Monthly Archives: February 2007

Will online video work? Only if it’s made for the medium

Someone agrees with me about the online video bandwagon (read my previous rant informed analysis here). Meanwhile, I am softening a little after reading the thoughts of the Guardian’s head of editorial development Neil McIntosh, who is quoted in a lengthy feature on video in this week’s Press Gazette (not online – argh!):

“Asking users to ‘sit forward’ and watch video online is a ‘big commitment,’ he says, but the rise of YouTube has shown that there is a huge market for ‘good, gripping video in short bursts.’ McIntosh argues that this has been almost completely ignored by other newspapers.

“‘They are often producing very long things or content that is not very gripping at all, or full of stock images of men in suits walking through revolving doors. That works perfectly well on broadcast television but when you’re demanding that the user pay attention for short bursts, you’ve got to do better than that.'”

Is this the newspaper of the future?

So asks Shane Richmond of the Readius, “an electronic reader with a rollable screen that folds to the size of a mobile phone.” Looks like a believable picture of the future – I’ll be showing it to my online journalism students to convince them of the merits of RSS (if they’re not already addicted to MyGoogle/Wikio/Bloglines after their first session).

The online journalism blogroll

Graham Holliday has listed “the most influential voices” in online journalism blogs for today’s Press Gazette (apologies to those who have had to look at my gurning visage twice in that publication this week, not to mention at the head of this blog).

Anyway, once again, it doesn’t seem to be on their website, but you can find it on Seamus McCauley’s blog and Martin Stabe’s (who should have been included even if he is now working for Press Gazette again, thank god). So get your personalised news service/RSS reader ready and start copying and pasting:

“The list included Roy Greenslade; Andrew Grant-Adamson; Adrian Monck; Robin Hamman; Richard Sambrook; Paul BradshawShane Richmond; Neil McIntosh; Andy Dickinson; Richard Burton, Strange Attractor by Suw Charman and Kevin Anderson and Vickywatch.”

Are wikis the new blogs?

The following article appears in today’s Press Gazette, Sadly, since the demise of the /discuss webpage, this is the only place you’ll find it online:

Picture this: you write a story covering an issue on which there is a broad range of opinion – so broad that it would be impossible to summarise it effectively in one article alone. Let’s say: local transport problems. On the newspaper’s website, alongside your rather superficial analysis (quote, counter-quote, “only time will tell”) you place a ‘wiki’: a webpage that readers can not only contribute to, but also edit and change, so that one reader’s contribution is another reader’s subbing material.

Or how about this: you’re working on a story that involves reporters in Washington, London, and New York. Rather than relying on lengthy conference calls or an editor who has to read three separate articles and combine them into one, the journalists collaborate by editing a single webpage that all three have access to.

If recent discussions are anything to go by, these scenes could be part of newsroom life sooner than you think. A piece by American columnist Bambi Francisco last week argued that it was only a matter of time before more professional publishers and producers begin to experiment with using “wiki-styled ways of creating content” in the same way as they have picked up on blogs. This was picked up by Ross Mayfield, CEO of wiki company Socialtext who, guest-writing on the blog of The Telegraph’s Shane Richmond, wrote: “Unusually, it may be business people who bring wikis into the mainstream. That will prepare the ground for media experiments with wikis [and] I think it’s a safe bet that a British media company will try a wiki before the end of the year.”

A number of experiments with wikis have already shown its potential to both reach out to a readership – and to fall flat on its face. An example of the latter was the LA Times ‘wikitorial’ – an editorial piece on the Iraq war which the newspaper allowed readers to edit. After only a day the newspaper had to pull the feature due to readers flooding the site with inappropriate material.

On the positive side, however, was Wired’s experiment with the form late last year, when they allowed readers to whip an unedited article about (yes) wiki technology into shape. Over 300 users made edits, with one interviewing a Harvard expert, and another suggesting a contact – and when one user complained about some quotes from an interviewee, the original journalist, Ryan Singel, posted his interview notes so that users could pick a better one.

So can we look forward to a wiki utopia where our readers check our facts, spelling and grammar – and do our interviews to boot? Or will the wiki dream be killed off through the fear of cyber vandals treating our news websites as virgin walls for virtual graffiti?

A clue to the answer may come from the rapid adoption of blogs by newspapers and broadcasters, a move that has been fuelled in large part by economics: the appeal of free content to publishers has been strong, while at the same time the fear of losing audiences to an army of micro-publishing competitors is neatly addressed.

Like blogs, wikis offer cost-saving user generated content, instant reader community, and even – for those so desperate to trim staff that they are willing to risk ending up in court – volunteer subeditors.

Wikis are blogs 2.0: like blogs, they provide an arena for readers to critique and correct, to self-publish, and to form communities. But they are different in a key way: wikis are ‘articles by committee’. The range of voices editing each other results in an often conservative, fact-based piece of work that stands firmly on the fence. This is why the ‘wikitorial’ experiment failed – if you want outspoken opinion, don’t conduct a survey.

But like blogs, wikis will only flourish if as much time and care is invested in them as are invested in editing articles. Shane Richmond identifies two obstacles that could slow down their adoption: inaccuracy and vandalism. Both can be addressed if savvy editorial staff are assigned to monitor the page and step in – both to prevent legal issues, and to facilitate those much-sought-after A-List contributors.

For now, the wiki seems likely to become an in-house tool before it reaches the news websites. The Telegraph are already planning an internal wiki as a precursor to something for readers to get their teeth into. “Once we have a feel for the technology,” says Shane Richmond, “we will look into a public wiki, perhaps towards the end of the year.”

In the meantime expect a lot of half-hearted and misguided experiments, a lot of mistakes as a result, and a lot of pooh-poohing from those without the guts to try.

Links:
Why media will embrace wikis
LA Times ‘wikitorial’ gives editors red faces [http://technology.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1511810,00.html]
The Wiki That Edited Me
Veni. Vidi. Wiki.
Veni, Vidi, Wiki (published article)
Shane Richmond: What makes wikis work
Wiki Wild West
Change is inevitable

Daily Mirror catches relaunch fever

Daily Mirror website 19 April 07Another week, another relaunch – this time it’s The Daily Mirror website, which MediaWeek reports:

“now hosts three embedded video players featuring content in the three core areas, accessible through a slide-down video screen.
“The site will feature breaking sports news and live results, and celebrity gossip and videos under the 3am brand.
“It also offers blogs by Daily Mirror journalists, user-generated content, message forums and an archive of Mirror content from its 103-year history.
“The relaunch was led by MGN Digital, which earlier this week announced a tie-up with video content specialist Roo Group to develop a video portal for the Sunday Mirror website, www.sundaymirror.co.uk.

Jeff Jarvis interview

Journalism.co.uk has an interview with online journalism figurehead Jeff Jarvis. I like the way he sums up the current situation as follows:

“News, information and media are all going to be improved by conversation. Yes, there are bozos that say stupid things, but that is not the point.

“The point is that there are people who know more than we do out there and this is a means to learn and gather and share that. In journalism we have to be at the point where we take advantage of that.”

My wife uses the word ‘bozo’ too…

New journalist job no.117: Database Editor

At some point someone should compile all the new jobs that have been created by news organisations’ shift online. Here’s one to start you off: Database Editor.

Read Derek Willis’ post about his new job at WashingtonPost.com – one I can imagine becoming increasingly important as news orgs start to realise the power of databases – from archives to stories that use databases to empower readers (e.g. Channel 4’s ‘NHS postcode lottery’ piece ).

More behavioural targeting for advertisers as Times revamps website

Times website 19 April 2007MediaWeek has lots of blah about the Times revamp meaning ‘upgrading’ audio and video (whatever that means) and “more analysis” (you need to ‘revamp’ a website to do that?). But what’s this hidden in par 2?

“Zach Leonard, digital media publisher of Times Online, said the site would also offer more contextual and behavioural targeting for advertisers and sponsors.”

Sounds like that’s the real headline story here.

UPDATE (Feb 6): There’s an ‘ask the designers’ feature at Times Online where they explain the process of the redesign, including the reason for that strange lime green. Georgia works well but it is very ‘now’ and may start to date in a few years…

UPDATE (Feb 9): There’s even more at Press Gazette on the systems that are being used to integrate print and online, to handle comments, and the future plans around video and archive content.