[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. The Digital Bulletin reports that the BBC has launched a bursary in honour of its science and technology writer Ivan Noble, who died from a brain tumour this year. “The annual bursary will give a journalist, who has recently completed a journalism course or has less than two years’ journalistic experience, the chance to work on bbc.co.uk for six months. The recipient will also have a passion for science and technology.”
Emails as publications
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. I’ve always been a big fan of the email newsletter as a medium, so it’s good to see that some listings-based emails are making money from advertising, according to The Guardian.
“Both newsletters are free to subscribers and while Urban Junkies is aimed at a mixed audience, Daily Candy is unashamedly female in its focus. Balfour believes that they will co-exist quite happily. But with the low entry costs, it will not be long before the market becomes even more crowded. Dazed & Confused and Vice, two of the last style mags left standing, have recently launched email services.”
Google News more biased than Yahoo
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. …That’s the upshot of this research (PDF) by Eric Ulken. He analysed news articles that are brought up by Google’s supposedly bias-immune algorithms, and found that the lack of human editors resulted in more biased sources being used. He talks about his findings at the Online Journalism Review.
Open source journalism
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. Letting your readers contribute to an article is not particularly new (oh I’m so jaded), but here’s a recent experiment from MIT Technology Review – and some background/comment to it.
Buy your own news presenter
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. Journalism.co.uk reports that news sites can now buy a virtual newsreader to read out stories for around £250 (a half price deal on till the end of May). You can have fun with a demo at creators Daden’s site, which will read out RSS feeds.
UK online research tools
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. Trawling through my to-do box I found an excellent article from The Journalist by Heather Brooke on online sources. Here’s a quick rundown:
The Financial Services Authority Register is “an excellent way of finding the names of directors and the boards on which they sit.”
The Health and Safety Executive is “one of the most progressive and open regulators with a proactive online publishing regime. You can check the names of companies against the searchable prosecutions database, which includes all cases resulting in a conviction since 1999. The notices database includes details of all enforcement notices since 1 April 2001. The A-Z subject index of industry research reports is also useful.”
The Office of Fair Trading “keeps a number of useful public registers. Some of these are easily accessible online, such as the Competition Act 1998 Register and the Register of Orders and Undertakings. However, others – the register of prohibition orders against rogue estate agents, for instance, and the Consumer Credit Act 1974 Register (which lists businesses with consumer credit agreements for issuing loans) – are not online. There is no publicity even for the existence of these registers. Journalists should pressure the OFT to make them available online.”
The US Security and Exchange Commission “is a free site that monitors all companies filing SEC records, which could prove useful as many UK companies have to make them. The site will even send you an email when the company you are tracking files something new.”
“Private companies that provide public services affecting the environment (such as water companies) fall under the Environmental Information Regulations 2004. This law gives the public (including reporters) greater legal rights than under the FoIA for environmental information. Friends of the Earth publishes a users guide at http://community.foe.co.uk/tools/right_to_know“
Also added by David Hyatt of Halifax are The Employment Tribunal site and the Employment Appeal Tribunal.
Online research links
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. More useful links for online research – again, you need to take into account the fact that most are American.
Paid-for content increases – and more jobs for OJs
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. The UK Association of Online Publishers has just released some research charting an increase in publishers charging for content – as well as an increase in the audiences for that content. The latter statistic is not particularly surprising given that web users and web use generally are increasing – but enough to make chairman Bill Murray state ““It’s very clear that we are starting to see the end of a general perception from consumers that the web is ‘free’”.
Stats include :
- 63 per cent of AOP member companies now charge for content online, compared with 58 per cent in 2004.
- Paid-for content now provides 19 per cent of overall revenue.
- A decline in one-off (micro) payments, and an increase in subscription models.
- The largest source of revenue for respondents remains display advertising, supplying 47 per cent of all revenue. More than half (58 per cent) of AOP members are now generating more than £1 million annually from advertising alone.
- Other sources of revenue include: recruitment classified advertising (14 per cent), content syndication (five per cent), e-commerce, sponsorship, web-design and development, listings, newsletter advertisements, and commission on sales.
- Integration of online and offline teams increased to 79 per cent of companies (from 63 per cent in 2004), suggesting online is seen as more of an integral part of the wider organisation than in previous years.”
But buried away towards the bottom of their press release is some great news for online journalists, as recruitment increases considerably:
“In the past year, 40 per cent of online publishers surveyed took on more online staff, upping their headcount by 10 on average. However, the report also found that 60 per cent of publishers on the web had unfilled vacancies, with nearly eight in 10 of them urgently seeking sales and subscription staff, and nearly half looking for editorial staff.”
Got a good idea about using BBC content?
[Keyword: onlinejournalism]. Full credit to the BBC, who have opened up their content to Web developers with ideas about ways of using it. BBC Backstage revolves around an email discussion list which debates the ideas suggested – but it’s also interesting to browse the Prototypes section and see what people have proposed, including displaying news on maps and using spam filter concepts to filter news – most of them with links that are quite useful in themselves.
Interactive PR: Who’s paying the blogger?
Interesting story about a company paying bloggers to write favourable reviews of certain products and services – a cautionary tale to check your sources.
