Transcript Document
Grass Roots Journalism by Mid-Missourians
The citizen journalism route to
readership
Clyde H. Bentley, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Missouri School of Journalism
Short circuiting the “priesthood”
Technologists empowered Heretics
13th-14th
centuries
20th-21st
centuries
Martin Luther
Oh Yeon-ho
Johannes
Gutenberg
Tim
Berners-Lee
The “other” side of journalism
Information from non-professional communicators
Bulletin boards
Civic club presentations
“News” releases
Coffee klatches
Chat rooms
Gossip
Blogs
16 months with “citizens”
http://mymissourian.com launched Oct. 1, 2004
A participatory
project under “The
Missouri Method.”
Real-world
challenges, real-world
solutions
Empowered students
who developed
management skills
Inspired by others
OhMyNews was well known to professors
and popular with our Korean students
Launch of Northwest Voice generated a
faculty discussion.
“”Every citizen is a
journalist” - Dean
Mills - Oh Yeon-Ho . ÒCan we proceed with all deliberate speed ? I'm in no hurry. Next week would be soon
enoughÓ
Dean Mills recognized the potential and
asked us to move quickly.
Proposed in late May 2004, launched
Oct. 1.
“”Can we proceed with all
deliberate speed? I'm in no
hurry. Next week would be
soon enough” - Dean Mills
A challenge to tradition
Missouri is the home of traditional newspaper
journalism education
Some faculty questioned the ability to maintain
credibility
Could we teach a journalism where “we” were
not in control?
So why do it?
To give voice to those traditionally excluded
from the media
To allow non-journalists to help set the
community agenda
To test our knowledge of audience values
To train students in a new form of journalism
Oh, I forgot . . .
And to make money …
Newspaper Print and Online Rev enues
First three quarters, 2005
40000000
First three quarters, 2005
35000000
$33,934,000
30000000
25000000
20000000
15000000
10000000
4.38%
5000000
$1,373,000
0
Source: NAA Quarterly Newspaper
Advertising Expenditures
Print1
Online
2
Online alone is not enough
A hybrid strategy
Gather content via an online citizen
journalism product
Use that content to fill a printed TMC
product
Use revenue gains in TMC to underwrite
the online product
Which led to one more BIG goal…
End Driveway Rot!
TMC = The Money Cow
Total Market Coverage products often
produce a substantial portion of a
newspaper’s budget.
At the Missourian, our TMC is budgeted
at about 25% of our revenue but actually
brings in 33%.
Depending how you count it…
It more than adds up
“What’s deceptive is that much of the daily
revenue comes from the TMC agreements
in a forced buy, so even more of our
revenue is the result of our TMCs.
Dan Potter
Missourian GM
“Also, we will do about $230,000 with the Real
Estate This Week magazine this year. That
would not be possible if we did not have the
Saturday TMC for distribution purposes.”
Back to print
Print edition launched Oct.
1, 2006
Allows use of the efficient
advertising pattern of print
Increases readership by
23,000 households
Reverses the print-to-Web
paradigm
Compelling content is the key
to readership
TMC’s are often filled with old, trivial or
syndicated material
Lack of reader interest can cause “pickup
failure”
Citizen-generated material is unduplicated,
compelling and does not compete with our own
daily product
Readers reach readers
Citizen journalism succeeds where others have failed.
“I have seen newspaper companies
spend thousand of dollars annually to
determine what readers expect.
Few of their findings, however, are
ever implemented.
“The greatest benefit of what we
have done with MyMissourian is we
have given newsroom leaders an
inexpensive and effective way to
give readers what they truly want.”
Hans K. Meyer
graduate student
Is there a future for
journalists?
YES -- both professional and citizen journalists
Blogs pose both a threat and an opportunity
The power relationship in information is being
re-negotiated
Journalists provide continuity and quality
control
Story tellers become story guides
New journalism skills
Brian Hamman
graduate student
“As more and more news
organizations adopt
community/citizen/open-source
journalism ventures, they'll need to
learn how to run them.
“Covering stories and collecting,
cultivating, sharing stories are very
different things. Helping others to
share their lives is still journalism,
and it needs to be taught.”
Inviting the public to our table
Many editors are concerned about errors,
credibility and libel
Some fear that citizen writing quality is low
How do we know if those untrained people are
lying?
WILL WE LOSE CONTROL?
Mix logic with understanding
Most participants in citizen journalism have
little reason to cheat or lie.
The “WBC” category is primarily the realm of
blogs.
By and large, most Americans will conform to
rules that are both simple and logical.
Focus on broad concerns; keep rules simple.
The arguments
“Decency” - How do we treat profanity and adult
topics?
“Commercialism” - What about the promotion of a
business, organization, religion, etc.?
“Literacy” - How much editing and rewriting should we
do?
“Banalism” Is anything just too stupid to appear on the
site? If so, how dumb is dumb?
Logical solutions
“Decency” No profanity, no nudity - use normal
newspaper standards of propriety
“Commercialism” Don’t ban businesses that selfpromote, but work with them to produce copy of
general interest.
“Literacy” Keep editing to a minimum, focusing on
readability rather than style. Avoid jargon and cultural
slang that can be misinterpreted.
“Banalism” Journalists are poor judges of the banal.
Rather than say anything is too low-brow, just find an
appropriate category and let the public judge it.
And… Just Four Simple Rules
No profanity
No nudity
No personal attacks
No attacks on race, religion, national
origin, gender or sexual orientation
The end of “NO”
“I worked in newspapers for seven years,
and as an editor most of my dealings with the
public were about telling people “no” due to
limited space.
NO, we can't cover your event.
NO, we can't run your youth baseball photo in the
newspaper.
NO, your story idea isn't good enough for publication.
“The open source format takes a medium
with limitless file space and allows us to
finally say ”YES" to the public.”
Jeremy Littau
graduate student
Let
them
write
Any
subject.
Everything
is
interesting
to someone
Enlist
“senior”
photogs
Hobbyists are
often looking for a
forum for their
photos
Give them
disposable
cameras
Example:
Camera passed
around at a teen
dance
Go for
the
“gut”
QuickTime™ and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Earth Day:
Natural news
Annual festival
celebrates
environmental
awareness
Provided
wireless laptops
so citizens could
comment on the
spot
Earth Day: Picture it
Loaned digital
cameras to citizens to
document the festival
Unexpected reader issues
Political issues are much less popular
than we predicted.
Religion is far, far more popular than we
predicted.
Pictures of dogs, cats and even rats
trump most other copy.
Unexpected teaching issues
Traditional journalism students want to
write, not “guide.”
Many were at a loss at how to cover “non
news” topics like Little League.
Few students are well prepared to work
with the public.
Into the future
More teasers in the morning newspaper
Increased connection with high school
journalism classes
Addition of student and citizen blogs
Establish a “Websighted” photo program.
Class in “entrepreneurial journalism”