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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April Ratings Are Good News For CNN

April Ratings Are Good News For CNN | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

April was a big month for breaking news, and that meant strong ratings for CNN. Fox News led the pack as usual. It was the second most watched network in all of cable, drawing 2.02 million total viewers in primetime and 389,000 in the key 25-54 demo. Overall, the network was up nine percent in total viewers and down two percent in adults 25-54.

 

The bigger story, however, was CNN, which pulled ahead of MSNBC for the number two spot for the first time in months. April was full of big news stories — from the Boston marathon bombings to the fertilizer plant explosion in Texas — and the ratings proved that breaking news is still the network's bread and butter....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Ratings up. Credibility drops like a stone at CNN. 

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GuardianWitness: an interview with Joanna Geary | The Guardian

GuardianWitness: an interview with Joanna Geary | The Guardian | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Guardian digital development editor Joanna Geary answers some questions about GuardianWitness....

 

...First up: this was built in two months. The sponsorship pot from EE gave them a budget and time to get the job done, but not necessarily have everything they wanted at launch. She says it's a complete, working system that can be built upon. I suggest the phrase "minimum viable product" to Jo but she suggests that it's a full product - one that will be built on.

 

Do they have aspirations for more integration with social media? Yes, they do. And it's something they're looking at as the system develops. The key part of the development which is invisible to us right now is that the Guardian Witness system is deeply integrated with the Guardian's CMS. Once the content has passed through verification, it's available to the journalists, and they can insert it into a story or liveblog just by inserting an URL, which creates an embedded version of the contribution that links back to the contributor's profile.

 

"The really exciting thing is not what you see now, but what you see when Witness is included in a story," she says. It's a tool to facilitate genuine collaborative working between the journalist and external witnesses. Jo says they'll collaborate with people on the ground, or with expert knowledge, in any way they can - and already do, via phone and other traditional methods. This adds another tool for doing that....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This is an exciting development for citizen journalism and is definitely one that other newspapers and the entire industry should be watching closely. CNN already has more than 1 million iReporters and this type of engagement between media and audiences is surely the way of the future.

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Boston explosions a reminder of how breaking news reporting is changing | Poynter.

Terrible events such as yesterday’s bombings at the Boston Marathon have always meant “all hands on deck” for news organizations, with staffers pulled off their regular beats to contribute. But the endpoint of the newsgathering and reporting is no longer a front-page package of stories explaining — the best one can — what happened, why it happened and what might be next. Now, there is no endpoint — events are reported in real time, with stories in constant motion, and the front page is a snapshot of an organization’s reporting at the moment when the presses needed to roll. Boston was a reminder of that, and a look at what’s changing in real-time journalism. Through Twitter and various live blogs, I found myself looking over my shoulder at the Boston Globe, the New York Times, Reuters and other news organizations, and was able to make some observations and draw some conclusions....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Compelling reading from Poynter on the evolution of media...

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This is no 'golden age' of journalism. These are the news media end times | Bob Garfield

This is no 'golden age' of journalism. These are the news media end times | Bob Garfield | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Don't be fooled by evangelists of 'free': editorial ethics and real reporting have been blown up along with the business model. Over at Slate the other day, Matthew Yglesias argued that journalism consumers are enjoying a "golden age". Yeah, sort of – in exactly the way looters enjoy an improved standard of living. Problem is, it only stays improved until the store is emptied out.


The news industry has gone from being obscenely profitable to slightly profitable to – at least, in the case of newspapers – largely unprofitable. All of that fantastic content Yglesias was gushing about is paid for by venture capitalists making bad bets, established media companies digging into their savings accounts to pay the bills, displaced workers earning peanuts, amateurs, semi-pros, volunteers and monks.


I would say that the business model is unsustainable, but losing money is not a business model. It is a going-out-of-business model....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

A very pessimistic but realistic look at the state of newspapers.

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How News Organizations Can Adapt to Digital Disruption

How News Organizations Can Adapt to Digital Disruption | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Traditional news organizations need to embrace the disruption brought by digital culture -- or they risk becoming obsolete. That was the message late last week at the International Symposium on Online Journalism hosted by the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas at the University of Texas at Austin, where about 370 of the world's journalists, researchers and media watchers grappled with the hard questions for a beleaguered traditional media industry that is now more than a decade into its disruptive transformation.

 

The problem is many media companies view digital technologies through a lens of traditional journalism and thus, fail to strategize properly, said Clark Gilbert, president and CEO of Deseret News Publishing Company. "In a post-disruption world, why would people pick up a paper at all? Why would someone turn on the 10 o'clock newscast?" Gilbert asked. "If you are not asking those fundamental questions, there is not a future for you legacy organization." The key to surviving? Innovate. Fail. Innovate again....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Great insight and a must-read if you care about journalism

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Terror and the template of disaster journalism | Reuters

Terror and the template of disaster journalism | Reuters | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Natural disasters, airline crashes — and yes, terrorist bombs — undercut the normalcy of everyday life by bringing death’s whammy to an unexpected place at an unforeseen time. In the hours and days following such catastrophes, journalists work to restore normalcy to the panicked population by explaining how and why the bad thing happened and how to prevent it from happening again.

 

Reporters have been normalizing the abnormal for so long that they’ve created well-worn catastrophe templates to convey their stories. Yesterday, while covering the Boston Marathon bombing, journalists leaned hard again on those templates. First came the sputtering dispatches over radio and television about the calamity. Next up were the on-the-scene broadcast reports, frequently marred by confusion and contradiction, as the press held out hope for survivors but prepared audiences for the worst. Video of the catastrophe was converted by the cable news networks into a perpetual loop, giving the talking heads a wallpaper background to talk over (and giving new viewers just tuning in something graphic to watch)....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Wall-to-wall coverage, a constant video "loop" and the proliferation of cell phone photos and footage show just how significantly news coverage has changed. It's a sign of the times and a notable contrast from coverage of past events like 9-11..

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Facebook users get news from family & friends, Twitter users get news from journalists | Poynter

Facebook users get news from family & friends, Twitter users get news from journalists | Poynter | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Today’s annual report on the State of the News Media shows that new technologies really are pressing journalists to do much more with much less. Last week, we learned that newspaper industry ad revenue was down 7.3 percent this year to its lowest level since 1984 (or 1954, adjusted for inflation). As a result, newsrooms continue to shrink. But The Project For Excellence in Journalism’s report shows us that the needs and demands of the audience are growing and fragmenting. Social media is an important source of news, the report says, but remains smaller and only “supplemental” to other discovery methods like directly visiting a news website, searching the Web or browsing an aggregator....
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