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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Creating new forms of journalism that put readers in charge | Poynter.

Creating new forms of journalism that put readers in charge | Poynter. | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

… We began our New York meeting by trying to understand why media companies have largely failed to take advantage of the incredible power of the Web and mobile devices.


We identified four forces that have stymied innovation:

1.  Content Management Systems. They are designed to convert old media into new media and they provide little flexibility to experiment with new journalistic forms.

2.  Newsroom culture. The rhythm in most newsrooms is based on a well-established work flow that produces predictable content. It’s not easy to suggest a wholesale change.

3.  Product managers on the business side. They’re accustomed to selling the old recipe and often seem perplexed by new approaches.

4.  Editors/news directors. They’ve got other priorities — such as having to choose people for another round of layoffs — and often don’t have the resources for a new venture....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Bill Adair provides a really insightful analysis of news and journalism trends.

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Kindle Singles: Growing, but Maintains Focus

Kindle Singles: Growing, but Maintains Focus | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The Kindle Singles store, according to its editor David Blum, is “like a bookstore where the manager also edits the books.” Blum is that manager-editor, and under his guidance the store has grown to feature nearly 400 works since launching in January 2011. When the store went live, its mission was to publish the kind of long-form journalism that has become harder to find as more magazines have shuttered and those still standing allocate fewer pages to in-depth pieces.


Since the Singles program started, it has gained enough respect to attract major names—among the many heavy hitters who’ve released Singles are Christopher Hitchens and Stephen King—and to delve into fiction.


Blum, a veteran of alternative weeklies—he worked at both the Village Voice and the New York Press, during the papers’ headier days—has gained a fair amount of attention since the store took off. In an April profile in the New York Times, Leslie Kaufman wrote that he has “transformed himself from doctor of the dying to midwife of the up-and-coming,” becoming “a man whom authors want to court.”...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Publishing and journalism Renaissance? Maybe...

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