Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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FiveThirtyEight and the End of Average - stratēchery by Ben Thompson

FiveThirtyEight and the End of Average - stratēchery by Ben Thompson | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The problem for newspapers is not just advertising, but rather that their readers no longer have to settle for average. Greatness is just a click away.


The implication of my news consumption being dominated by the tall skinny part of the power curve is that those who can regularly appear there – the best of the best – are going to win the zero sum game for my attention. And, for that, they will be justly rewarded.What then, though, of the tens of thousands of journalists who formerly filled the middle of the bell curve? More broadly – and this is the central challenge to society presented by the Internet – what then of the millions of others in all the other industries touched by the Internet who are perfectly average and thus, in an age where the best is only a click away, are simply not needed?


This is the angst that fills those in the news business, and society broadly. The reality of the Internet is that there is no more bell curve; power laws dominate, and the challenge of our time is figuring out what to do with a population distribution that is fundamentally misaligned with Internet economics.

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Greatness (of content) is just a click away writes Ben Thompson. And most of the time, on the internet, it's free! For now. Recommended reading. 9/10

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Tech Literacy Has Nothing To Do With Age

Tech Literacy Has Nothing To Do With Age | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

I know plenty of people of all generations, including my parents, who are actively embracing the latest digital platforms and technologies (and having a good time doing so).


Things are at a point tech is democratized and doesn’t require any specialized knowledge to use. It’s nearly all common sense.


So when I saw Dave Winer’s post this morning sharing how a journalist has sadly “given up” trying to learn new things, I had to share it. I’ve summarized the key bits...


Jeff Domansky's insight:

New York Times columnist Joe Nocera has no excuse for giving up on learning new technology. If this is how he thinks, it's just another example of how traditional media is doing things wrong. Time to get a columnist who is tech savvy on board.

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The Stages of Newspapers' Decline - stratēchery by Ben Thompson

The Internet has evolved communications in stages: static to social to mobile. Each stage has further decimated newspapers....In case you’re wondering, the most-common objection to FiveThirtyEight and the End of Average was that I didn’t address the demise in advertising. That was intentional; while I plan on talking business models – and it’s an important topic – I think that people in the news industry are too quick to attribute their problems to ads, and too slow to understand how incompatible the Internet is with their definition of a newspaper. Newspapers may be screwed, but we can’t start fixing news until we understand what we’re trying to save, and what is simply a relic.
Jeff Domansky's insight:
Ben Thompson's ongoing series on the future of journalism news media are thought-provoking and profound. Highly recommended reading. 9/10
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