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Corinna Sherman

John Paton on newspapers' future « BuzzMachine - 1 views

  • We outsourced all printing, distribution and pre-press ad make up and page make up. We plowed a big part of the savings into expanding our digital resource
  • The second decsion was we would let the outside world in. We would share our content for free and we would play with anyone who wanted to play with us – mainstream media or bloggers.
  • The third decision was that we would put in place a very strict protocol that follows the new news ecology of news creation and consumption.
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  • The result was in less than two years we went from 9 products on two platforms (print and crappy publications sites full of shovelware) to nearly 100 products on 7 platforms – with about 45% less costs.
  • establish community E-Journalism labs in our communities where we have dailies.
  • expand relationships
  • community crowd-sourcing for assignments.
  • tackle the two-thirds infrastructure cost bucket.
  • The focus will become very local with national and international news procured from the very best sources.
  • At impreMedia we proved legacy media can be changed.
  • The E-Community Journalism labs will strike content and sales relationships with community members. We will faciliate cross-publishing with some, ditto sales. Sales training will be important.
  • I believe it is important we use the power of our traffic to strike ad relationships with local merchants.
Corinna Sherman

'Newsonomics' Predicts The Future Of The Media : NPR - 1 views

  • Every day, USAToday.com, the third most popular news site on the web, gets more than 20,000 comments on its stories. Gannett — America's largest news publisher, with USA Today and 81 other dailies, has made "community conversation" a centerpiece of its new strategy
  • Many stations use three or four of the user-generated stories a week on air.
  • Number two, the economics of user-generated content are a potential godsend for media companies, big and small. Media can compare the costs of well-salaried editors, producers and reporters to those of "cheap-to-free content," eagerly offered by some pretty good writers. Now draw a line between the headcount reduction in journalism and the rise of user-generated content. It's not a straight line, of course, lots of zigs, zags and caveats, but the trendline is unmistakable.
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  • The convergence of two phenomena has catapulted "user-generated" content to incredible heights. Number one, it became possible for the first time in human history for individuals to connect with hundreds to tens of thousands of people they don't know through the Web.
  • Talk to Pluck, and they'll tell you that reader interaction usually starts with simply reacting to a story. That's commenting — the 20,000 or so comments USAToday.com gets every day. Think of that as letters to the editors on Barry Bonds or Manny Ramirez's vitamins. Comments are, by their nature, reactive.
  • Move up the ladder, and readers start filling out a "profile" page, noting their interests. Then, they may participate in forums or discussion groups. Everything from political campaign groups to health support groups to sports team back-and-forth. Then, they may "upload" photos or video, the latter of course being the fuel that feeds CNN's iReport and YouNews. While much of the public feels deficient in "writing" skills, anyone can take a picture or use a Camcorder.At the top of the ladder are the regular contributors, mainly in print. These are people who have great expertise or passion or both — and keep up on topics of interest to their readers. Some have huge direct followings. Some are former journalists — bought out or laid off — looking to keep up their craft. Others disdain the word "journalism." Others are increasingly being — you guessed it — aggregated, as we saw in Chapter 5, by smart new middlemen.
  • how do editors vet? The short answer here is that they vet lightly, and that of course is why there are a lot of ticking time bombs out there. People do blog to advance business or political interests. Sometimes they disclose those; sometimes they don't. Disclosure is what is the basic rule should be, but it's an uneven practice.
Corinna Sherman

New York Times to Charge Nonsubscribers For Unlimited Use of Its Site - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    The Times will start charging nonsubscribers for unlimited use of its site starting January 2011. "We have to get rid of the notion that high-quality news comes free."
Corinna Sherman

How the Next Kindle Could Save the Newspaper Business | Epicenter | Wired.com - 0 views

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    Scaling in journalism could be the next sustainable business model; utilizing e-readers is seen as a promising option for scaling.
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