How to make your own newspaper - and maybe win a print run

Later in this module we'll demonstrate software that lets you create your own newspaper

And we'll offer prizes of two free, 150-copy print runs of your own  tabloid newspaper

But first...what is the future for print?

Vinyl_finished_grab

It’s not hard to spot the decline in print as a medium for distributing news

And commentators proclaiming the death of print are legion.

So there’s no denying that print’s fortunes have plummeted, just as other media that were overtaken by more convenient technologies have done in the past.

But print still has its cheerleaders. There are even those who say print is the new vinyl – drawing a parallel with the niche appeal of a music-distribution technology that was first overtaken by tape (but who still has a tape deck?) and then by CDs (that don’t seem as robust as my old LPs).

So it’s probably fair to say that print will have a place in the future of news distribution. We just don’t know how big a place it will continue to earn, or for exactly which markets it will still work.

Speaking personally, while I consume about 90 per cent of my news online, and also use the web and mobile versions of print titles I subscribe to, print is still unique.

Online, I pick from a wide array of sources – or brands. With print, I’ll consume a great deal from one particular brand. I’ll always want the weekend papers, and I get a richer experience – and more enjoyment – from reading print than I do from electronic platforms.

So there are situations in which, for me, print is still the favoured way to consume news, information and entertainment.

And when we think of a future for print, it’s worth pondering this explanation for renewed interest in vinyl: “vinyl was the fastest growing music medium in 2010. Why? Essentially, because purchasing and consequently possessing a physical object is an entirely different consumer experience.  This is why, after a long period of disinterest, consumers are increasingly investing in vinyl alongside other mediums, mainly digital.”

I may well be in a small minority in valuing a physical newspaper, but serving minorities that value you highly is not a bad business model.

Clay Shirky on what newspapers must do

Indeed, for newspapers it may be the key to survival. Listen to Clay Shirky.

Shirky posted this analysis of what newspapers need to do to serve effectively those still prepared to buy them.

He says there that while the median reader, the general interest readers who once formed the mass of newspaper readership, won’t pay for news, there is a small and very loyal core readership that will – as long as their newspaper gives them exactly what they want.

And what they want may be highly specialised, and very different from the general mix of news, gossip and entertainment that even ‘serious’ papers have come to rely upon increasingly over the past 20 years or so.

His piece – which I strongly recommend you read in full – ends with this: “It will take time for the economic weight of those [loyal core] users to affect the organizational form of the paper, but slowly slowly, form follows funding. For the moment at least, the most promising experiment in user support means forgoing mass in favor of passion; this may be the year where we see how papers figure out how to reward the people most committed to their long-term survival.”

So what I think we can conclude from this is that news organisations need to pretty much reinvent their print products if they are to survive. While the focus in newspaper offices has, understandably, been on how to use the new range of online, multimedia and social media opportunities that now present themselves, the other big and unaddressed challenge is to create a new form of newspaper that is finely attuned to the needs of the small core of readers who will continue to pay for it.

My hunch is that this will involve the abandonment of the populism that many papers have gone for; the dumbing-down in an effort of satisfying a mass audience.

What Ian Fleming did for the Sunday Times

I was struck, reading Andrew Lycett’s biography of James Bond’s creator Ian Fleming recently, to learn of one of his great circulation-building coups while at his day-job as managing editor of the [London] Sunday Times. It was a 15-week serialisation of a book by Somerset Maugham: an interpretation of the best 10 novels in the world, and their authors. It added 50,000 to the paper’s then circulation of around 500,000 and led to the creation of the Sunday Times’s colour magazine. As Lycett says “in this way Ian influenced a major development in British newspaper journalism.”

Today the Sunday Times’s circulation is just over 1m, which is down by 7.51 per cent on the previous year. Maybe the key to stemming that decline – or at least to establishing the title at a level where its core readers are happy with it – is to look again at heavy-weight content. But pitch something like the Maugham book today as a promotion and marketing would think you were mad.

Elsewhere, there is a growing file of evidence that some audiences – often niche audiences by topic or geography - are best reached via print.

Most papers are local papers, and some locals are doing interesting things with print.

Hyperlocal and niche-audience initiatives

Some are taking the strategy of engaging with citizen journalists online, and then curating some of the content they produce in highly geo-located print products.

 

This post on the MultiAmerican site  - ‘In L.A.’s Boyle Heights, hyperlocal news comes in print’ - talks of a collaboration between  the USC Annenberg journalism school and La Opinión, a Spanish language news organisation, to create a printed paper on which the reporters are local high school and other students.

This is the second hyperlocal news site these partners have launched.

Here’s why this one uses print rather than the web:  “the demographics are different in Boyle Heights, a longtime immigrant port of entry that for the last several decades has been predominantly Latino. While Latinos are active smartphone users, they generally have less Internet access than other groups, hence the old-fashioned distribution approach. A tabloid print edition in Spanish and English, delivered to residents … by La Opinión, compliments an English-language online edition.”

The post concludes: “The community newspaper model, which one might argue is the original hyperlocal news, has been a long-time fixture in Eastside neighborhoods. Many of these are covered by the small Hispanic-owned local papers published by Eastern Group Publications “ which have a circulation of over 104,000 and a readership of nearly 500,000.

In the UK, print newspapers for ethnic, immigrant and language groups have sprung up. If you are a registered user of MMJ you’ll find an overview of that phenomenon here and an interview with the editor of a UK-Lithuanian newspaper, Londono Zinios, here.

Some newspapers are taking the strategy of engaging with citizen journalists online, and then curating some of that content in highly geo-located print products.

The cheerily titled Newspaper Death Watch, which chronicles the decline of print titles, found this piece of encouraging news; “Does print still have value? The people at neighborsgo.com would argue that it does.

 

 

“This website, which is a spin-off of the Dallas Morning News, is using a social network to anchor a community journalism initiative. Local residents create profiles and post information about their interests.”

Those posts are scanned by editors and the best are curated in 11 print editions covering 71 communities which are home-delivered to over 340,000 Dallas Morning News subscribers each Friday.

“The opportunity to be featured in print is a major impetus for local residents to contribute, says managing editor Oscar Marti­nez. And it may actually be a jump start for careers. One journalism student used her trip to Beijing to contribute a series of articles on the preparations for the [2008] Olympics. The visibility she’s received has been worth more than any internship could offer.”

It's not just newspapers that are reinventing their print personas. B2B magazines are working to the same goal. Just as I was writing this, an alert popped up that "The Lawyer magazine has unveiled a radical redesign that will see its weekly print edition devoted entirely to analysis, features and comment."

Editor Catrin Griffiths says: “Print works, as long as you get the product right – analytical doesn’t have to mean anodyne.

"The big issues of the day are best served analytically and at length - it’s what print does best."

So, the challenge for print in general, and for the newspaper industry in particular, is to learn who will pay for a print product, and what they will need to see in it.

Meanwhile, maybe you'd like to create your own newspaper?

Next: How to create your own newspaper

 

Masterclass 29: Celebrity, showbiz and arts reporting

Celebrity and showbiz news has traditionally been looked down on by the posh newspapers and the BBC

They have arts correspondents, putting the emphasis on culture and arts policy matters

Celebrity News magazineIt was redtops, and the more ‘tabloid’ TV channels that went for showbiz gossip, kiss-and-tell tales about soap stars, footballers and reality TV wannabes.

But that’s all changed. Now even the poshest papers recognise that their audience, however high-minded it might be, is also interested in celebrities and what they get up to.

On channels such as BBC3, the news is bite-sized showbiz gossip. The Guardian and The Times both have writers who focus on celebrity.

In this masterclass we’ll look at what a massively expanded journalistic area this is, and at the opportunities for celeb and showbiz reporting there now are.

Much of the growth in celeb news has been fuelled by websites – often maverick, sometimes plain nasty. But while they began often as email newsletters distributed among friends, the most successful now have millions of readers, make millions a year, and are challenging the existence of established celebrity publications and the red tops.

The other big driver of celebrity news is the way celebrities themselves have taken to Twitter, often writing about themselves and what is happening to them, and sometimes conducting their love-lives in public.

So we’ll look here at several things:

  • Why celebrity and showbiz news is so big - and how it got that way
  • How to do celeb and showbiz reporting
  • Twitter's vital role in your reporting

We’ll have a case study in how to create a full newspaper article from the tweets of celebs (and a bit of telly watching) by analysing how The Times’s Caitlin Moran told the Royal Wedding story through celebs' tweets.

We'll also have:

  • Celebrity Twitter accounts listed
  • Star celeb and showbiz reporters

And we won’t forget about arts reporting. We’ll look also at what it is and where you can get a job doing it, plus list the Arts tweeters you should follow

Next: Why celebrity and showbiz news is so big - and how it got that way

Bubbleby, the great location-based reporting tool, gets an important update

I raved about Bubbleby as a great way to create journalism around a point on the map here http://www.multimedia-journalism.co.uk/node/1529 in a mastercalss on Location-based Content for local Journalism.

Now Bubbley by has intoroduced a key improvement. Here's how they announced it today:

New Feature
Finally, naming and renaming of bubbles is possible!
Your feedback was clear. Customizable names are important for the identity of bubbles. We kept the addressing scheme, but now you get to choose the names of your bubbles.

Our addressing scheme is loosely based on how addresses are assigned in Japan. Checkout this video about Japanese addresses and thinking different on ted.com "Derek Sivers - Weird or Just Different?".

New bubbleby Uses
In the last couple of weeks we saw two exiting examples of how users are beginning to take over bubbleby and are coming up with new ways of using it.

  • Andy Bull had the idea to use bubbleby as a tool for journalists to create stories and communities around locations and came up with a great example.
  • And tweets started appearing about using bubbleby in conjunction with google translate to find and translate twitter messages surrounding the terrible events in Japan and Libya.

To support users who want to explore areas where they don't know the language, we now directly integrated translation into the site.
Simply press the "en"-button below any tweet and get its english translation.

We hope that this new feature will not only find use at times of catastrophies and uprisings, but that it will also be a great tool to explore the unfolding of more fortunate events!

Did you come up with any new uses of bubbleby? Then please get in touch, so we can add new tools and features to support you.

Curatorial journalism: the what why and how...An introduction for journalism students

What curation is...Why it’s important...How to do it well

Curate_2

Previewing Masterclass 24 at Multimedia Journalism: A Practical Guide

Curation is a new word for doing something that old school journalists might call copy tasting.

On a traditional national newspaper or broadcaster's newsdesk you’ll find a copytaster who sifts through the incoming reports from news agencies - Reuters, AP, PA, Agence France Presse and the rest - rejecting some, selecting others and pushing the most promising ones towards staff reporters, or the relevant specialists, for their assessment and follow up.

So some of those wire stories are developed, expanded and taken to a new level. Other, less promising ones, are printed straight, with or without reference to the source.

In the new world of journalism, the sources for stories have multiplied, and become available to all.

Eyewitnesses, industry experts and citizen journalists all have the ability to publish their material direct to the public if they wish. There is a far greater wealth of information being disseminated, on a wide range of open publishing platforms.

If we are talking about eyewitness accounts, Twitter probably comes first to mind. There’s also a lot of material filed to Facebook, video to YouTube and other platforms.

If there is a really big story – a Japanese earthquake, tsumani and nuclear meltdown, or unrest in a range of Middle Eastern countries, then the resources of profession journalists and broadcasters/publishers are completely inadequate to the task of reporting.

It’s down to eyewitnesses – or citizen journalists – to provide the vast majority of first-person material for the many reports that will be crafted about these events.

OK, there will be a few hard-news honchos striding in their flack jackets or anti-radiation suits through a scene of conflict or devastation, but what they can tell us is often actually pretty superficial.

The BBC saw fit to parachute a non-Japanese speaker into the heart of the unfolding nuclear disaster when the story was at its height, and went live to him as sirens were sounding and convoys of vehicles were passing.

The studio jockey asked him, as he broadcast live from the roadside, what those sirens were all about. The poor guy had no idea. I sympathise, I would have had no idea what was going on either.

I’d have had to look to social media - at local tweets and the rest - and use a translation tool to try to find out.

Given that many big events can’t be covered adequately by professional journalists, what do we need to do?

We need to look to social media, and the vast amount of eyewitness material and informed comment they hold.

The problem with all this eye-witness stuff is that it is unverified, sometimes unreliable, sometimes inaccurate.

What it lacks is the eye of a professional journalist, who can sift, evaluate and seek to corroborate the material that is presented.

That’s the process an old-school copy taster sets in train. And it’s the same process we embark upon when we try to take these raw sources of information, compare them, try to find patterns in information that reveal a truth.

That process describes what curatorial journalism is.

But it doesn’t just relate to really big stories.

Because everyone with a smartphone has the capacity to file multimedia reports, many people can contribute to the raw source-material for a story.

Curatorial journalism is about bringing an objective journalistic eye to all that raw date, sifting it, and presenting the best of it to a wider audience.

In another field, that of comment and analysis on an industry, there will be many commentators, some who describe themselves as journalists, others who are key members of that industry, some with less elevated roles but still with potentially illuminating insights.

Curating an industry, an issue, a hobby or pastime is also a valuable and rewarding journalistic enterprise.

So the old-school skill of copy tasting can be reinvented in the modern world as one in which many news sources – both official and unofficial, eyewitness, citizen journalist and/or expert can be scanned, appraised and either added to the report or rejected.

This masterclass is about how to practice curatorial journalism.

It’s about the platforms that help you curate the news, and the ways in which you can identify the best sources for the news you choose to curate.

Potentially, anyone could do this, what will make our curations worth reading?

It comes down to a fundamental journalistic skill – the ability to present information in the most dramatic and engaging way.

Have we curated, selected and packaged source material in such a way that people want to read it? If so, we have created successful journalism. If not, we’ve failed.

We may at times be unsure of the reliability of our sources, but we can at least identify what those sources are. That way, the reader can decide whether to trust them.

There are a range of platforms that promise the opportunity to curate successfully. We’ll look at some of them in this masterclass.

Which platform is most appropriate for you depends in part on the sort of curation you want to practice, and how much work you want to put in.

Want to know more about the reasons for curating? Here's a great Mashable article: Why curation is important to the future of journalism

Projects

There'll be some ideas for curation projects as we get down to using particular platfoms in later modules. Feel free to share them with the MMJ community by sending a link via any of the comment buttons, or to @andybull on Twitter.

Next: Choosing what to curate, and the right platform for you

Location-based content for local journalism - the latest masterclass from Multimedia journalism: A Practical Guide

Location is the fastest growing aspect of communication

Providing location-specific content holds out huge opportunities – and challenges – for journalists and publishers

 

Listen!

How do we harness the potential of geo-location for our journalism, whether we are working in hyperlocal, local, B2B, specialist or any other media?

Whatever your beat or specialism, the exponential growth in the use of smartphones and other mobile, wi-fi enabled devices, means that we must look at ways we can make our content relevant to our users when they are on the move.

Mobile devices offer consumers information that is tailored to where they are, and what they want to do, right now. We need to put our own content on the leading mobile platforms.

The challenge to local media: Geolocate or die

The message to local media companies is: geo-locate or die. Or, perhaps more acurately, continue to fade.

For any local journalist, or local publisher of a blog, hyperlocal news site, or local newspaper then the question of locality is central to what they do.

Newspapers were, once upon a time, the best way to get information to those in a particular locality.

What geo-location does is bring a massive advance in the opportunities to do that.

The challenge for any local journalist or publisher is to ride this development.

If you don’t, if those in your area can’t immediately find information from you that is relevant to where they are and what they are doing, or want to do,  than you are failing as a provider of local content and information.

I don’t see many local papers getting abreast of this. I do see some pioneering hyperlocal sites and blogs doing it.

What geo-location platforms to use?

At the moment there is a competing array of localising platforms out there.

You can’t build your own and you wouldn’t want to if you could.

What you can do is see which platforms people are beginning to use, and find out whether you can get your content on them.

That’s our aim in this masterclass.

Are they on Foursquare, for example, and could you use Foursquare as a platform for reaching people?

We’ll look at the breakthrough one hyperlocal site, BlogPreston, has made using this platform. What about Gowalla, another check-in site that lets you create local journeys?

There are other potential publishing platforms that are far less well known, and I’ll be demonstrating some of them, including a very promising one called Bubbleby which I think has great potential for local journalists because it lets you create content and community – in what it calls bubbles – around a particular location.

Great for campaigning, or focusing discussion on a particular distinct area in the town you cover.

Mapping platforms

Then there are the various mapping platforms that enable you to put information on a map of the area you cover and then embed those information-laden maps into your website or blog. We looked at using Google Maps as a backdrop to a feature on pages 417-8 of the book version of MMJ, and here:  http://www.multimedia-journalism.co.uk/node/98  on the web version.

We’ll look at a range of other ways of exploiting the potential of mapping in local journalism.

Build your own GeoGuide

There is the opportunity, from a company called Geodelic, to create a guide to a particular area, called a GeoGuide, that can be read on a Blackberry, iPhone or Android smartphone.

We’ll look at Geodelic, on which I’m building a guide.

The GeoGuide I’m building is not local in the local paper sense, but locality is important to it. It’s an app that brings together the best places to train as a multimedia journalist in the UK. It’s a work in progress but we’ll look at how far I’ve got with it.

GeoGuides could be useful to any editor of a magazine where location can be relevant to some of the title’s content. A golfing mag, for example, might have a GeoGuide to the best courses and cluster a lot of relevant information around those venues. Any specialist-interest magazine could create GeoGuides.

Here are some thoughts:

  • A business travel mag might create a guide to each major airport.
  • A fishing mag could let readers see which is the best river or lake close to where they find themselves.
  • Real ale fans can be told where to get a pint of Owld Scroat in the strange town they happen to be visiting.

How to explore the potential of geo-location for your journalism

Mashable said this about geo-located content in its predictions for 2011:

“In 2010, we saw the growth of location-based services like Foursquare, Gowalla and SCVNGR. Even Facebook entered the location game by launching its Places product, and Google introduced HotPot, a recommendation engine for places and began testing it in Portland. The reality is that only 4% of online adults use such services on the go. My guess is that as the information users get on-the-go info from such services, they’ll becomes more valuable and these location-based platforms will attract more users.

“Part of the missing piece is being able to easily get geo-tagged news content and information based on your GPS location. In 2011, with a continued shift toward mobile news consumption, we’re going to see news organisations implement location-based news features into their mobile apps. And of course if they do not, a start-up will enter the market to create a solution to this problem or the likes of Foursquare or another company will begin to pull in geo-tagged content associated with locations as users check in.”

So how do we get on the bandwagon and use geo-location on our website, blogs and in the apps we create?

That’s the question this masterclass explores. It won’t give you all the answers, but it will point to some promising possibilities.

There will be some suggested projects along the way, to give you some starting points.

And, as ever, if you do experiment in this area, you must feel free to share what you have discovered with the MMJ community by clicking on any of the comment buttons and sending us a link.

Next: Create content and community around a location with Bubbleby