MASTERCLASSES

Thursday 28 January 2010

Apple iPad: the picture they didn't want you to see

Steve Jobs may think he's come up with something new and original...

but Dom Jolly thought of it years ago

Thursday 21 January 2010

What journalism schools should teach about entrepreneurialism


Entrepreneurialism is in the air, with three events two UK and one transatlantic focusing on the subject in the past few days.
So I thought I’d draw together what is being done, look at the common threads in the discussion, and in the process make a stab at drawing together a template for what those who teach/train journalists should be equipping them to do.


First, what is entrepreneurialism?
It’s equipping journalism students and, indeed, working journalists, to spot a business opportunity, and then create a business, that will enable them to make their journalism pay.


Why is it necessary?
Because jobs in established media companies are scarce and getting scarcer. I blogged recently about where I think the jobs will be in 2010, but for increasing numbers of journalists, if you want to practise your craft, you’ll have to create a business that enables you to do so.


What should be taught?
Jeff Jarvis of Cuny, the City University of New York , organised a transatlantic conversation about that this week. You can listen to the conference call between teachers in the UK and US here, and find the source material to what I summarise below here
and here.


At Cuny they set out to tackle the fact that journalists didn’t understand their own business by establishing a course in which students must create a business plan for a sustainable (which they define as profitable) journalistic enterprise. Cuny won grants of $100k to give as seed money to the best of the ideas students come up with, as decided by a jury of experts.


Here’s what students learn:


How to create a plan for a sustainable (profitable) journalism business
That plan includes
·        An elevator pitch – how to sell the idea briefly and effectively
·        A needs statement – why does the world need this business?
·        Market research and analysis – deciding who their customers are, and talking to them about the idea
·        Competitive analysis – who do you have to beat?
·        Product plan – what is it?
·        Revenue plan –  how’s it going to make money?
·        Distribution/marketing plan –  how will people discover it?
·        Operations plan –  how will it operate? What will that cost?
·        Launch plan –  what are the phases and milestones?


Here are some of the business ideas currently being developed
1 Making an iphone app around sports
2 Infrastructure for the assignment of news assignments to journalists, bloggers and students
3 Distributing radio shows in the student’s home state in Africa over the phone as phone calls
5 Serving the Ugandan diaspora in the US and the UK
6 A platform for educators to share their curriculum and news about science


Jeff Jarvis’s view is that what he characterises as the big old dumb media company is not going to be replaced by some big new smart media company. Rather, its going to be replaced “by an ecosystem of a couple of hundred individual players who operate under motivations and means and business models. That’s the world our students are going in to.


“There will be jobs in established media but students also need the means to start their own jobs


“So much is changing, we don’t know how journalism will look as a career in 10 years time – even five years. But our hunch is that there will be a demand for journalism, for our traditional skills – which is why we still teach them.


“But we need to be prepared to meet the type of demand that there is for journalists and journalism in the future, and the old model is only going to be one way, and maybe not the main way, of making a living as a journalist.”


Academic journalism courses must be dovetailed with media companies


Cuny also ties in with media companies, and that seems to me to be key.


Indeed, any journalism course that is not allied with a publisher – of a local or national news website, newspaper or B2B or consumer magazine is going to look increasingly cut off from the real work of journalism.


Specifically, at Cuny, says Jarvis: “We just added a course in hyperlocal built around running The New York Times blog, The Local, in Brooklyn. We are working with The Times and others to also tackle hyperlocal advertising opportunities and challenges (funded by the Carnegie Corporation).”


One contributor to Jeff Jarvis’s conference call was George Brock, professor of journalism at City University in London, who also gave the opening address at the news:rewired event organised by Journalism.co.uk. His contribution to the call was refreshingly honest: “I wish I could say that we have flourishing courses here at City on entrepreneurial journalism, with new business models and so on. But we don't, yet.


“Our magazine course does require students to shape and present a new business idea which then gets taken apart by experts and by the class. ...But this kind of exercise is not yet general for our 600-plus graduates and undergraduates and I'm keen to spread this sort of learning so that it reaches all our students and strengthens their hand in the years ahead.



“Two dimensions which I think are important: (1) sustainability and (2) the chemistry of teamwork in a small outfit.



“1) In almost anything to do with entrepreneurial activity, there's a huge concentration on the elevator pitch and preparing for the mauling from the audience. TV shows like Dragon's Den (apologies to the US - this is a massively popular British TV show featuring a jury of hard-bitten business gurus chewing, and mostly spitting out, new business ideas) only reinforce this. A business idea for sustaining a new form of journalism is not about making a quick killing: it needs legs, strength to survive imitation by new competitors, the ability to create a platform which lasts.



“2) On an assumption that was perfectly good in the past, many journalism courses assume that their students will join large journalism outfits of several hundred if not thousands of people. This is a particular kind of working culture and jobs in them tend to be relatively specialised. Working in teams of, say, less than 10, is a different business and requires a degree of flexibility and skills of collaboration which are worth drawing attention to.



“My hunch is that the very best way to teach this is in experimental local news sites working on the ground in central London, just north of the financial district where we're located. At the moment, our students on all platforms make their own papers/magazines/programmes/blogs from that local material but for internal consumption. If we could find a way to do that while helping experiments in local news in real time, the enterpreneurial aspects would be a natural part of the experience.”



I imagine all journalism courses get students to create a publication print online or both as part of their studies but very few insist that this be a viable business that will attract readers and advertisers and create the revenue to pay journalists. In future they should.


Some are working towards that.


Goldsmith’s College MA students created an online magazine called EastLondonLines, designed to serve the disparate London boroughs that will be linked when the East London overground railway reopens in a massively extended form later this year.


It sounds like a worthy effort


Birmingham’s City University has MAs in Online Journalism and Freelance Journalism with a strong focus on entrepreneurship and enterprise.


Newcastle University is introducing business and entrepreneurial training to a number of disciplines, including journalism, and has twinned with the BBC   and PA to “combine first-rate scholarship, and vocational training in multi-media journalism in a real-world commercial publishing environment.”


Entrepreneurialism isn’t just for students


The NUJ’s Making Journalism Pay conference was filled with examples of journalists who have – often out of necessity – become entrepreneurs.


There are two detailed reports on the conference
here and here. Below is my summary of entrepreneurial ideas that have worked.


Niche business news services that work


The conference heard from the founders of two business news services that took a lot of cash and promotion to establish but which are now profitable.


One was former Yorkshire Post business editor David Parkin who in 2007 set up Thebusinessdesk.com. It employs seven journalists in Leeds and Manchester covering business news for the north of England


As Dominic Ponsford blogs: “It’s a thriving and expanding business and shows that the advertising funded online model can work if you’re dealing with high-value readers and have low fixed costs.


Daniel Johnston is the founder of indusdelta.co.uk a niche news, analysis and community website set up in 2007 for the welfare to work industry. It sustains itself through advertising.


Making local media pay


Manchester confidential is a news and entertainment site for the city that is confident enough in its performance to plan to charge for content.


Eric Gordon, founding editor of Camden New Journal, an independent London paper launched in 1982,  runs a newspaper with a £2m turnover and a staff of 30. It operates on a small net profit which he believes a larger, more commercially minded owner would not accept, meaning closure.



He told the conference: “Even now, despite the slump, we’re getting by.


“It’s so important to look at the market – and whether you’re going to get advertisers.”


New markets for your skills


If traditional media companies can’t or won’t pay you to do what you do well, you need to find someone who will.


Gavid MacFadyean, director of the Centre for Investigative Journalism, said 75% of investigative journalism is now carried out by foundations or NGOs.


Blogging


Paul Staines runs the 2m-page-views-per-month political blog Guido Fawkes.
And is a founder of MessageSpace.co.uk – an advertising network that represents 40-odd political websites. He told the conference that the single highest paid blogger on MessageSpace has sales on average of £3,872 per month.


The top 10% of bloggers had monthly sales averaging £2,861 in the fourth quarter of 2008 – and that you can add on perhaps 30 per cent to those numbers now.



Staines also makes money selling stories to newspapers, from T-shirt sales and appearances.
He can get £20,000 from a newspaper for a political scandal story.



“The thought that a rival newspaper is going to get it drives them mad and they pay up for that reason.



“I have achieved the Marxist ideal. I own the means of production and distribution. I have job security, I can’t be fired and do much better than many journalists.”



Dominic Ponsford says: “When it comes to niche business and local media I think we are going to see ever more small web-based start-ups taking a slice of the pie.”


He told the conference how his title, Press Gazette, which has had a troubled recent history under a variety of owners,  is made to pay:


  • Reach a mass audience online
  • Reach an elite audience in print 
  • Attract people to linked events

I suppose its fair to say that, as journalists have only had to be entrepreneurial in the past few years, it's no surprise not many are much good at it right now. But that will change. It has to change if journalists are to be equipped to survive.

Thursday 14 January 2010

We are all journalists now – so we need a new definition of news


Haiti shows us the modern face of journalism. When something big happens, which affects a lot of people, or about which many not directly affected have a high level of interest, the old model of professional journalism collapses.

With Haiti as with other major disasters, as well as the Iranian uprisings and the Mumbai terror attack, the resources of traditional professional journalism cannot cope. Often they can’t get access.

Yet the old media conglomerates still strive to cover such stories in the old top-down way that they always did. Last night the BBC’s correspondent was bundled onto the 10 O’Clock News a bare 10 minutes after his plane had landed. All he could tell the millions watching was what a few airport workers had told him in that time, and that as his plane had arrived over an area of low-rise buildings he hadn’t really seen any devastation.

Clearly the old cry: have we got a man there yet? Is still heard in the world’s newsrooms.

Now you might argue that the BBC, along with every other news organisation, made strenuous efforts to get material from on the ground, and was very happy to take that from anyone with a mobile phone. You’d be right, but that doesn’t alter the fact that really major stories are actually now covered by those involved in them. The citizens are the reporters. The professional journalists are the curators of that material: they are editors, not reporters. Or at least, they should be.

Because we (almost all) have a multimedia broadcasting device in our pocket, we are all journalists now. I want to hear the story from those involved in it, not some bloke who’s just landed. No wonder the general view of journalists is that they over-simplify, misunderstand and distort.

But of course all those millions with camera phones, Twitter and Facebook accounts aren’t all trained in reporting. So while we all have the technical power to report, only the chosen few have the journalistic skills to do it well, and hence effectively. Often that doesn’t matter. As any journalist will tell you, a big story tells/writes itself.

But what this also suggests to me is that, to be a fully enfranchised citizen in this new age of omnipresent broadcasting capability, a person needs to know how to be a reporter. Such skills should be taught in school alongside the basics of maths and English.

I’m not talking about abstract media studies, but rather the solid basics of what makes a news story and how to tell it, in words, sounds and pictures.  That is now just as vital as being able to structure and write an essay.

Increasingly, any citizen who can’t engage with the internet and social media risks powerlessness and disenfranchisement.

More and more, a consumer needs access to social media to get a decent level of service.

Contrast the general ineffectiveness and frustration of spending hours on the phone to a call centre with the ease of posting a tweet about your problem. Very often, the latter works, the former doesn’t.

When my broadband packed up I spent 21/2 fruitless hours on a bad phone line to India, which failed to resolve the problem. My annoyed tweet got me an immediate call from customer care, who fixed it.

When my car was vandalised our community copper was unavailable. We didn’t hear from him until a week later. Yet my tweet to a chief inspector of another force got an immediate response with solid advice of what I should do.

Pretty soon the best way to get your elected representative to take notice of you will be through social media. So anyone who doesn’t have access to it, or can’t express themselves effectively through it, will be powerless.

The impact of all this on professional journalists and how they are trained is, or ought to be, seismic.

The big stories have always been the ones that involve a lot of people. Now, the participants are the reporters too.

The snow in the UK is being covered largely by those affected. Professional journalists are one step removed, they are the curators of that material.

When the floods in the north of England devastated parts of the Lake District I looked in vain for really comprehensive coverage on mainstream media that would satisfy my particular interest. I got plenty of reporters doing pieces to camera in a swamped high street. Only on social media did I get the wealth of reporting within which I could find what I wanted.

I was interested in a particular village and valley. I found a blog post from the owner of a bed and breakfast  who had driven right across the region, taking photographs of  the devastation all along the way, and using a simple piece of free software to geotag them to a map. With this and some other material pertinent to my particular interest, I was able to create my own personalised news stream on my Facebook page.

The material was there on social media to satisfy almost any observer’s particular interest in a very big story, but the established media organisations failed to become the gateway to it.

But what about smaller stories? Not the earthquakes and revolutions, but the stories that might be seen as the bread-and-butter of local news coverage?

Jeff Jarvis suggests that we need to do no less than re-think what news is and how it is reported.

Responding to a Pew report that said 95 per cent of original reporting still comes from newspapers he blogged that the study [the emphases are mine]: “defines news as news has been defined. We should be rethinking our definition of what is news - for many people, it’s not stories about juvenile justice, one of Pew’s subjects - and how it should be covered - not necessarily in articles - and how it is spread - that is the role of blogs and Twitter - and not be stuck in old measurements.

He goes on: “We are also just beginning to see experimentation with the form of news, moving past the articles the study measures. News is becoming more of a process than a product; it is being disseminated in new ways thanks to search and social and algorithmic links. News is changing.

“We must keep mind that we are at the dawn, the very dawn of the new news ecosystem.”

What the economics of that new ecosystem might be is still very hazy. But what we do know is that this new model will strongly feature the citizen-as-journalist, and hence how to do good journalism must be an essential ingredient of a citizen’s education.