It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a media company in possession of a good fortune (an audience, brand recognition and decent revenues), must (still) be in want of innovation.
The pace of change in our industry means that even the biggest, most successful, companies need to continually innovate, refresh and reinvent what they do and how they do it. Those who don’t risk being left behind, overtaken by digital upstarts, or blown away by more established players with deeper pockets and a longer transformational runway.
I asked 10 experts — leading media practitioners, researchers and scholars around the world — for their insights around what constitutes innovation, the barriers to implementing it, and how to overcome these roadblocks.
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This report is based on a series of in-depth email interviews with ten leading media practitioners, researchers and scholars around the world.
It would not have been possible without the thoughtful and insightful contributions provided by Federica Cherubini, Professor Lucy Kueng, Joon-Nie Lau, Nic Newman, Rishad Patel, Professor Devadas Rajaram, Thomas Seymat, Professor Jane Singer, Patricia Torres-Burd and Dr. Gillian Youngs.
The report was produced as part of the Journalism Breakthroughs project, The Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS); a research center for the study of media, communication, and information policy and its impact on society and practice.
Introduction to hyper-local media, part three: issues, challenges and futureg...Damian Radcliffe
12" pack broken into three, due to file size. This is part three, which looks at the issues, challenges and opportunities for the sector. It also involves some future gazing. Comments, feedback and suggestions are very welcome.
The Impact of COVID-19 on Journalism in Emerging Economies and the Global SouthDamian Radcliffe
This report explores the untold story of how the COVID crisis has impacted on journalists – and journalism - in Emerging Economies and the Global South. It’s a story told not only through the insights of industry leaders, advocates and media experts – but critically, through the voices of the journalists themselves, too often unheard or silenced. It is the first report of its kind to bring together both fact-based data and first-hand experience with this regional focus.
Taking a deep dive into the critical challenges faced by the profession, the report examines issues including the pandemic’s impact on the personal safety and welfare of journalists, the structure of newsrooms and disruption to business models, the proliferation of fake news, and surging threats to media freedom. The study also identifies best practice and innovative approaches that have been developed as a response to the challenges of COVID-19.
Contributing alumni from TRF’s journalism training programmes span 26 countries, sharing their own experiences to illustrate the reality of journalism outside of North America and Western Europe.
First published by the Thomson Reuters Foundation on 14th January 2021 at http://covid-report.trust.org/
Public Scholarship Workshop - Tips and Tricks for AcademicsDamian Radcliffe
Workshop for Center for Latina/o and Latin American Studies at the University of Oregon on public scholarship, exploring why this matters, how you can engage in public scholarship (including areas of potential engagement) and tips for implementation.
Slides: The Impact of COVID-19 on Journalism in Emerging Economies and the Gl...Damian Radcliffe
COVID-19 is a generation-defining global crisis. But how does it affect those upon whom we depend for critical, balanced and accurate information?
My slides from the launch of the Thomson Reuters Foundation's #COVIDReport which examines how the COVID crisis has impacted on journalists – and journalism - in Emerging Economies and the Global South.
Download the study at: http://covid-report.trust.org/
An introduction to news consumption, monitoring and verification. Presentation slides from the American Press Institute's "Build a Better Journalist" conference, held at George S. Turnbull Center, University of OregonPortland
Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016. https://www.americanpressinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/OREGONbootcampagendaforprinting-1.pdf
I also walked through 10 resources for breaking news and media management: https://medium.com/@damianradcliffe/10-easy-ways-journalists-can-better-verify-monitor-and-manage-social-media-790a1b1f3ba7#.t1tww4kzv
Local Newspapers: trends and developments in the USADamian Radcliffe
Slides of keynote on US local newspapers given at the 6th International Conference of proximity media, Barcelona, 21st November 2017. http://jornades.amic.media/default.php?id=3065
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
Introduction to hyper-local media, part three: issues, challenges and futureg...Damian Radcliffe
12" pack broken into three, due to file size. This is part three, which looks at the issues, challenges and opportunities for the sector. It also involves some future gazing. Comments, feedback and suggestions are very welcome.
The Impact of COVID-19 on Journalism in Emerging Economies and the Global SouthDamian Radcliffe
This report explores the untold story of how the COVID crisis has impacted on journalists – and journalism - in Emerging Economies and the Global South. It’s a story told not only through the insights of industry leaders, advocates and media experts – but critically, through the voices of the journalists themselves, too often unheard or silenced. It is the first report of its kind to bring together both fact-based data and first-hand experience with this regional focus.
Taking a deep dive into the critical challenges faced by the profession, the report examines issues including the pandemic’s impact on the personal safety and welfare of journalists, the structure of newsrooms and disruption to business models, the proliferation of fake news, and surging threats to media freedom. The study also identifies best practice and innovative approaches that have been developed as a response to the challenges of COVID-19.
Contributing alumni from TRF’s journalism training programmes span 26 countries, sharing their own experiences to illustrate the reality of journalism outside of North America and Western Europe.
First published by the Thomson Reuters Foundation on 14th January 2021 at http://covid-report.trust.org/
Public Scholarship Workshop - Tips and Tricks for AcademicsDamian Radcliffe
Workshop for Center for Latina/o and Latin American Studies at the University of Oregon on public scholarship, exploring why this matters, how you can engage in public scholarship (including areas of potential engagement) and tips for implementation.
Slides: The Impact of COVID-19 on Journalism in Emerging Economies and the Gl...Damian Radcliffe
COVID-19 is a generation-defining global crisis. But how does it affect those upon whom we depend for critical, balanced and accurate information?
My slides from the launch of the Thomson Reuters Foundation's #COVIDReport which examines how the COVID crisis has impacted on journalists – and journalism - in Emerging Economies and the Global South.
Download the study at: http://covid-report.trust.org/
An introduction to news consumption, monitoring and verification. Presentation slides from the American Press Institute's "Build a Better Journalist" conference, held at George S. Turnbull Center, University of OregonPortland
Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016. https://www.americanpressinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/OREGONbootcampagendaforprinting-1.pdf
I also walked through 10 resources for breaking news and media management: https://medium.com/@damianradcliffe/10-easy-ways-journalists-can-better-verify-monitor-and-manage-social-media-790a1b1f3ba7#.t1tww4kzv
Local Newspapers: trends and developments in the USADamian Radcliffe
Slides of keynote on US local newspapers given at the 6th International Conference of proximity media, Barcelona, 21st November 2017. http://jornades.amic.media/default.php?id=3065
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
Emerging platforms are using an evocative form of storytelling, called long form or immersive storytelling experiences, to effectively communicate information with readers. Built specifically for digital consumption, these immersive experiences have gained prominence as a result of The New York Times’ enormously successful piece Snow Fall that covered the 2012 Tunnel Creek avalanche. The piece won a Webby award and the author John Branch won the 2013 Pulitzer for feature writing. Snow Fall was praised as “the future of journalism.” But it’s not all positive; Snow Fall garnered heavy criticism too. Read on to find out what the pattern of modern media consumption reveals about the future of journalism.
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.
Reimagining Journalism in the Age of Social MediaJD Lasica
A presentation about how journalism might be reimagined in an age when more people are embracing the precepts of social media.
Given by JD Lasica on Aug. 25, 2011, at El Mercurio in Santiago, Chile, during a 2-day symposium attended by news executives and managers from major publications in South America.
This report is the ninth in an annual series of publications, dating back to 2012, showcasing the latest developments in social media across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.
This year’s study is produced in partnership with the New Media Academy. The New Media Academy was inaugurated in June 2020, by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, UAE Vice President and Prime Minister, and ruler of Dubai, to work within the space of development, with a focus on harnessing opportunities in the digital space.
Using a broad range of industry, academic and media sources, we dive into the trends - and biggest stories - which shaped MENA’s relationship with social media during the past year. Not surprisingly, this study is heavily influenced by the impact of
COVID-19. The novel coronavirus impacted on everyone’s lives around the world, including the Middle East. One by-product of the pandemic could be seen in our changing media habits. Social media usage - across all platforms - increased during the early stages of the outbreak.
More widely, given the importance of social media in our media diets, platforms, industry and governments alike sought to use these networks to promote public health messages, as well as counter misinformation related to the COVID crisis.
Alongside these developments, we have also seen continued investment in content on social media platforms - especially during Ramadan - and growing partnerships between traditional media players and social media channels and influencers. These developments reflect the popularity of high quality digital content consumed on social media, and a desire to reach audiences on these platforms, or bring existing social
audiences onto other networks.
We expect that this synergy will only rise, not least because many media habits developed during the pandemic may well continue post-COVID. As a result, social networks will become an increasingly important source for talent spotting, as well as a
key avenue for content and information consumption.
This trend, as we outline at the end of this report, matters for brands, creators and influencers, as well as governments and other public entities. Social media is already an important part of digital media habits and digital marketing strategies. In 2021,
that importance looks set to continue and grow even further.
Journalists today are faced with an overwhelming abundance of data – from large collections of leaked documents, to public databases about lobbying or government spending, to ‘big data’ from social networks such as Twitter and Facebook. To stay relevant to society journalists are learning to process this data and separate signal from noise in order to provide valuable insights to their readers. This talk will address questions like: What is the potential of data journalism? Why is it relevant to society? And how can you get started?
Handout: Resources for Managing Misinformation (2021)Damian Radcliffe
Handout for attendees at the pre-departure orientation for Fulbright scholars and ETAs (2021-22). You can view the presentation at: 10.13140/RG.2.2.21505.17762
Middle East Digital Digest Special: Social Media in the MENA - 2012 ReviewDamian Radcliffe
A personal take on the story of social media in the Middle East in the past year. In 20 slides... Also available at: http://www.slideshare.net/ictQATAR/digital-digest-special-social-media-in-the-mena-2012-review
Parsons | MS in Strategic Design & Management
Design Innovation and Leadership: An innovation report to help The New York Times meet the challenges of, and thrive in the digital age.
Emerging platforms are using an evocative form of storytelling, called long form or immersive storytelling experiences, to effectively communicate information with readers. Built specifically for digital consumption, these immersive experiences have gained prominence as a result of The New York Times’ enormously successful piece Snow Fall that covered the 2012 Tunnel Creek avalanche. The piece won a Webby award and the author John Branch won the 2013 Pulitzer for feature writing. Snow Fall was praised as “the future of journalism.” But it’s not all positive; Snow Fall garnered heavy criticism too. Read on to find out what the pattern of modern media consumption reveals about the future of journalism.
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.
Reimagining Journalism in the Age of Social MediaJD Lasica
A presentation about how journalism might be reimagined in an age when more people are embracing the precepts of social media.
Given by JD Lasica on Aug. 25, 2011, at El Mercurio in Santiago, Chile, during a 2-day symposium attended by news executives and managers from major publications in South America.
This report is the ninth in an annual series of publications, dating back to 2012, showcasing the latest developments in social media across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.
This year’s study is produced in partnership with the New Media Academy. The New Media Academy was inaugurated in June 2020, by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, UAE Vice President and Prime Minister, and ruler of Dubai, to work within the space of development, with a focus on harnessing opportunities in the digital space.
Using a broad range of industry, academic and media sources, we dive into the trends - and biggest stories - which shaped MENA’s relationship with social media during the past year. Not surprisingly, this study is heavily influenced by the impact of
COVID-19. The novel coronavirus impacted on everyone’s lives around the world, including the Middle East. One by-product of the pandemic could be seen in our changing media habits. Social media usage - across all platforms - increased during the early stages of the outbreak.
More widely, given the importance of social media in our media diets, platforms, industry and governments alike sought to use these networks to promote public health messages, as well as counter misinformation related to the COVID crisis.
Alongside these developments, we have also seen continued investment in content on social media platforms - especially during Ramadan - and growing partnerships between traditional media players and social media channels and influencers. These developments reflect the popularity of high quality digital content consumed on social media, and a desire to reach audiences on these platforms, or bring existing social
audiences onto other networks.
We expect that this synergy will only rise, not least because many media habits developed during the pandemic may well continue post-COVID. As a result, social networks will become an increasingly important source for talent spotting, as well as a
key avenue for content and information consumption.
This trend, as we outline at the end of this report, matters for brands, creators and influencers, as well as governments and other public entities. Social media is already an important part of digital media habits and digital marketing strategies. In 2021,
that importance looks set to continue and grow even further.
Journalists today are faced with an overwhelming abundance of data – from large collections of leaked documents, to public databases about lobbying or government spending, to ‘big data’ from social networks such as Twitter and Facebook. To stay relevant to society journalists are learning to process this data and separate signal from noise in order to provide valuable insights to their readers. This talk will address questions like: What is the potential of data journalism? Why is it relevant to society? And how can you get started?
Handout: Resources for Managing Misinformation (2021)Damian Radcliffe
Handout for attendees at the pre-departure orientation for Fulbright scholars and ETAs (2021-22). You can view the presentation at: 10.13140/RG.2.2.21505.17762
Middle East Digital Digest Special: Social Media in the MENA - 2012 ReviewDamian Radcliffe
A personal take on the story of social media in the Middle East in the past year. In 20 slides... Also available at: http://www.slideshare.net/ictQATAR/digital-digest-special-social-media-in-the-mena-2012-review
Parsons | MS in Strategic Design & Management
Design Innovation and Leadership: An innovation report to help The New York Times meet the challenges of, and thrive in the digital age.
Journalism in an Age of Big Data: What It Is, Why It Matters and Where to StartLiliana Bounegru
Invited lecture and workshop at the European University Institute Boot Camp for Journalists: Tools for Better Reporting, Florence, Italy, 10 June 2014.
Digital Immersion: What's Next for Social Media MarketingAndy Hunter
Social Media Evolution. An Open Thinking Exchange long form, digital immerson report on the state of social media for marketers.
Report curated and written with Graham Saxton, Ipsos Open Thinking Exchange - Global Insights..
From the Ipsos The Open Thinking Exchange, the innovation center of Ipsos, an independent company which ranks fifth among global research firms. Our mission: to challenge convention, take risks and use our collective intelligence in the service of our clients to foster innovation.
Similar to Understanding and Implementing Innovation in News Media and Journalism (20)
Moving Beyond Twitter/X and Facebook - Social Media for local news providersDamian Radcliffe
Slides from a workshop exploring "Moving Beyond Twitter/X and Facebook - Social Media for local news providers"
This presentation outlines social media habits in the US (and globally) and offers suggestions for how local newsrooms can tap into them.
The presentation features key data, user case studies and recommendations for new things to try out.
The presentation was part of the New York Press Association's 2024 spring conference.
https://nynewspapers.com/2024-nypa-spring-conference/
Slides from a workshop exploring "How is AI changing journalism?"
This presentation outlines how newsrooms have been using artificial intelligence (AI) for some time, and how the emergence of Generative AI is accelerating this usage. The presentation outlines use cases, key steps for implementation and some emerging areas and issues to keep an eye on.
The presentation was part of the New York Press Association's 2024 spring conference.
https://nynewspapers.com/2024-nypa-spring-conference/
Lessons from Community-Centered Journalism for Local Journalism ResearchDamian Radcliffe
Slides presented by Regina Lawrence - based on our research - at the 2024 Local Journalism Researchers’ Workshop, March 25-26, 2024 at Duke University. The presentation outlines key points from our research, including: why Community-Centered Journalism matters, the backdrop that it plays out against, and five key challenges for growing this journalistic practice.
After the sobering read seen in our 2022-23 report, this year’s World Press Trends study strikes a more cautiously optimistic note, with more than half of the respondents conveying a positive outlook about their companies’ business prospects for the foreseeable future.
This is despite publishers grappling with challenges on various fronts, including elevated inflation and interest rates, surging paper and printing expenses, continual shifts within advertising markets and audience behaviours, as well as wider geopolitical uncertainty reflected in conflicts in Ukraine, the Middle East and elsewhere.
Meanwhile, wider strategic challenges such as the surge of Generative AI, changing relationships with platforms and continued challenges to press freedom and freedom of expression, also continue to vex many journalists and publishers.
In response, news publishers are inevitably looking closely at their revenue strategy, investment priorities, areas of focus, cost management, and their stance on areas such as AI and other technologies. We delve into these themes extensively within this report.
This report is primarily based on the findings of an online survey distributed to WAN-IFRA members and other senior media executives between July and September 2023, and was available in four languages (English, French, Spanish and German).
Survey participants were typically members of the senior team at a newspaper or a newspaper group. Based on the information provided by our respondents, a third (66%) are C-Suite (CEOs, Publishers, Managing Directors). A further third is either a Commercial Director/Heads of Strategy or Executive Editor.
We received 175 complete responses from 60 nations around the world. Using classifications developed by the World Bank, 58% of respondents come from developed economies and 42% from developing economies. Our sample also features a wide range of different countries with respondents coming from countries as diverse as Argentina, Canada, Russia, and Indonesia. They also came from some of the world’s largest media markets, including Germany, India, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
Through the data and insights that they provided, we are able to comprehend the attitudes of today’s industry leaders in a variety of business and editorial roles. Their observations, regarding the sector’s present and future, can be seen throughout this report.
As ever, we want to express our appreciation to everyone who participated in this annual survey. This report would not be possible without their contributions.
A huge thank you to all of our contributors: Damian Radcliffe, Dr. Francois Nel, and Teemu Henriksson. Last but not least, this report would not be possible without the support of our partner, Stibo DX.
Full CV/Resume as of March 2023, listing my previous experience, research and journalistic output, media mentions, speaking engagements and events/conferences that I have organized. (Produced for an academic audience, hence the length!)
Redefining News: A Manifesto for Community-Centered JournalismDamian Radcliffe
This forward-thinking report makes the case for embracing a more inclusive, community-focused model of journalism, one that prioritizes listening to and collaborating with communities to produce relevant, equitable and impactful news and storytelling. The report features an actionable framework to put the principles of Community-Centered Journalism into practice and explains how this approach differs from traditional models of journalism, with potential benefits including rebuilding trust, tackling inequities, and fostering civic engagement.
Building a Stronger Local Media Ecosystem: The Role of Media PolicyDamian Radcliffe
This paper plays out against a backdrop of continued closures and diminished local news reporting across much of the United States. It explores the role that media policy can and should play in supporting local journalism.
In examining this topic, we investigate three fundamental questions:
What is local media policy?
What are the key existential issues and/or problems local media policy must wrestle with?
What potential solutions to the local news crisis can media policy potentially help address?
The core of our response to these questions is derived from a series of five public webinars hosted by the Tow Center. Through these events, we invited a range of industry and academic experts to share their perspectives on areas related to these major themes.
Our conversations explored the scope of media policy, barriers to implementation, opportunities for policy to make a difference, and some of the unique characteristics that shape U.S. media policy and attitudes toward potential policy interventions.
To this, we have added further context and updates on some of the latest policy developments, based on a literature review and our continued interest in this subject.
The latest World Press Trends report shows that business sentiment in the industry has taken a downturn, in a context where multiple challenges face news publishers around the world. Yet there are causes for optimism, as revenue diversification progresses and publishers double down on new revenue sources and editorial products.
This year’s World Press Trends study makes for a sobering read after the optimism of our previous report. The mood in the industry has changed, and publishers find themselves in a more unpredictable business environment due to a number of challenges, including high levels of inflation, rising paper and print costs, as well as ongoing changes to advertising markets.
The change in business sentiment is one of the main findings of the new World Press Trends Outlook report. As in the previous years, the analysis is based on an online survey distributed to industry leaders. 167 news executives from 62 countries took part in the survey in Fall 2022 – a big thank you to them for sharing their insights, results and strategies.
WAN-IFRA also works with PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and Zenith for key performance indicators (global revenues and circulation). For audience insights, we work with analytics specialist Chartbeat. World Press Trends is supported by Protecmedia, the content management provider.
Damian Radcliffe, longtime industry analyst, journalist and academic, authored most of the report, offering his analysis and context to the survey and emerging trends. Dr. Francois Nel, also a longtime analyst, well-known academic within our industry and longtime contributor to WPT, provided his analysis, contribution and data analysis of all our collected data. WAN-IFRA’s Andrew Heslop shared his analysis on our Press Freedom data, and WAN-IFRA’s Teemu Henriksson helped to coordinate the project along with Dean Roper.
Here is what makes up the core of the report:
Executive Summary
Methodology and Profile of Respondents
Chapter 1: Global snapshot of performance indicators
Chapter 2: Business Outlook
- Tougher times ahead
- Priming the profit pump
- Relationships with Platforms
- Digital Transformation
Chapter 3: Revenues
- Back in black
- Print’s continued importance
- Revenue diversification in practice
- A bumpier revenue road in 2023
- Ad advice Publishers, it’s all about controlling what you can control
Chapter 4: Investment and Expenditure
- Investing in Revenues
-Tech spending
- AI and publishers
- Costs and Outgoings
Report partner: How AI and automation solutions can impact newsrooms
Chapter 5: Media Freedom
Social Media in the Middle East 2022: A Year in ReviewDamian Radcliffe
Welcome to the latest annual study on Middle East Social Media Trends. This report, the eleventh in a series dating back to 2012, provides an in-depth analysis of the current state of social media in the Middle East. As the most comprehensive and up-to-date study of its kind, it is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in the region's digital landscape.
In this report, we examine the most popular social media platforms and the ways in which people are using them. We explore the impact of social media on politics, business and culture in the region. Our findings will be of interest to anyone interested in how social media shapes the way we connect with one another, as well as the ways in which we consume and find information. These trends are relevant to marketers, journalists, brands and businesses, as well as government agencies and public bodies.
Over the past decade, the Middle East has seen a significant increase in social media adoption. Today, it boasts some of the highest penetration rates of social media in the world, making it a key market for platforms and businesses looking to engage with Arab audiences.
From staying in touch with friends and family to consuming news and entertainment, social media - as it is around the world - is an integral part of daily life in the region. Social media is also playing an increasingly important role in politics, with many politicians and activists using the platforms to connect with the public and mobilize support for their policies.
Damian Radcliffe is a journalist, researcher, and professor based at the University of Oregon.
He holds an endowed chair as the Carolyn S. Chambers Professor in Journalism, and he is also a Professor of Practice, an affiliate faculty member of the Department for Middle East and North Africa Studies (MENA) and the Agora Journalism Center, and a Research Associate of the Center for Science Communication Research (SCR).
Damian is also a three time Knight News Innovation Fellow at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University, an Honorary Research Fellow at Cardiff University’s School of Journalism, Media and Culture Studies (JOMEC), and a life fellow of the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA).
In spring 2023 he will be a Visiting Fellow at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, his alma matter.
With over 25 years of experience in the media industry, Damian has worked in editorial, strategic, research, policy and teaching roles in the USA, Middle East and UK. He continues to be an active journalist, writing regular features for leading trade publications such as Digital Content Next, International Journalists' Network (IJNet), What's New in Publishing, journalism.co.uk and other outlets.
He is a globally recognized expert on digital trends, social media, technology, the business of media, the evolution of present-day journalistic practice and the role played by media and technology in the Middle East.
As an analyst, researcher and trainer, he has worked with a wide range of industry and academic organizations including the BBC World Service, Facebook, FIPP, INMA, Thomson Reuters Foundation, World Association of News Publishers (WAN-IFRA) and the United Nations.
He has been quoted on issues relating to digital media and journalism by major outlets such as AFP, BBC, Business Insider, Editor & Publisher, NPR, The New York Times, Snapchat, Wired and Voice of America.
As a freelance journalist his work has also been published by leading publications and trade outlets such as the BBC, Columbia Journalism Review (CJR), Harvard’s Nieman Lab, HuffPost, PBS MediaShift, Poynter, TheMediaBriefing and ZDNet.
Originally from the UK, Damian lives on the west coast of the US with his wife and three young children.
The Most Popular Social Media Accounts in the Middle East (H1 2022)Damian Radcliffe
For the first time, this report brings together the most popular accounts originating in MENA on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter.
Each of these platforms is explored in more detail in this report, but below we outline the account with the largest number of followers, likes and subscribers, across MENA as well as the region's four biggest markets: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.
The report was made by possible by support from the New Media Academy and data from Emplifi. My thanks to them both.
From the Ground Up: How Community-Centered Journalism can Help Create a More ...Damian Radcliffe
A look at some of the key themes and ideas from an upcoming report on Community-Centered Journalism, commissioned by the Agora Journalism Center. Presented at a local journalism researchers workshop hosted at the University of North Carolina, in Chapel Hill, on Feb 19th 2023.
Mental Health and Digital Safety Tips for Journalists.pptxDamian Radcliffe
Tips and recommendations for my Social Media for Journalists class (Fall 2022) at the University of Oregon. The deck includes tips for digital safety, self-care and mental well-being, as well as managing digital overload. It features links to resources and materials from DART, CPJ, Poynter and others.
This edition of WAN-IFRA’s annual flagship research and report reveals an industry challenged but optimistic about its business. It examines the results of publishers’ business in 2021, their forecasts for 2022 and beyond, and the trends and issues shaping the industry.
Our research shows news publishers feel confident about tackling the ongoing coronavirus crisis, and that some of their early pandemic-era pivots are beginning to pay dividends. However, publishers still need to navigate considerable transformation and turmoil, even if there are signs of a resurgence in global advertising markets and a maturing of many reader revenue strategies. The invasion of Ukraine has further undermined companies’ plans, as how that conflict will unfold can have long-lasting effects on industries across the board, in addition to the humanitarian crisis it is causing.
As in the previous years, the World Press Trends Outlook analysis is based on an online survey distributed to industry leaders. 162 news executives from 58 countries took part in the survey in Fall 2021 – a big thank you to them for sharing their insights, results and strategies.
In addition, WAN-IFRA works with PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and ZenithOptimedia for key performance indicators (revenue, circulation and ad spend). For additional audience insights, we work with analytics specialist Chartbeat.
World Press Trends is supported by Protecmedia, the content management provider.
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Per the report intro (page 4): "Damian Radcliffe, longtime industry analyst, journalist and academic, authored most of the report for the first time, offering his analysis and context to the survey and emerging trends. Dr. Francois Nel, also a longtime analyst, well-known academic within our industry and contributor to WPT, provided his analysis, contribution and data analysis of all our collected data. WAN-IFRA's Teemu Henriksson helped to coordinate the project along with Dean Roper."
Bridging the Digital Gap Brad Spiegel Macon, GA Initiative.pptxBrad Spiegel Macon GA
Brad Spiegel Macon GA’s journey exemplifies the profound impact that one individual can have on their community. Through his unwavering dedication to digital inclusion, he’s not only bridging the gap in Macon but also setting an example for others to follow.
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
# Internet Security: Safeguarding Your Digital World
In the contemporary digital age, the internet is a cornerstone of our daily lives. It connects us to vast amounts of information, provides platforms for communication, enables commerce, and offers endless entertainment. However, with these conveniences come significant security challenges. Internet security is essential to protect our digital identities, sensitive data, and overall online experience. This comprehensive guide explores the multifaceted world of internet security, providing insights into its importance, common threats, and effective strategies to safeguard your digital world.
## Understanding Internet Security
Internet security encompasses the measures and protocols used to protect information, devices, and networks from unauthorized access, attacks, and damage. It involves a wide range of practices designed to safeguard data confidentiality, integrity, and availability. Effective internet security is crucial for individuals, businesses, and governments alike, as cyber threats continue to evolve in complexity and scale.
### Key Components of Internet Security
1. **Confidentiality**: Ensuring that information is accessible only to those authorized to access it.
2. **Integrity**: Protecting information from being altered or tampered with by unauthorized parties.
3. **Availability**: Ensuring that authorized users have reliable access to information and resources when needed.
## Common Internet Security Threats
Cyber threats are numerous and constantly evolving. Understanding these threats is the first step in protecting against them. Some of the most common internet security threats include:
### Malware
Malware, or malicious software, is designed to harm, exploit, or otherwise compromise a device, network, or service. Common types of malware include:
- **Viruses**: Programs that attach themselves to legitimate software and replicate, spreading to other programs and files.
- **Worms**: Standalone malware that replicates itself to spread to other computers.
- **Trojan Horses**: Malicious software disguised as legitimate software.
- **Ransomware**: Malware that encrypts a user's files and demands a ransom for the decryption key.
- **Spyware**: Software that secretly monitors and collects user information.
### Phishing
Phishing is a social engineering attack that aims to steal sensitive information such as usernames, passwords, and credit card details. Attackers often masquerade as trusted entities in email or other communication channels, tricking victims into providing their information.
### Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) Attacks
MitM attacks occur when an attacker intercepts and potentially alters communication between two parties without their knowledge. This can lead to the unauthorized acquisition of sensitive information.
### Denial-of-Service (DoS) and Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) Attacks
1.Wireless Communication System_Wireless communication is a broad term that i...JeyaPerumal1
Wireless communication involves the transmission of information over a distance without the help of wires, cables or any other forms of electrical conductors.
Wireless communication is a broad term that incorporates all procedures and forms of connecting and communicating between two or more devices using a wireless signal through wireless communication technologies and devices.
Features of Wireless Communication
The evolution of wireless technology has brought many advancements with its effective features.
The transmitted distance can be anywhere between a few meters (for example, a television's remote control) and thousands of kilometers (for example, radio communication).
Wireless communication can be used for cellular telephony, wireless access to the internet, wireless home networking, and so on.
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ABOUT CMDS
The Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS) is a research center for the study of media,
communication, and information policy and its impact on society and practice.
Founded in 2004 as the Center for Media and Communication Studies, CMDS is part of Central
European University’s Democracy Institute and serves as a focal point for an international network of
acclaimed scholars, research institutions and activists.
ABOUT THE PROJECT
The Journalism Breakthroughs project aims at methodically collecting data and information about
innovation in journalism and improving the ways (formats, channels and frequency) in which it
packages and disseminates this content for broader consumption.
This project is strategically important for CMDS as knowledge sharing is one of the center’s three
main lines of work (research and policy analysis being the other two). By knowledge sharing we mean
a complex set of activities all aimed at making knowledge generated by research available to
interested parties as well as the general public.
The project is funded by the Open Society Foundations (OSF).
ABOUT THIS REPORT
This report began as a three-part series on Medium exploring innovation practices in media.
A key goal for the series was to discuss innovation – what it is, the barriers to its implementation and
examples of innovation in practice. The three articles are collated here, in one place, for the first time.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This report is based on a series of in-depth email interviews with ten leading media practitioners,
researchers and scholars around the world.
It would not have been possible without the thoughtful and insightful contributions provided by
Federica Cherubini, Professor Lucy Kueng, Joon-Nie Lau, Nic Newman, Rishad Patel, Professor
Devadas Rajaram, Thomas Seymat, Professor Jane Singer, Patricia Torres-Burd and Dr. Gillian
Youngs.
I remain heavily indebted, and grateful, for their willingness to share their ideas and thoughts on this
topic, the depth of responses they provided, and their willingness to do all of this at short notice.
Alongside this, my further thanks to Dumitrita Holdis at CMDS for commissioning the series, being
flexible with deadlines, and allowing me to take this work in a slightly different direction than initially
envisaged, as a result of the expert insights that the email interviews gleaned. Thank you one and all!
3. 3
About the Author
Damian Radcliffe is the Carolyn S. Chambers Professor in Journalism, a Professor of Practice, an
affiliate faculty member of the Department for Middle East and North Africa Studies (MENA) and the
Agora Journalism Center, and a Research Associate of the Center for Science Communication
Research (SCR), at the University of Oregon.
He is also a Fellow of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University, an Honorary
Research Fellow at Cardiff University’s School of Journalism, Media and Culture Studies (JOMEC),
and a life fellow of the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce
(RSA).
An experienced digital analyst, consultant, journalist, and researcher, Damian has worked in editorial,
research, policy, and teaching positions for the past two and a half decades in the UK, Middle East
and USA. This includes roles in all media sectors (commercial, public, government, regulatory,
academic, and nonprofit/civil society) and all platforms (print, digital, TV and radio).
Damian continues to be an active journalist, writing monthly columns for ZDNet (Red Ventures) and the
Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI) at the University of Missouri. He also writes regular
features for the International Journalists' Network (IJNet), What's New in Publishing, journalism.co.uk
and other outlets. His work has been republished by publishers such as AP, Fast Company, MSN,
Salon, Scroll.in and Yahoo!.
Other bylines and research work can be found in publications such as the BBC College of Journalism /
Academy (35 bylines), The Conversation (10 bylines), Digital Content Next (6 bylines), Huffington Post
(12 bylines), IJNet (20 bylines) journalism.co.uk (23 bylines), and the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Prior to their closure he also wrote for PBS MediaShift (14 bylines) TheMediaBriefing (35 bylines)
and Your Middle East (13 bylines). His work can also be read in Columbia Journalism Review (CJR),
Harvard's Nieman Lab, and Poynter.
Damian’s research, teaching and public scholarship focus on
digital trends, social media, technology, the business of media,
and the evolution - and practice - of journalism.
He has spoken about these topics at events hosted by a diverse
range of organizations including the BBC, Broadcasting Board of
Governors, Facebook, Foreign Press Association, FIPP, IBC, LION
Publishers, numerous state press associations, the National
Governors Association, World Association of Newspapers
(WAN-IFRA) and the United Nations.
Alongside this, he has been interviewed by outlets such as AFP, Arab News, Editor & Publisher, ESPN,
Index on Censorship, Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN), NPR and Wired, and been
quoted by the likes of the American Press Institute, BBC News, CJR, Forbes, The Idea (Atlantic Media),
MediaPost, Monocle, The National (UAE), Poynter, Times of Oman, the World Bank and others.
Find out more: www.damianradcliffe.com and follow him on Twitter @damianradcliffe.
4. 4
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1: What do we mean by innovation? (And why is so hard for news organizations to implement?) 5
“I know it when I see it.” Spotting innovation - and its characteristics - in the wild. 5
Principle No 1: The innovation process and mindset 6
Principle No 2: It’s not always sexy 6
Principle No 3: You should start with the end in mind 7
Implementation: Five Key Barriers to Overcome 8
1. Innovation for the sake of it 8
2. Organizational preparedness 9
3. Risk aversion 9
4. Resource challenges 10
5. Thinking innovation is all about the tech 11
Chapter 2: Making it Happen: 12 ways to overcome common innovation roadblocks 12
1. Define what problem — or problems — you’re trying to resolve 13
2. Reframe your mindset to be more audience-led 13
3. Measure the right things 13
4. Provide effective and clear leadership 14
5. Look beyond the C-Suite 15
6. Commit for the long-term 15
7. Trust — and invest in — the process 16
8. Acknowledge fear, risk and uncertainty 16
9. Bring people with you 17
10. Empower managers, cut the detractors loose 17
11. Let go of the past 18
12. Understand that change is the only constant 19
Chapter 3: Innovation in Practice – five core ideas seen at successful media companies around the world 20
Theme 1: Business Model Innovation 20
Principle 1: The Value of Niche 20
Principle 2: Going Against the Grain 22
Theme 2: Cultural Innovation 23
Principle 3: Investing in — and Creating — Community 23
Principle 4: Collaboration 24
Principle 5: Transparency and an Open Innovation Culture 25
Theme 3: Audience-first Innovation 26
Principle 6: Products Designed to Meet user Needs 26
Theme 4: Content and Tech-led Innovation 27
Principle 7: Embracing New Formats and Products 27
Principle 8: New Tech 28
Theme 5: Changing Editorial Culture 28
Principle 9: Leadership Matters 28
Final Thoughts 30
METHODOLOGY AND LIST OF INTERVIEWEES 31
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Chapter 1: What do we mean by innovation? (And why
is so hard for news organizations to implement?)
Photo by Kvalifik on Unsplash
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a media company in possession of a good fortune (an
audience, brand recognition and decent revenues), must (still) be in want of innovation.
The pace of change in our industry means that even the biggest, most successful, companies need to
continually innovate, refresh and reinvent what they do and how they do it. Those who don’t risk being
left behind, overtaken by digital upstarts, or blown away by more established players with deeper
pockets and a longer transformational runway.
I asked 10 experts — leading media practitioners, researchers and scholars around the world — for
their insights around what constitutes innovation, the barriers to implementing it, and how to overcome
these roadblocks.
Here’s what they had to say:
“I know it when I see it.” Spotting innovation - and its characteristics - in
the wild.
“It is such a difficult concept,” admits Nic Newman, Senior Research Associate at the Reuters Institute
for the Study of Journalism (RISJ). Newman, like others such as Joon-Nie Lau, Director, Asia, WAN-
IFRA (The World Association of News Publishers), highlighted the myriad of areas and activities that
can be captured under an innovation umbrella.
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This includes innovation in the way journalism is gathered (routines, methodologies, workflows and
processes), the way it is packaged (workflow, products and formats), as well as distributed and
monetized (platforms, services and products once more).
Principle No 1: The innovation process and mindset
In doing this, “innovation could be a new solution to an old problem or a new approach to a new
problem,” explains Federica Cherubini, Head of Leadership Development at RISJ. “It could be about
technology of course, but more broadly it’s about process and ways of doing things,” Cherubini
suggests.
Dr. Jane Singer, Professor of Journalism Innovation at City University in London, concurs, noting how “in
existing news organizations, it [innovation] generally requires a cultural shift, going well beyond the
integration of some new technology or tool.”
This is an approach that chimes
with Devadas Rajaram, a Professor
at the Asian College of Journalism
in Chennai, India.
“Innovation in media for me is a
mindset — not an architectural
thing,” he says.
“It’s a total revamp of [our]
approach to doing journalism and
redefining it.”
Photo by Alex Knight on Unsplash
For Rajaram, and others, integral to this mindset is the need to be user-centric. That can manifest itself
in many ways, from storytelling formats to methods of content delivery, but at its heart, Rajaram
argues “should be a complete overhaul of our relationship with the user.”
It’s an end goal that Patricia Torres-Burd, Managing Director, Media Services Advisory Services, MDIF
(Media Development Investment Fund) agrees with. “Decades ago, an all-news radio station in the US
— had a tag line that I loved then and still believe is relevant. It was ‘KTRH — News You Can Use’.
Thinking about your readers needs first and foremost is critical,” Torres-Burd says.
The rationale for being audience-led is simple. As Torres-Burd puts it, “audiences are bombarded
with so many choices (not all great) and the competition is fierce.”
Principle No 2: It’s not always sexy
There’s a risk that efforts to innovate focus on big, bold and sometimes seemingly brash changes and
alterations. A rash of new products. An eye-catching redesign. An expensive new CMS. New hires
whose appointments make a big splash in the trade press, as well as the newsroom.
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The reality, however, can (and perhaps even should) be more mundane.
As Jane Singer observes: “Innovation can encompass new ways of doing something that’s already
being done, as well as doing something that is itself new.”
Nic Newman stresses the role
“of innovation within existing
rules.”
That might mean “making
existing things a bit better
often with the use of data
e.g. iterating and improving
an email,” or “creating
something completely new”
that helps to usher in “the
next great leap forward.”
Photo by Danielle
MacInnes on Unsplash
For Newman that magic leap could constitute “a completely new tech framework like responsive
design or voice interfaces and the content.”
Building on this, Thomas Seymat, Editorial Projects and Development Manager at Euronews, and an
Adjunct Professor of Journalism at Paris’ Centre de Formation des Journalistes and Sciences Po Lyon,
posits that “building a new CMS — because of all the technological and operational changes it entails
— is perhaps the most innovative and transformative innovation of all.”
Principle No 3: You should start with the end in mind
Either way, it’s important that innovation is “grounded in analyzing a situation (or a problem) and
finding the best way to solve it or improve it,” recommends Federica Cherubini.
“We can think of innovative ways of approaching how to engage with your audiences, or how to
automate a task that takes too much human time but could be done very well by AI and technology, or
how to tell a story in a way that meets your audience’s needs and consumption habits, or how to
implement a new business model that is sustainable and in line with the organization’s needs and
structure.”
“The news media industry has been through constant evolution, transformation, and adaption for the
last decade (or more!),” Cherubini reminds us, “and all of these examples are about… being able to
find the right way to produce and deliver journalism in line with those challenges and opportunities.”
8. 8
Photo by Ross Findon on Unsplash
Implementation: Five Key Barriers to Overcome
“Barriers to strategic change are as much about mindsets and established working practices and
structures as they are about forms of expertise that need to be introduced into the innovation mix,”
says Dr. Gillian Youngs, a strategist, innovation and ecosystem expert, who has worked across the
creative, digital and academic sectors.
The aim of innovation-focused work, “is to ensure that areas such as values, accuracy, different forms
of interconnected content and audience engagement can be extensively explored in the context of
technological possibilities,” she says, “with the appetite for experimentation high on the agenda.”
That said, despite their best intentions, the appetite for experimentation can — sometimes for often
understandable reasons — be mixed, or its efforts muted. Similarly, the implementation of initiatives
focused on innovation can also be stymied by a combination of structural and cultural considerations.
Understanding why this happens is important, not least so that leaders and organizations can seek to
avoid these pitfalls and potentially put strategies into place that might help to mitigate them.
With that in mind, here are five of the most common factors that news and media organizations
need to navigate and be cognizant of.
1. Innovation for the sake of it
Media’s obsession with “the next big thing,” or the ‘‘Shiny Things Syndrome’, a term coined by Kim Bui,
the Director of Product and Audience Innovation at the Arizona Republic, can be all too real.
Companies need to avoid “quickly jump[ing] on the bandwagon because others are doing it,” cautions
Patricia Torres-Burd at MDIF (Media Development Investment Fund). That’s “not a great reason,” for
doing something she adds.
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2. Organizational preparedness
“Yes you want to be competitive,” Torres-Burd says, but organizations need to ask if specific efforts
to innovate fit with your mission, and if your newsrooms — and your audience — are ready for them.
This is a sentiment Rishad Patel, the co-founder of Splice Media in Singapore agrees with.
“I think the biggest obstacle to any sort of strategic change around managing media is our
unwillingness to ask our audiences what they need,” he says, advocating that having then listened to
their audience, it’s incumbent on outlets to change accordingly.
As it’s stands, Patel clearly feels that many organizations have a long way to go in this regard.
“Far too many of the processes, tools, workflows, and mindsets we have used
in traditional media organizations, from newsgathering, creation,
processing, and amplification to distribution, sales, and marketing are
calcified and codified in structures and hierarchies from decades ago that
were created for advertising and a capital-heavy, gatekeeper-controlled
marketplace.”
Photo by Brooke Lark on Unsplash
3. Risk aversion
Overcoming traditional working practices can be difficult when many organizations are quite
conservative and risk-averse; sentiments that may have only have been exacerbated by the
uncertainties of the COVID-era.
10. 10
“Taking chances and committing to changes in a
risk-averse, resource-scarce environment — or
even a contracting one like journalism today —
can be particularly challenging,” says Thomas
Seymat at Euronews.
Together with this, Jane Singer reflects, “the
contemporary environment of intense public
scrutiny and, in many quarters, radical mistrust of
the media,” does not help. “Fear of missteps that
might explode disastrously can and does inhibit
risk-taking.”
At the same time, although these are legitimate
barriers to innovation and doing things
differently, the economic reality of our industry
— and the competition for eyeballs, attention
and revenue — makes innovation a necessity.
Standing still is a luxury few (if any) can afford.
For some, like Devadas Rajaram, “the biggest
barrier is the old-school mindset in management.”
Photo by Sammie Chaffin on Unsplash
Rajaram sees “fears and reluctance to change things,” coupled with a “refusal to learn, upskill and
encourage new ideas,” as endemic among some industry leaders.
“We can overcome these barriers only by persevering and encouraging student journalists and young
journalists to explore new methods and open up their minds to new opportunities that are there,” he
adds.
4. Resource challenges
Nevertheless, even those with a will — and desire — to change, can still struggle.
“Keeping up with global industry media trends and your local / regional / national competitive
market takes time and money,” notes MDIF’s Patricia Torres-Burd, adding how for many outlets “scale
is critical for survival,” an economic reality that may influence what your new product offers will be.
At the same time, “when you are struggling to keep the ‘wheels on the bus’ and the bills paid as a
leader, finding time to come up with strategic plans is hard to do,” Torres-Burd says.
“An additional challenge for media outlets, of course, is that any change has to happen alongside
constant attention to the existing product(s),” Jane Singer reminds us. And, lest we forget, the news
industry is “a notoriously voracious and crisis-prone beast that demands full-on time and energy from
all involved.”
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5. Thinking innovation is all about the tech
A further consideration for organizations is their own definition of innovation and the technological
lens through which is all too often viewed.
“Technology isn’t always the big disruptor we think it is,” suggests Rishad Patel, co-founder, Splice
Media. “It certainly helps, but the disruption we need for media doesn’t come from a very sexy place
at all; it comes from asking people — our users, audiences, and customers — what they need, and
translating those needs into actual solutions.”
“Perhaps it’s time we realized that media, or journalism, is a service industry,” Patel advocates.
“If our practice or content is not solving a problem for a community, or at
least addressing a real need, it’s probably time to do something else.”
Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash
12. 12
Chapter 2: Making it Happen: 12 ways to overcome
common innovation roadblocks
Photo by Osman Rana on Unsplash
“The bad news is that there’s a pretty low bar for innovation in journalism and media,” says Rishad
Patel, co-founder of Splice Media in Singapore. “The good news is that there’s a pretty low bar for
innovation in journalism and media.”
Nevertheless, despite this perceived low bar, addressing issues of innovation — and its
implementation — is not easy.
“These are important questions… [and] very hard to give a brief answer to,” says Dr. Lucy
Kueng who as Professor of Media Innovation (University of Oslo) and the Google Digital News Senior
Fellow at Reuters Institute, Oxford, has written extensively on strategy, innovation and leadership with
particular emphasis on managing technology shifts.
“I think the industry has a systematic problem with innovation — too much with too little focus,” Keung
told me in email correspondence. ”Innovation needs to be embedded in a smart and strategic
process, and then setting up the process to match the outcomes needed,” she says.
With that in mind, here are twelve strategic considerations which need to be factored into the
processes — and outcomes — that companies looking to innovate need to consider.
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1. Define what problem — or problems — you’re trying to resolve
“Innovation per se does not lead to growth,” Lucy Kueng reminds us, “and more innovation is not
necessarily better, especially if it’s not wrapped in a strategy.”
“Innovation can ironically lead to fragmented attention, resource stretch, complexity and lack of focus.
The answer is clarifying at the start what kind of innovation is needed, and why,” she adds.
2. Reframe your mindset to be more audience-led
For Rishad Patel, one major driver that he doesn’t see often enough are efforts that are externally
focused, with media outlets innovating with the goal of seeking to solve the problems faced by
audiences.
“We don’t see enough of that in the way we run our media organizations,” he adds. “True innovation
in media comes from that value exchange: by serving our audiences with anything at our disposal that
allows them to make better decisions and live better lives.”
“All of that takes a lot of conversation — actual conversations with the actual people we produce our
content and media and journalism for, and an ability to listen with real empathy,” he advises.
Photo by Leon on Unsplash
3. Measure the right things
Once you’ve identified the problems you wish to solve, and put steps in place to address them, then “a
great metrics framework to help show whether innovations are working or not,” is essential says Nic
Newman, Senior Research Associate at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (RISJ).
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One potential challenge to
address here, Newman
observes, is to ensure that
everyone is speaking the same
language, especially where
innovations involve a mix of
tech, editorial and commercial
staff.
Given that these diverse roles
may express themselves —
and understand their roles and
what success looks like — very
differently, it’s essential that
they are all on the same
page.
Photo by Luke Chesser on Unsplash
4. Provide effective and clear leadership
Setting this framework, and communicating the vision and focus behind innovation efforts, are
cornerstones of the work that those in leadership roles must deliver on.
It’s essential that senior management “set [a] clear vision and mission and ensure all staff are in
alignment,” says Joon-Nie Lau, Director, Asia, WAN-IFRA (World Association of News Publishers).
To help do this, that means being clear about “who is in charge” Nic Newman recommends. This is
especially important given the myriad of stakeholders (e.g. editorial, tech, marketing, commercial) who
may be involved in these efforts.
It also requires industry leaders to possess a broader range of skills than perhaps they have in the
past too. As Federica Cherubini, Head of Leadership Development at RISJ, explains:
The task requested of newsroom managers is much more complex now.
The skills needed have widened to include empathy, listening and
understanding. It’s about adding on top of the old jobs the ability of
taking care and truly leading a team.
We need to rethink what leadership means and who we consider a leader.
We need to think about how that strategic change is reflected into having
more diverse and inclusive newsrooms.
15. 15
5. Look beyond the C-Suite
Putting these ideas into practice is key, for those like Devadas Rajaram, a Professor at the Asian
College of Journalism in Chennai, India, who see “the biggest barrier [to innovation] is the traditional
mindsets of the people running newsrooms.” “Media management should be open to new ideas and
young people should be given a place at the table.”
It’s a view that resonates with Thomas Seymat, Editorial Projects and Development Manager at
Euronews. “I would strongly recommend setting up structures or pathways internally for people with
innovative ideas where they can find the support of people who “have done it before”, he advises.
Seymat recognizes that this may be difficult in resource-scarce environments, but that a failure to
broaden the conversation reduces the pool of people given opportunities to lead change or have their
ideas heard. Overcoming this is essential, not just to drive innovation, but also to promote fresh ideas,
inclusivity and overlooked perspectives.
Encapsulating these frustrations (and strategic needs), Seymat highlights the Twitter thread from Catt
Small, a product designer for Asana who went viral, earlier this summer, after reminding us that:
Allied to this, Joon-Nie Lau, Director, Asia, WAN-IFRA advocates teams “look outside the company and
media industry for inspiration and answers,” given that the challenges being faced by the media
industry are not unique to it.
6. Commit for the long-term
In implementing new ideas, “your first version probably won’t be right,” instructs Nic Newman, a
former BBC News veteran who oversaw the launch of many of the Corporation’s early digital news
products, “so you need to iterate and change.”
Recognizing — and committing to this reality — can be challenging, especially when “the newsroom’s
understaffed and the higher ups’ focus is solely on quick wins or the bottom line,” acknowledges
Euronews’ Thomas Seymat.
As a result, too often, it would seem, organizations
risk being “fair weather innovators,” committed to the
idea of change, but not necessarily sticking with it.
This can be one reason why, implementation can be
such a challenge. Lucy Kueng’s recent work on
strategy and culture, for example, revealed that
“only a fraction of strategies are ever implemented.”
“This is due to the complexity of strategy
implementation,” Kueng wrote. “It involves shifting
from a rational, deeply thought-out plan to the messy
realities of human action, organizational inertia, and
small ‘p’ internal politics and personal intractability.”
Photo by Erik Mclean on Unsplash
16. 16
7. Trust — and invest in — the process
“We might have a good strategy on paper but its implementation brings lots of uncertainties. And this
is because change is not just about process, but people,” says Federica Cherubini.
The process needs to match the outcomes that an organization is looking to deliver, advises Lucy
Kueng. “Is this open-ended experimentation to test an idea, and learning is just as valuable as it
working, or are we dealing with a fundamental pivot that has to deliver?”
“Each of these categories needs an entirely different processes, and teams people working on it,”
Kueng observes.
“So underlying this, the big point is the process is as important as the innovation. Those doing well tend
to have nailed the process — a central piece of which is simply unpicking the learnings that emerge.”
8. Acknowledge fear, risk and uncertainty
A consistent theme among contributors to this article was what Joon-Nie Lau categorizes as “FUD.”
Fear, uncertainty and doubt.
“Fear of change, of upsetting whatever’s left of the status quo, fear of
the unknown… fear of taking risks and investing in technology or new
ventures which may not pay off.
Uncertainty in the political and economic outlook… uncertainty over what
audiences want (or don’t) despite the existence of tools and techniques to
determine and measure such preferences.
Doubt over whether any changes or new ventures will actually work, doubt
and insecurity over being left behind.”
The sum of all these fears is understandable. After all, as Federica Cherubini, reminds us, “change is
hard. The result of change is often (always?) unknown.”
Industry leaders need to lean into this, setting clear objectives and expectations.
“We are all afraid of change and what it implies,” confesses Patricia Torres-Burd, Managing Director,
Media Services Advisory Services, MDIF (Media Development Investment Fund). “[But] I will say that
fear of this need for continued relevance brings out the insecurity in the best of us!”
“Similarly, and the reverse is true,” argues Thomas Seymat. “It’s easy to imagine that change
management in news organizations bloodied by cuts, buyouts and layoffs cannot be fully effective, or
even well-received by the staff.”
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9. Bring people with you
“Buy-in from a critical mass of people at all levels of an organization is necessary but is exceptionally
difficult to obtain,” Dr. Jane Singer, Professor of Journalism Innovation at City University in London,
divulges.
“Changing habits of both practice (how things are done) and thought
(what things we believe ought to be done, and how we believe we ought
to do them) is not only hard but also tends to happen unevenly: Some
people will be enthusiastic, some will be less keen but receptive, and some
will be resistant.”
“The size of each group will vary, but all will include senior managers, middle managers and junior
staffers — and not just on the editorial side but right across the organization.”
Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash
10. Empower managers, cut the detractors loose
Everyone knows that culture change is hard. To help drive it, “remove detractors and naysayers,”
counsels Joon-Nie Lau. “They are toxic!”
18. 18
“Make it easy for them to leave if they do not agree with the new direction,” she recommends. At the
same time, you need to “build trust [and] empower staff,” Lau says, which means showing your trust in
your teams and working hard to “identify talent gaps, train, promote from within or hire from outside.”
Stressing some of the same lessons as those espoused by Jane Singer, Federica Cherubini points out
that “strategic change has implications at all levels of an organization.”
Because of this “it needs to be embraced, pursed and championed by the top leadership, understood
and implemented by the middle management — who often are confronted with the most real
implications on the people aspect of this — and it needs to make sense and work for everyone who is
executing that strategic change, working on it every day, throughout the organization.”
“I think a way to overcome these challenges goes through investing on and empowering managers,”
she says.
11. Let go of the past
Having put these principles into practice, outlets may find themselves looking — and feeling — very
different from when (and where) they started.
“These solutions, or products, may not look very much like the journalism business we grew up with, but
that’s a good thing, because it probably means that we’re meeting those audiences where they are,
rather than asking them to come to us, as we’ve done for so many decades,” proposes Rishad Patel.
Nevertheless, “it is complicated to change the ethos of a newsroom that has for decades been the
leader in the market… but in print,” says Patricia Torres-Burd, sharing a sentiment applicable to
players across multiple mediums. “Switching to digital is an enormous shift on so many levels!
Managing this need internally and externally is hard work that takes vision, time, and strategic
expertise.”
Photo by Hadija Saidi on Unsplash
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12. Understand that change is the only constant
That said, few organizations can rest on their digital laurels, so however uncomfortable and uncertain
this ride is, it remains a necessary one.
“We’re on a journey and there is no playbook or silver bullet to solve it all,” Federica Cherubini says.
“It’s about learning and iterating,” we need to “keep evaluating [because] what works now might not
work in the future,” Cherubini argues. “This has been true probably for a very long time, but the pace
of the evolution has increased dramatically.”
“The ecosystem is constantly evolving and embracing change means
embracing the fact that we’re not simply trying to figure out how to get
from A to B, but that that finish line keeps moving forward,” Cherubini
cautions. Subsequently, “transformation is the default,” she adds.
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Chapter 3: Innovation in Practice – five core ideas seen
at successful media companies around the
world
The impact of COVID-19 has accentuated and accelerated underlying structural issues, catapulting
the industry into a new and uncertain future much quicker than anticipated.
To survive, never mind flourish, in this environment, strategic innovation — rather than innovation for the
sake of it — is more important than ever.
If we accept that principle, what lessons can be learned from other news and media organizations
around the world?
In this report, I’ve shared thoughts from leading media scholars, researchers and practitioners for their
top tips for successfully implementing innovation as well the principles and likely barriers organizations
need to consider. For this final chapter, based on their expert insights, I’ve identified nine principles of
content innovation, and examples of them in action.
Theme 1: Business Model Innovation
Principle 1: The Value of Niche
“There was a point where the mainstream media industry believed scale was taking marginally
valuable audiences and trying to make them bigger. We’ve done the opposite,” Sean Griffey, CEO
and co-founder of Industry Dive, told Axios recently.
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“This is a company that has taken a ridiculously simple idea — that ‘the real value in business media
is in niche, highly targeted audiences’ — and then replicated it profitably multiple times,”
observes Rishad Patel, the co-founder of Splice Media in Singapore.
Patel highlighted how Industry Dive had identified a successful approach and replicated it (e.g.
Retail Dive, Utility Dive, Food Dive, Supply Chain Dive, Payments Dive). As a result, profits are
expected to grow to 30% this year.
As Griffey himself puts it:
“Basically, the true secret to scale for a media business is to do something
*valuable* multiple times.”
Thomas Seymat, Editorial Projects and Development Manager at Euronews, and an Adjunct Professor
of Journalism at Paris’ Centre de Formation des Journalistes and Sciences Po Lyon, also cited the work
of a niche publisher, The Fix.
An online trade publication for media professionals with a strong focus on Central and Eastern
Europe, the site has innovated, Seymat says, “by occupying a (to my knowledge) unused space —
topic and geography-wise, and in English.”
“They write a lot about media revenue experiments and I hope they too will find the right balance of
revenue streams to be sustainable in the long term,” he adds.
Banner image for The Fix, via their website.
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Principle 2: Going Against the Grain
Both Patel and Seymat cited further examples of publishers and content creators who have bucked
obvious trends.
“Our friends at The Ken in Bangalore realized that their strength lay not in throwing multiple stories
at an audience to see which one would stick,” Patel recounted, “but in publishing one well-researched,
deeply reported story a day.”
“If you’ll allow me to be corporate, I think my employer’s (Euronews) strategy to launch and grow an
affiliates network in Southeast Europe and the Caucasus region is strategically innovative,” Seymat
says.
“Finding local partners and investors to start whole new media
organizations — facing a pandemic and other challenges — is a great
example of innovation that makes sense for the business development
side, for the brand, and for the audience too.
“These affiliates bring a new independent voice in their region,” he adds, “and they contribute to
Euronews’ main news coverage, along with the rest of our language services.” “I know it’s a ton of
work for everyone involved, so I have to give kudos to my colleagues.”
Launching new services in the midst of a pandemic
was a bold idea reiterated by Patricia Torres-Burd,
Managing Director, Media Services Advisory
Services, MDIF (Media Development Investment
Fund).
Torres-Burd noted efforts led by Styli
Charalambous of the Daily Maverick in South Africa,
“a CEO focused on product and innovation.”
“He is not afraid to make changes,” Torres-Burd says,
“and during the pandemic — this digital news portal
— are you ready for it? … Launched a weekly print
section. It is entirely counter-intuitive but in line with
their goal to reach and inform as many people as
possible in their country.”
Front cover of the weekly Daily Maverick newspaper (Issue No
168)
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Theme 2: Cultural Innovation
Principle 3: Investing in — and Creating — Community
“Although news organizations, in general, remain reluctant to relinquish their role in deciding what
constitutes news and how best to convey it, there are some creative experiments,” notes Dr. Jane
Singer, Professor of Journalism Innovation at City University in London.
Focusing on what Singer refers to as “audience-driven news,” one such organization that has caught
Singer’s eye, is Tortoise Media in the UK.
“Although the name stems from its ‘slow news’ approach, I think one of the more innovative things
about Tortoise is the way it makes audiences integral to the news process, from deciding what to
explore to engaging directly with newsmakers,” she says.
Singer also mentions The Ferret, an award-winning investigative journalism co-operative, based in
Scotland. As they explain in their online FAQ, “when you subscribe to The Ferret you become more
than just a passive supporter — people become part-owners of the project and can influence how it
will develop.”
This community-centric model also resonates with Patricia Torres-Burd, who points to case studies from
the Membership Puzzle which showcase innovative forms of content creation, distribution and
engagement.
“I absolutely love and devoured these,” Torres-Burd says, “but the stand outs are KPCC and their
community-driven efforts during the pandemic, and Black Ballad out of the UK and how they built a
safe space online for Black women.
“This effort not only created a community, engaged and active participants but has now turned it into so
much more with opportunities for revenue and brand alignment that fits their mission.”
Torres-Burd also highlights the Mexican media
platform “Malvestida, which “is focusing on
women’s issues beyond fashion and beauty …
amplifying the voices and experiences of a
new generation who can define their needs
and identity on their own terms.”
“Most of what they have to say and discuss is
region agnostic,” she adds, recommending
people check out their Instagram page, and
reminding us how in the digital age
communities are no longer bound by
geography.
Image for the story: “I die where you vacation”: the
fight for legal abortion in the Dominican Republic —
via https://malvestida.com/2021/10/aborto-republica-dominicana/
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Principle 4: Collaboration
Community building principles are not just embodied in the relationship organizations have with their
audience, but increasingly with each other.
“As I write, the Pandora Papers has just dropped,” Jane Singer commented in an email. “They are the
latest manifestation in a growing trend of journalists from different news organizations working
together, rather than competing, to tell different parts of a major story.”
Other efforts shared by Singer include how “BureauLocal, (part of The Bureau of Investigative
Journalism in the UK) has “brought local journalists from around the country together to collectively
explore a national data set and develop local stories from it, ” and the #CoronaVirusFacts
Alliance database (created by the International Fact-Checking Network), “a compilation of debunks
of coronavirus hoaxes by fact-checkers all around the world.”
Image: #CoronaVirusFacts Alliance
“Innovation is not easy,” Patricia Torres-Burd reminds us. “It can be internally disruptive and
expensive. Collaboration can provide an excellent opportunity to test and find the best ways to reach
audiences with relevant content.”
By way of an example, she cites the work of Hashtag Our Stories (and their collaborations
with Snapchat and NBC LX, a local news network targeted at younger cord-cutters), and two
examples from India: Josh Talks and Sheroes a social network for women. “While they are not
traditional media outlets — both are utilizing social and content platforms to connect with and improve
communities,” she says.
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Principle 5: Transparency and an Open Innovation Culture
“I’ve spent a couple of intense years leading Euronews’ immersive journalism efforts,” says Thomas
Seymat, Editorial Projects and Development Manager at Euronews, “so VR, AR, etc. are mediums I
keep a (nostalgic) eye on.”
“However, the field evolves constantly and it’s easy to fall behind if you’re not paying close
attention.” Because of this, Seymat says he was “happy to see that the New York Times’ R&D
department published a guide teaching how journalists can create stories through photogrammetry
using only their mobile devices.
This was “cutting-edge stuff made available to the greater public,” he notes.
“It’s one thing to lead innovative projects with cutting-edge technologies
with the financial support of tech companies, it’s a whole different thing to
do it openly (as Seymat’s company has previously done) so it benefits the
rest of the industry.”
It’s a model others have also adopted, with Jane Singer underscoring how “growing numbers of large
news orgs also now have dedicated ‘spaces’ for exploring new ideas.”
Found on Medium and elsewhere, efforts like BBC News Labs can help spark discussion and
“explicitly seek to foster and encourage creativity.”
Image: BBC News Labs
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Theme 3: Audience-first Innovation
Principle 6: Products Designed to Meet user Needs
“A lot can be learnt from looking at other traditional industries,” argues Joon-Nie Lau, Director, Asia,
WAN-IFRA (World Association of News Publishers). “Entire books have been written about how these
industries have transformed digitally.”
“What they [and the media] have in common is that they make their money by serving consumers and
addressing customers’ needs, constantly tweaking their products and services to ensure that consumers
will want to pay for them.”
For Splice Media’s Rishad Patel, one example of a company embodying these ideals is The
Information. “[It] has such a richness of products for its users that all speak to its mission — to cover
the technology business like nobody else — and that it does this in so many formats that meet their
audiences where they are (or want to be),” he says.
Image promoting the launch of their new app, the Tech Top 10 by The Information, December 2019
“They understand that the text-based article isn’t the only way we consume information, so their ‘stories’
take the form of paid products like conference calls, Slack channels, events, workshops, commenting on
their website (because they get that being a part of the conversation is something their members were
willing to pay for) and… org charts.”
“I think [the org charts] is a genius product in that The Information understands the needs of that
segment of their tech insider users who work in finance or journalism that would pay for this sort of
intelligence because of its utility in the work that they do.”
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Theme 4: Content and Tech-led Innovation
Principle 7: Embracing New Formats and Products
“I love what The Guardian, The New York Times, Washington Post and NPR are doing —
particularly in the areas of data storytelling, immersive podcasts, VR and AR storytelling on
Instagram,” says Devadas Rajaram, a Professor at the Asian College of Journalism in Chennai, India.
“They are very engaging and user-centric,” he adds, reflecting on the fact “it’s ironic that they’re all
legacy media organizations.” Of digital-born entrants, Rajaram adds BuzzFeed News and Hashtag
Our Stories into the mix.
Nic Newman, Senior Research Associate at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (RISJ),
stressed how content-led innovation can be found across a number of different areas, from the types
of open-source investigations produced by outlets such as Bellingcat and the BBC Africa Eye team,
through to product format innovation like Quartz Obsessions, The New York Times’ podcast The
Daily, and live events hosted by Tortoise.
The next leap forward, he believes, will be in “flash briefings,” as well as “personalized” and
“atomized audio.”
Promotional image highlighting Flash Briefings provided by Crosscut,
a Seattle-based independent, nonprofit news site in the northwest of the United States.
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Principle 8: New Tech
Although there’s a deluge of new tech that companies can — and are — using, Dr. Gillian Youngs, a
strategist, innovation and ecosystem expert, who has worked across the creative, digital and
academic sectors, stressed the role of AI as a major focal point for innovation in media and
journalism.
Youngs pointed to the role of this technology in tackling areas such as misinformation, (through
initiatives like the EU-funded Fandango project).
“Even if automatic detection of Fake News and disinformation is not possible for the moment…,
Machine Learning technologies and Big Data analysis can strongly support journalists and media
professionals to detect disinformation in their day-by-day working activity,” she says.
More widely, “curating audience
preferences and interests, social media,
and links across different forms of
content can be part of this picture in far
more complex ways than is happening
at present,” Youngs argues.
Embodying principles that can go way
beyond managing misinformation,
Youngs notes how “innovation in these
areas requires a lot more thinking
outside of traditional mass media
boxes, and new interdisciplinary
strategies.”
Photo by airfocus on Unsplash
Theme 5: Changing Editorial Culture
Principle 9: Leadership Matters
Underpinning much of this is the ability of leaders to change editorial culture and a company’s
mindset.
With this in mind, Jane Singer admits this “reflects my own reader biases,” but, she cites The New
York Times and The Guardian as two examples of where this can be seen.
“Not incidentally, both also have strengthened their financial situation as a result of
these changes, including by adding significant numbers of new readers.”
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Innovations can resonate beyond institutional boundaries, priming the entire industry.
Nic Newman points to efforts such as engagement metrics like RFV (which measures the Recency,
Frequency and Volume of reading the FT digitally) a move from the Financial Times which
“galvanized the industry on loyalty.”
Meanwhile, Joon-Nie Lau, Director, Asia, WAN-IFRA (World Association of News Publishers) highlights
innovation strategies at outlets such as Stuff NZ (New Zealand), Mediahuis (Belgium) and the South
China Morning Post as outlets others can learn from.
Led by new CEO Gary Liu, the South China Morning Post has “transformed a local English paper of
record into a global news publication helping readers understand China.” Liu “started with 250 staff
producing print, 40 on digital, and transformed headcount to 250 on digital and 40 in print.”
Chart showing audience growth at the South China Morning Post, via INMA ($)
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Final Thoughts
“To create the space for innovation and the opportunity for growth, companies at every scale and
every stage from start-up to storied legacy media must decide not only what to do,” the journalist
and communications consultant Kevin Anderson argued for the Reuters Institute back in 2017, “but also
what they will stop doing.”
The reason for this, Anderson suggested is “so that they can focus on editorial and commercial
innovation — not simply for the sake of doing something new but to achieve their journalistic mission
and their editorial ambitions in a constantly changing media environment.”
That’s an argument that remains as true today as it did four years ago.
After all, as Federica Cherubini, Head of Leadership Development, Reuters Institute for the Study of
Journalism (RISJ) reminds us, we all want to be “inspired by those who are really embracing the
change, not for the sake of changing or just doing something new, but for their ability — and
commitment — to find the best way to serve their audiences, build a sustainable business, and nurture
their newsrooms.”
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METHODOLOGY AND LIST OF INTERVIEWEES
This report is based on a series of email interviews with ten leading media practitioners, researchers
and scholars from around the world. Their contributions were analyzed to identify patterns and key
ideas, which then informed the contents and shape of this report, as well as its conclusions.
Participants were selected because of their extensive experience delivering, researching, promoting
and implementing innovation projects in newsrooms and classrooms.
Respondents were also identified – and approached – due to their geographic location (for both
their current and previous roles, alongside the geographic regions they cover in their work), their
different areas of primary expertise, as well as the media platforms and skillsets they specialize in.
List of Interviewees
Primary positions held at the time of the interviews (September – October 2021)
Federica Cherubini
Head of Leadership Development, Reuters Institute for the Study of
Journalism, Oxford University, UK
Professor Lucy Kueng
Google Digital News Senior Fellow at the Reuters Institute for the
Study of Journalism, Oxford University, UK
Joon-Nie Lau
Director, Asia, WAN-IFRA (World Association of News Publishers),
Singapore
Nic Newman
Senior Research Associate, Reuters Institute for the Study of
Journalism, Oxford University, UK; Digital media and product
consultant
Rishad Patel Co-Founder, Splice Media, Singapore
Professor Devadas
Rajaram
Asian College of Journalism, Chennai, India
Thomas Seymat Editorial Projects and Development Manager at Euronews, France
Professor Jane Singer Professor of Journalism Innovation, City University of London, UK
Patricia Torres-Burd
Managing Director, Media Services Advisory Services, MDIF
(Media Development Investment Fund), Europe
Dr. Gillian Youngs
Visiting Professor of Design and Digital Strategy, University of
Greenwich, London, UK; Independent strategist, innovation and
ecosystem expert