papers!" Cross out that
ïŹnal S and you're describing their business model.â
Paul Graham on Post-Medium Publishing
http://www.paulgraham.com/publishing.html
56. advertising models are mostly ïŹawed
Sales teams are expensive, there is the issue
of the balance of being objective while
making advertisers happy (multiple conïŹicts
with this)...
57. non-proïŹt models? hyperlocal? niche markets?
maybe? feels like these models would work for
some, but not for all. great examples emerging
that can test this out.
60. âOur community has 25,000 members. 1%
produces content and a 1,000 are very active.
Among the active, you have what we call "guests".
They are bloggers and columnists that are paid on
a revenue sharing basis. Amateurs send 400 to
500 contributions and write 6,000 comments a
day.â
Benoßt Raphaël, Editor & Chief, Le Post
interview at:
http://mediacafe.blogspot.com/2009/02/le-post-successful-and-innovative-news.html
63. the answer doesnât lie in social media itself, but
rather what we our customers and their needs as
the adoption of social networks increases...
64.
65. thanks! these people gave me LOADS of ideas...
âą Rachel Weidinger - @rachelannyes
âą Burt Herman - @burtherman
âą Will Straw, PhD - http://strawresearch.mcgill.ca/straw.html
âą Alex Ikonnikov - @alexikonn
âą Jay Seidel - Professor, Fullerton College
âą Adam McNamara - @adammcnamara
âą Heather Flyte - http://www.hbïŹyte.com/
âą Kellan Elliott-McCrea - @kellan
âą Chris OâBrien - @sjcobrien
âą If I forgot you...tell me! And Iâm sorry!
66. Order
WhufïŹe
today!
http://www.thewhufïŹefactor.com
67. licensing:
share/remix/spread ... but donât forget to attribute.
http://slideshare.net/missrogue
68. photos/screenshots
âą most of those gorgeous photos are from istockphoto.com unless indicated on
the photo as a link to a Flickr creative commons shot
âą screenshots were snapped on Skitch (plasq.com)
âą please do not re-post the photos as it will be a violation of their copyright/left.
however, have at the screenshots where you will!