Online Journalism Archive

Journalism needs a Parkinson’s Law (or, did Wolf Blitzer really ask that question?)

Somewhere in the middle of CNN’s ceaseless reporting of what it didn’t know about the shooting today at the Washington Navy Yard, in between Wolf Blitzer’s precise references to an upcoming news conference by “the President of the United States” (to clarify for all of those expecting the President of Bolivia), the anchor asked whether

These 7 sins aren’t just deadly on social media: Attention, news websites

Steph Parker posted “The 7 new deadly sins of social media” on Socialmedia Today this month. A lot of good advice packed into a relatively short post: Misappropriation Just because something happens doesn’t mean you have to take advantage of it for your brand. There’s a difference between being clever and being annoying, and forcing

If at first they do not learn, train, train again

Here are some words of encouragement for anyone asked to train people in a newsroom: You will fail. Within weeks after your training is complete, you will realize that some people are doing poorly at whatever you taught them. Some are doing the opposite of what you said. And some aren’t doing it at all.

Don’t teach the tool; teach the task

The worst training sessions I’ve had to endure mostly consisted of the so-called trainer plodding through something — let’s say, a website stats tool — in a presentation that was more like an inventory than a lesson. Every button and every option was listed and explained. Two hours later, we students would emerge not much

When training your newsroom, fear the experts

Is your newsroom offering training in digital reporting? Are you considering doing so, and looking for trainers? Here’s my advice: Beware of experts. What I’m talking about are one-topic specialists: the SEO genius, the group that’s produced sterling video documentaries, the social media consultant with 20,000 followers. They may know everything there is to know

How to turn website statistics into newsroom change

Once Stijn Debrouwere got through ridiculing the way the news industry uses website data, he did get to some positive approaches. Here’s one weird trick I learned from Eric Ries. No, it’s actually more like a four-step program. figure out what is important to your organization, what your goals are think of a couple of

5 things I think about the end of ‘AnnArbor.com’

AnnArbor.com, which started four years ago as a one-off experiment and ended up changing all of Advance’s newspapers, is going away as a brand. Its staff will continue to produce online news and the twice-a-week paper (now to be called, once again, The Ann Arbor News). But the site will be folded into the statewide

Why journalists should love live website statistics

I promise that I found a lot to like about Stijn Debrouwere’s speech on website statistics in newsrooms. But before we get to this, another nit. Here’s Debrouwere: Imagine your newsroom has been pumping out articles about the papal election, yet it turns out that the article readers are clicking on is one about the

Let’s not be so quick to trash the website statistics dashboard

Brace yourselves, my fellow journalists. Today we’re going to talk about … numbers. Start with Stijn Debrouwere, who says: Pageviews is a vanity metric: something that looks really important but that we can’t act on and that tell us nothing about how well we’re actually doing. This is from a speech that Mathew Ingram later

How to get past the print-first mindset

Well, there goes one “grass is always greener” belief. Newsrooms that want to adapt to digital ways can find that it’s hard to get their journalists to think about online until it’s almost too late — the stories are almost done, the photos have been taken, and then — oh, I guess we should talk