This document summarizes Steve Buttry's presentation on digital journalism. It discusses how digital newsrooms work with livestreaming, liveblogging and engaging the community. It emphasizes creating unique content through enterprise reporting and using metrics to measure performance while maintaining strong journalistic values. It also covers launching a digital-first strategy, using engagement and collaboration tools like crowdsourcing, and experimenting with new digital tools and techniques.
Journalism, like any other niche, has also been influenced by the Digital Media. The usage of digital technologies to research, produce and deliver (or make accessible) news and information is termed as Digital Journalism in simple.
This session sheds an average light on all the aspects of digital jounalism in today's digital context ranging from the theories to the legal issues so concerned.
Journalism, like any other niche, has also been influenced by the Digital Media. The usage of digital technologies to research, produce and deliver (or make accessible) news and information is termed as Digital Journalism in simple.
This session sheds an average light on all the aspects of digital jounalism in today's digital context ranging from the theories to the legal issues so concerned.
History of Internet
Give a convincing definition of online journalism
Explain the forms of online journalism
Explain why traditional media outlets are moving online
Exploring new media outlets e.g citizen journalism, backpack journalism
Looking at how social media is influencing the way we consume news, who can produce and publish news and how these new platforms are influencing journalistic practices
Online multimedia journalism is the process of combining text, images, sound, videos and graphics, to tell an interesting story with the use of the new technologies and internet.
The news agencies, also known as wire services, are among the most powerful and trusted names in news business. Some of them like Reuters have been in existence since the nineteenth century.
However, few are aware of their reach or existence. They do not own physical properties such as newspapers or television channels. But they generate news for all forms of media. Their subscribers include newspapers, magazines, radio stations, television networks and now news sites.
Journalism in the 21st Century conference - Melbourne University - July 2009.
Plenary session: Journalism in the new digital age - New Directions for National and International media outlets.
History of Internet
Give a convincing definition of online journalism
Explain the forms of online journalism
Explain why traditional media outlets are moving online
Exploring new media outlets e.g citizen journalism, backpack journalism
Looking at how social media is influencing the way we consume news, who can produce and publish news and how these new platforms are influencing journalistic practices
Online multimedia journalism is the process of combining text, images, sound, videos and graphics, to tell an interesting story with the use of the new technologies and internet.
The news agencies, also known as wire services, are among the most powerful and trusted names in news business. Some of them like Reuters have been in existence since the nineteenth century.
However, few are aware of their reach or existence. They do not own physical properties such as newspapers or television channels. But they generate news for all forms of media. Their subscribers include newspapers, magazines, radio stations, television networks and now news sites.
Journalism in the 21st Century conference - Melbourne University - July 2009.
Plenary session: Journalism in the new digital age - New Directions for National and International media outlets.
Innovations in Digital Journalism: 5 Lessons Learned (V2)Jeremy Caplan
As digital journalism evolves, this presentation offers a summary of five key lessons learned from successful new— and traditional— news organizations.
Blogs cover a very wide variety of styles and approaches. Blogs written by journalists, or housed on the websites of media organizations, are also widely varied. To understand blogs, blogging, and the audiences for blogs, we have to begin by looking at real blogs and comparing them. This presentation was given to 3rd-year journalism students at Rhodes University, South Africa.
Round up of developments in local and hyper-local media across the UK in 2012 including Local TV, Radio, Newspapers, Funding, Local Government, some examples of content from 2011.
Future of journalism online & mobile mediastereodan
Online and Mobile Media Presentation : Week 12, The Future of Journalism.
Examination of the Future of Journalism with reference to this weeks readings:
Conboy, M & Steel, j 2008 ‘The Future of Newspapers: historical perspectives,’ Journalism Studies, vol. 9, no. 5, pp. 650-661
Life in the Clickstream: The Future of Journalism [www.alliance.org.au/documents/foj_report_final.pdf ]
1. Summary of the way newspapers (up until now) have combined economic, technological and cultural issues to represent systems of shared beliefs through differentiation.
2. How news/debates about “information society” should be considered a continuation of socio-economic trends emerging in the 17th Century.
3. Debates on how current trends (“hyper-differentiation”) might impact on the political formations of the future.
Chapter 18: Ethics Issues Specific to Digital Journalism - JNL-2105 - Journal...Linda Austin
This presentation teaches journalism students to handle ethical issues specific to digital media. It describes how to verify information and visuals posted on social media, to handle hate speech posted online, to behave professionally on Facebook, and to link or embed to help attribute. Professor Linda Austin prepared it for her JNL-2015 Journalism Ethics students at the National Management College in Yangon, Burma, in August 2015. It goes with Chapter 18: Ethics Issues Specific to Web Journalism of The Ethical Journalist, by Gene Foreman.
These are slides for a workshop for The Gazette in Montreal on using social media and other engagement tools and techniques in reporting. For links relating to this workshop, check my blog: http://wp.me/poqp6-1Yd
Oikos workshop presentation on Social Media. The presentation takes a high-level strategy view of Social Media for small charities and community groups, along with providing statistics, hints and tips and some fun as we go.
This presentation was designed to help community-focused organizations elevate their social media marketing beyond the basics. From how to build a strategy, tips for content marketing, and tools to create/share better content, this presentation covers a wide variety of topics. Initially delivered to the Ohio Association for County Boards, government agencies that serve people with developmental disabilities, the presentation will help organizations look as amazing *online* as they are offline.
These are slides for a presentation on community engagement for the America East conference in Hershey, Pa. They go with this blog post: http://wp.me/poqp6-1ow
These are slides for a class on updating communication ethics codes. Here's a blog post with some points and links related to the class: https://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2015/11/19/slides-and-links-on-mass-communication-codes-of-ethics/
1. Digital Journalism
Steve Buttry
University of Colorado
October 19, 2012
#cudigital
2. Read more about it
• stevebuttry.wordpress.com
• slideshare.net/stevebuttry
• @stevebuttry
• stephenbuttry@gmail.com
3. Plan for the day
1. How a digital newsroom works
2. Digital news strategy
3. Working digital-first
4. Digital tools for today’s journalists
5. Social media tools & techniques
6. Launching your career in digital
journalism
6. What’s happening now?
• Livestreaming
• Liveblogging
• Live chats
• Alerts
• Feed tweets into site
7.
8. Engagement & collaboration
• Join, stimulate, lead & curate the
community conversation
• Crowdsourcing stories
• Community newsrooms
• Mobile newsrooms
9.
10.
11. Engagement & collaboration
• Join, stimulate, lead & curate the
community conversation
• Crowdsourcing stories
• Community newsrooms
• Mobile newsrooms
• Network w/ community blogs
12. Unique content
• Commodity content has little value
(curation can add value)
• Databases (answerbases) have greater
shelf life
• Lead conversation around enterprise
• Do what you do best & link to the rest
(Jeff Jarvis)
13.
14. Measuring performance
• Metrics have always mattered
• Understand what metrics say & what
they don’t
• Seek multiple metrics
• Learn from metrics, but they don’t
override values
• Recognize flukes & don’t overreact
15.
16. Some values don’t change
“Seek truth & report it.”
– SPJ Code of Ethics
17. Digital-first values
• Accuracy • Watchdog role
• Truth • First Amendment
• Attribution • Timeliness &
• Transparency reflection
• Identification • Civility & respect
• Fairness • Diversity
• Community • Skepticism
18. Can we raise standards?
• Does he-said-she-said story really seek &
report truth?
• Is the “view from nowhere” honest?
• Dan Gillmor suggests replacing
“objectivity” w/ transparency, fairness,
accuracy, thoroughness
22. John Paton:
“You don’t tinker or tweak a
broken model. You start again
anew.”
23. Digital First principles
• Digital First & print last
• Put the digital people in charge
• Engage the community
• Core competencies: Local content & local
sales
• If it’s not core: reduce it, stop it, sell it or
outsource it
24. Foundation to build on:
• Strong brands
• Local content
• Local sales force
• Journalistic integrity
25. Engagement = value
• Computers & archives for
community use
• Open news meetings
• Blog network
• Classes
• Digital audience 5x print
• From loss to profit
26. What engagement is
Community engagement = News orgs make
top priority to listen, to join, lead & enable
conversation to elevate journalism.
27. What engagement isn’t
• Promotion (though it has promotional
value)
• Distribution of content (though you
should)
• Purely a digital pursuit (it uses digital
tools along w/ traditional ones)
28. What engagement is
Community engagement = News orgs
make top priority to listen, to join,
lead & enable conversation to elevate
journalism.
29. Avenues of Engagement
• Social media • Content submissions
• Blogs • Interactive content
• Crowdsourcing • Voting, contests
• Breaking news • Comments
• Stories • Schools, groups
• Events • Feedback
• Curation • Print
• Aggregation • Face to face
36. Mobile Opportunity
• 44% of U.S. adults have smartphones
• 18% of U.S. adults have tablets (up 50%
from summer 2011 to early 2012)
Source: State of the News Media 2012
37. Mobile-first strategy
• Text alerts
• Email
• Applications (phones & tablets)
• Social media (tweets, check-ins, tips)
• Location-based news, info & commerce
• Easy-to-use mobile websites
• Device-flexible (not device-agnostic)
• Games (phones, iPads great for games)
38. Personal content
• Births • Divorce
• Youth milestones • Jobs, pets, holidays, fo
• School od, interests, health
• Graduation • Illness
• College life • Empty nesters
• Military service • Retirement
• Weddings • Reunions
• Parenthood • Obituaries
39.
40. Life stories
• Commissioned obits (journalist tells life
story, paid by family)
• Obituary, website, booklet, video
• Not just obits:
weddings, retirements, anniversaries, mil
estones
43. N2 lessons for Digital First
• Jobs to be done = opportunities
• “Good enough” opens doors to new
avenues of excellence
• Potential markets exceed what you can
imagine (or what research can project)
• “Beware the sucking sound of the core”
45. Thinking digital-first
• Story is, as Jeff Jarvis says, a process, not a
product
• It’s great to be first w/ story or the idea, but
otherwise link
• Community = collaborators
• Lots of RTs or a prominent link are better than
front-page story
• How can you use new tools to do better
stories?
46. Working digital-first
• Create content for digital platforms (web,
email, SMS, social, mobile)
• Produce print & broadcast products from
content on digital platforms
• Live coverage of events
• Breaking news coverage
• Engage community
47. Court reporter
• Live-tweet from courtroom (narrative,
not a transcript)
• Feed tweets into liveblog
• Big development: Text news alert to
editor
• Write summary or analysis story for web
& print
48.
49.
50. Why to liveblog
• Immediacy
• News value
• Storytelling
• Traffic
• Community engagement, loyalty
• Interactivity
• Saving time
51. Liveblog formats
• Update (time-stamp, reverse-chron) in
blog or story template
• Use CoverItLive
• Use ScribbleLive
• Live-tweet (on Twitter or feeding blog)
• Video stream (w/liveblog)
• Raw, edited or moderated
52. Tips, techniques
• Short, frequent takes
• Space isn’t an issue; engagement is
• Liveblog becomes notebook
• Consider links, polls, photos, audio, video
• Promote live & replays
• Tweet links to liveblog & replay
• OK to step away for question, video, etc.
53. Liveblog & print story
• Liveblog is notebook: cut, paste & edit
• Note when you know you’ve written
good lead or passage for story
• Does summary (w/ web plug) work for
print?
• Plug “complete coverage” in liveblog
55. Court reporter, no trial
• Traditional rounds: lawyers, judges,
clerks, filings
• Add #DigitalFirst rounds: monitor tweets,
search Twitter, Facebook groups & pages
• Tweet/alert/blog big filings
• Video clips in interviews
• Scan or download docs if not online
56. Beat reporter
• Beatblog
• Liveblog meetings, events
• Tweet/alert/liveblog breaking news
• Live chat on continuing stories
• Data visualization
• Curate community conversation
57. Beat reporter questions
• How to crowdsource story?
• What terms, hashtags should you search
(routinely & for each story)?
• Regular/special hashtags to use?
• People to follow? New FB pages/groups?
• Other social media to search (YouTube,
Flickr, Foursquare, Google+ …)?
58. Visual journalist
• Shoot first w/ smartphone & post
• Shoot w/ camera for slideshow & print
• Shoot video
• Record ambient sound, interviews
• If disaster, shoot some after shots for
before/after
59. Digital Journalism
Tools & Techniques
Steve Buttry
University of Texas-Arlington Shorthorn
August 14, 2012
#utashorthorn
60. Text
• Stories • Quizzes
• Lists • Chats
• Headlines • Tweets
• Captions • FB updates
• Liveblog • Text on video
• Comments • Text in graphics
• Polls • Links
61. Audio
• Podcast
• Audio clips
• Audio w/ slides
• Soundtrack on video
• Google voice
63. Data
• Think of answerbases, not databases
• Data personalizes story for readers
• Data gives lasting value to reporting
• Caspio is plug & play database tool
• DataViz & Visual.ly
• Google Fusion maps
• Google Docs & Forms
64. Factors in blogging success
• Idea • Links
• Format • Voice
• Headline • Writing
• Visuals • Conversation
65. Possible formats
• Brief • Promotion
• Video (w/ intro) • Chart/graph/map
• Photo gallery • Q&A
• List • Narrative
• Review • Poll
• News story • Curation
66. The blogging conversation
• Crowdsource (specific questions: “Do you
know anyone who …?” “Did you see …?”
“Has this ever happened to you?”)
• Consider ending post w/ question
• Stimulate/continue conversation in social
media
• Engage with comments
67. Keys to SEO
• Relevance
• Keywords in headline (what would you
search for?)
• Keywords in story (best in 1st paragraph)
• Understand how people are searching
• Relevant links
70. Great for promotion, but also …
• Great for reporting
• Find story ideas
• Crowdsource
• Join the conversation (reply, retweet, ask
questions)
• FB algorithm change hurts news brands
71. • Many more users • Great for breaking
• Much info private news
• Tougher to search • Great real-time
• Not as immediate search
(less frequent • Engagement not as
updates) intrusive
• Engage, don’t • Hashtags help w/
intrude search, conversation
72. Personal vs. professional use
• Separate accounts OK but not necessary
• Always behave professionally, even on
private accounts
• Be personable on pro accounts
• Presume future bosses will see all posts
• Don’t bore pro audience
73. Options for journalists:
• Use personal FB account, all or most
public
• Journalist page
• Personal account, enable subscriptions
(decide which updates are public)
74. • Connect w/ sources (balance,
disclosure?)
• Check pages of agencies, people on beat
• Crowdsourcing (ask on their pages as
well as yours)
• Look for people in the news
• Ask for permission to use photos
75. Why use Twitter?
• It can save you time
• It extends your reach
• It’s an engaging, conversational tool
• It’s great for connecting with people who
experience stories you write about
86. Vetting tweeps, verifying info
• Check full Twitter stream, profile
• Connect on phone, in person
• Check location (not 100% reliable)
• Others verifying? Clusters, not echos
• Photos?
• Other sources, other tweeps
• Ask, “How do you know that?”
93. • Growing swiftly
• Users share (pin, re-pin) visual content
• 80% of users are women
• Heavy use for food, fashion, travel
• Embeddable
• How might you use?
94. • Effective curation of Sikh temple
shooting
• Obama answered questions
• Search at searchreddit.com
95.
96. • Do agencies on beat post photos?
• Search for keywords, photos
• Invite people to contribute photos on
news stories
• Connect w/ people posting photos
• Seek permission (check conditions)
• Give credit
97. • Do agencies, people on beat use?
• Watch for public videos getting attention
(will often see links, mentions on Twitter)
• Embed in stories, blogs
98. • “Mayor” is great source about an org or
venue (employee or customer)
• See who has checked in for event or
breaking news story
• Tips might provide questions for stories
• Break story w/ Foursquare “shout”
99. • Connect with sources
• Find new sources through
connections, groups
• Discussions help find experts
• Check updates, slides, travel
• Search by location & keyword
100. • Important for search
• Interview by video Hangouts
• Find sources
• Follow sources in Circles
• Follow beat topics in Sparks
105. Your job search is a story
• Research online. Thoroughly
• Work your connections
• Nail the face-to-face interview
• Be resourceful
• Try multiple approaches
• Never say no for someone else
106. Build your digital profile
• Google yourself. What do you find?
• Google+ profile
• LinkedIn profile
• Twitter, Facebook Timeline (movie)
• About.me, Intersect
• Blog (when did you last post?)
• Personal site (“about me” or portfolio)
107. Build your experience
• Student publications
• Internships
• Blog
• Social media
• Freelancing (stringer or one-shot)
• Part-time jobs
• Professional convention coverage
108. Network
• Connect digitally w/ people you admire
• Especially on Twitter
• #wjchat, #spjchat, #dfmchat, etc.
• Follow up (Twitter, email, handwritten)
• Comment on blogs
• IRL
110. Show, don’t tell
• Hyperlink résumé (but make sure it reads
well w/o links)
• Don’t send hard copy by U.S. mail unless
asked
• Video as part of résumé
(you, Xtranormal, Search Stories, FB
Timeline)
• Pitch through social media
• Use new tools
111. Do your reporting
• What does the job require?
• Who does similar work? What are their
strengths? What are yours?
• What strengths should you highlight?
• What are you doing to address
weaknesses?
• Research people you interview with
112. Little things are big things
• Customize your résumé
• Spell the prospective boss’s name right
• Take initiative (can you schedule your
own interview?)
• Include Twitter username on résumé
114. Follow up
• Thank interviewer(s): email, card, tweet
• Elaborate on answers (send link to story
you mentioned, etc.)
• Send link(s) to notable new work
• Send links (not just yours) they might like
• Persistence is a job skill
• Don’t overdo it
115. Read more
• @stevebuttry
• #cudigital
• stevebuttry.wordpress.com (“career
advice” category)
• Check links in today’s blog post
• slideshare.net/stevebuttry
• stephenbuttry@gmail.com
We’ll also discuss the Denver plane crash that Mike Wilson survived and how the media missed an opportunity by not using Twitter.
We’ll start with some examples of why Twitter is a valuable breaking-news tool. Most will, of course, remember that Twitpic had the first shot of the Hudson landing.