Tag Archives: Twitter

Who are you calling Twitters?

It looks like an Express.co.uk story about the BBC and Twitter has been removed. Originally available at this link http://www.dailyexpress.co.uk/posts/view/152233/Is-the-BBC-run-by-a-bunch-of-Twitters-, it now shows as a missing story.

The story, ‘Is the BBC run by a bunch of Twitters?’ can, however, still be found via the cache. As Malcolm Coles noted on his blog yesterday, the Sunday Express claimed that some BBC Twitter accounts, such as Radio 5 Live’s Victoria Derbyshire, were being followed by only one or two people.

But does the Express understand how Twitter works? Coles first suspected that the journalists muddled the account names, and now claims they’ve mixed up ‘follower’ and ‘following’ numbers.

So Radio 5 Live’s @vicderbyshire actually has 3,692 followers but only follows 2 people (in fact, perhaps thanks to the story, her number of followers seems to be on the rise).

Oops. Journalism.co.uk tried to clarify the situation with Express.co.uk. But it’s no comment for now,  and we’re waiting a response from the legal department who deal with all enquiries about missing stories. People in Australia never go out without their gadgets on hands. That’s one of the reasons mobile casinos are getting more and more popular. This site has info about mobile casinos that might be interesting to casino games enthusiasts. Play pokies, blackjack, poker and other games on the go with the best strategies from mobile casino experts.

Daniel Victor: Using Twitter to find story contacts

In this post Daniel Victor, a reporter at the Patriot-News in the US, explains how Twitter helped him find sources for a political story on a slow Sunday night in the newsroom.

While the details of Victor’s newsgathering are certainly interesting, it’s his take-away points for journalists using (or not using) Twitter that are most significant:

  1. The contacts he found for his story using Twitter came from unexpected places;
  2. They paid off, because he has taken time to build up a local network on Twitter;
  3. “(…)Twitter didn’t replace fundamental reporting, it just facilitated it.”

Full post at this link…

(hat tip @mathewi)

AdAge.com: Monetising news tweets

Advertising Age takes a look at ways of making money out of your news organisations’ tweets, pointing to Ad.ly, a start-up offering paid tweets among news tweets.

Another example given is Canoe, a news publisher based in Montreal:

Since last month, it’s used a service from Assetize that inserts an advertising bar on top of pages that get shouted out in participating Twitter feeds.

Full post at this link…

Ten things every journalist should know in 2010

This is an update on a post I wrote at the beginning of last year – Ten things every journalist should know in 2009. I still stand by all those points I made then so consider the following 10 to be an addendum.

1. How to monitor Twitter and other social media networks for breaking news or general conversations in your subject area using tools such as TweetDeck. Understand and use hashtags.

2. You are in control. Don’t become a slave to technology, make it your slave instead. You will need to develop strategies to cope with information overload – filter, filter, filter!

3. You are a curator. Like it or not, part of your role will eventually be to aggregate content (but not indiscriminately). You will need to gather, interpret and archive material from around the web using tools like Publish2, Delicious and StumbleUpon. As Publish2 puts it: “Help your readers get news from social media. More signal. Less noise.”

4. Your beat will be online and you will be the community builder. Creating communities and maintaining their attention will increasingly be down to the efforts of individual journalists; you may no longer be able to rely on your employer’s brand to attract reader loyalty in a fickle and rapidly changing online world (see 7).

5. Core journalistic skills are still crucial. You can acquire as many multimedia and programming skills as you want, but if you are unable to tell a story in an accurate and compelling way, no one will want to consume your content.

6. Journalism needs a business model. If you don’t understand business, especially the business you work for, then it’s time to wake up. The reality for most journalists is that they can no longer exist in a vacuum, as if what they do in their profession is somehow disconnected from the commercial enterprise that pays their wages (one side effect of journalists’ attempts to ‘professionalise’ themselves, according to Robert G Picard). That does not mean compromising journalistic integrity, or turning into solo entrepreneurs; rather it means gaining an understanding of the business they are in and playing a part in moving it forward.

As former Birmingham Post editor Marc Reeves said in his excellent speech to Warwick Business School last year: “You cannot be an editor in today’s media environment without also being a businessman. It might say editor on my business card, but really, I am in the business of making news profitable and budgets, targets and performance are as important to me as words and newsprint.”

OK, you may not be an editor yet but that is no excuse, and it is probably easier to innovate while you are still working on the coalface without managerial responsibilities. Plus, in some cases, your editor may be part of the problem.

7. You are your own brand – brand yourself online! I’m not talking bylines here – you need to build yourself an online persona, one that earns you a reputation of trustworthiness and one that allows you to build fruitful relationships with your readers and contacts. You can no longer necessarily rely on having a good reputation by proxy of association with your employer’s brand. And your reputation is no longer fleeting, as good as your last big story – there is an entire archive of your content building online that anyone can potentially access. Avodart est un nouveau médicament de marque à base de dutastéride, idéal pour le traitement de l’alopécie androgénique. En réduisant significativement la chute des cheveux, Avodart apporte une contribution significative à la lutte contre la maladie. Dans la pharmacie FFPP Avodart achat lesateliersvortex.com est simple et rapide, sans ordonnance et des prix déraisonnables! Venez faire du shopping.

Obvious ways to do this: Twitter, Facebook, personal blogging, but you can also build a reputation by sharing what you are reading online using social bookmarking sites like Publish2 and delicious (see 3).

8. You need to collaborate! Mashable suggests seven ways news organisations could become more collaborative outside of their own organisations, but this could also mean working with other journalists in your own organisation on, for example, multimedia projects as MultimediaShooter suggests or hook up with other journalists from other publications as Adam Westbrook suggests to learn and share new ideas.

9. Stories do not have to end once they are published online. Don’t be afraid to revise and evolve a story or feature published online, but do it transparently – show the revisions. And don’t bury mistakes; the pressure to publish quickly can lead to mistakes but if you admit them honestly and openly you can only gain the respect of your readers.

10. Technology is unavoidable, but it is nothing to fear and anyone of any age can master the basics. If you do nothing else, set up a WordPress blog and experiment with different templates and plugins – I promise you will be amazed at what you can achieve and what you can learn in the process.

    Learn more practical advice on the future of journalism at our news:rewired event at City University in London on 14 January 2010.

    BusinessWeek.com: Twitter will end 2009 in profit

    Microblogging service Twitter has reached profitability after signing $25 million of deals to make its content searchable by Google and Microsoft’s Bing, Business Week reports.

    For those media companies using the service as a promotional or newsgathering tool this news will be welcome. Could it prompt more partnerships in 2010 for the three-year-old company?

    Full story at this link…

    AdAge.com: Huffington Post offers Twitter advertising

    “The Huffington Post has started offering marketers the ability to inject their own paid comments among reader comments and place paid Tweets among the live Twitter feeds the site assembles around news subjects and events,” reports Advertising Age.

    Full post at this link…

    Do we need rules for journalists’ use of social media?

    This is an edited version of a post that first appeared on KristineLowe.blogs.com. Kristine Lowe is a journalist and blogger based in Norway and president of the Norwegian Online News Association (NONA). Read her last post on Journalism.co.uk: ‘Twitter mishaps and netiquette for journalists‘.

    Interested in social media in the newsroom? Come to news:rewired, 14 January 2010. Tickets on sale now. Follow @newsrewired on Twitter (#newsrw).

    Are you a journalist 24/7? Does the company you work for own you? Does it harm your credibility as a journalist if you share personal opinions online? Are some opinions more appropriate to share than others?

    These are just some of many questions raised by the recent debates on journalists and social media. Some companies, such as Bloomberg, have very strict policies on how journalists may or may not use social media, but in Norway such rules have been absent until now.

    However, it was recently brought to my attention that several of the country’s biggest media organisations are working on social media rules for their journalists, which caused The Norwegian Online News Association (NONA), an organisation I’m heading, to host a debate last month.

    The reason? We thought it was much better to get such a debate out in the open than have it confined by the walls of each individual media company. If Norwegian is not Greek to you, you’ll find video and notes from the debate over at NONA’s blog, but as these are questions many media organisations are discussing these days, I’ve also translated some key quotes and questions here:

    ‘The home alone party is over’
    “The home alone party is over, now the adults are back and they want rules,” said Jan Omdahl, internet and technology commentator for Norwegian tabloid Dagbladet. He said Dagbladet’s journalists had been playing around with social media from an early stage, but now the media executives had entered the arena, demanding rules.

    “It’s very typical that those who don’t use social media, or have started using it very recently, want rules, whereas those who have used social media a lot take the contrary view,” said Nina Nordbö, a social media advisor at Norway’s public broadcaster (NRK) and NONA board member.

    “It is perhaps our smallest problem that we lack rules for social media. At the same time one of our biggest problems is that we are part of a tradition for one-way communication that makes us ill-equipped for exploiting the social web,” said Espen Egil Hansen, editor-in-chief of VG.no and NONA board member.

    Grey areas
    He felt it as important that we learned how to utilise this arena, and make our mistakes now rather than later. He also emphasised that VG.no had strict rules on ethics and he couldn’t see that they needed any more rules than these.

    However, Omdahl also pointed out that journalists encounter a whole new set of challenges online. “Even if I as a social media user think we can just continue as we always have done, I do see that we can benefit from raising awareness about these challenges. For instance: should I reply when I get questions on Twitter about why Dagbladet has used five different angles on that sex podcast on NRK.no? Should I confer with my bosses before I reply? Is it appropriate that I share my opinions on one of our most heavily criticised front pages?”

    Guidelines or rules
    Hanne Kirkenes from ABCNyheter.no pointed out that in her organisation it was not the editors but the journalists who had asked for rules.

    “In my experience, our journalists are divided: those who take to social media very naturally and those who think journalists should not be using social media at all,” she said, explaining that as a result of this they had a few simple guidelines on social media. They also had held internal discussions on this and would continue to do so.

    John Einar Sandvand, a digital strategist with Aftenposten, Norway’s newspaper of record, explained that his company was in the process of implementing rules for how their journalists use social media, but suggested three very simple ones:

    1) The media company should be genuinely positive to its staff being active in social media

    2) Social media activities must be done in a way which maintains the professional integrity of journalists

    3) Stay loyal to your employer

    You can read more about Sandvand’s thoughts on this on his excellent blog Beta Tales (in English).

    Impartiality, sources and PR
    We touched on several other issues which tend to come up in one form or another whenever journalists’ use of social media is up for discussion, hence I’ll just mention three of these briefly here:

    Impartiality: Can a blogger with a strong political agenda or view on a particular issue work as a journalist? Or would it be more useful to ask if a journalist or commentator can do more credible journalism once we know his our her agenda? Espen Egil Hansen suggested that bloggers were blurring the lines between reporting and commenting; that commentators like Omdahl could still do credible journalism; and that in the future we would see more journalists becoming individual brands.

    Consensus: Is it a problem that journalists and commentators mostly talk to their peers online, therefore exacerbating media’s herdlike behaviour? A Norwegian editor recently argued this was the case and argued that discussing ideas on Twitter created a consensus among the country’s commentators, and therefore we need rules to regulate media’s use of social media. To this it was pointed out that hacks and columnists have always associated mostly with other media folks, but that at least on Twitter they do so openly and not behind closed doors in the press club .  On Twitter they also have (an opportunity) to engage with their readers and can make an effort to expand the network of people they talk and listen to.

    PR: Somebody asked whether it was problematic that marketeers and academics got to know a journalist’s interests so well on Twitter that they would know exactly which journalist to choose for pitching a certain issue. My answer? No, no, no: I would LOVE more targeted pitches, if all PRs and marketeers would make the effort to figure out what my beat is and what issues I’m likely to write about I would be absolutely delighted….

    Related: Think Before You Re-Tweet: L.A. Times’ Updates Social Media Rules for Journos.

    #FollowJourn: @catherine_mayer / magazine journalist

    #FollowJourn: Catherine Mayer

    Who? London bureau chief for Time Magazine.

    What? Started her career at the Economist in the 1980s; frequent speaker at events (eg. at the LSE).

    Where? On Twitter / Time Magazine.

    Contact? On Twitter or via Time Magazine.

    Just as we like to supply you with fresh and innovative tips every day, we’re recommending journalists to follow online too. They might be from any sector of the industry: please send suggestions (you can nominate yourself) to judith or laura at journalism.co.uk; or to @journalismnews.

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    Sky News launches breaking news Twitter channel

    Following the deal between breaking news Twitter channel @BreakingNews and MSNBC.com, Sky News has launched a new Twitter account for its own breaking news tweets – @SkyNewsBreak.

    “The latest breaking news, as we get it, direct from the Sky News studio,” says the account’s tagline.

    According to various tweets from the team involved, the account will tweet breaking news updates before they appear on the Sky News site.

    Journalism.co.uk is following up for more info.

    #soe09: Live coverage online – opportunities for audience and money?

    The benefits of using social media sites, predominantly Twitter, to cover live news events, newsgather and let the readers in were stressed by speakers from Sky News, Trinity Mirror, NWN Media and Northcliffe in a session at the Society of Editors conference today.

    Sky’s social media correspondent (once titled ‘Twitter correspondent’) Ruth Barnett explained what had been learned since her role was created:

    “We’d be very foolish as journalists not to be part of this interaction (…) I use it as a newswire – not one as valuable verifiable and reliable as PA, but as a good source of leads, eye witnesses and trends.

    “If we can tweet our own breaking news it allows us to be proud of it, own it and direct traffic back to us.”

    But there’s more to come: Trinity Mirror multimedia head David Higgerson emphasised the need to work with the audience to improve the use of tools such as CoveritLive.

    “The big lesson that we need to learn is that we need to involve the audience more. If people want more passive coverage we’ve got the BBC, which is not to be critical of the BBC, but it can be hard to interact with it,” said Higgerson.

    There needs to be experiments with livestreaming video into liveblogs, he added, and newspapers should start looking at the potential of  tools like Audioboo. There’s no reason Audioboo, for example, couldn’t be used for more in-depth reporting, such as livecasting election results, he explained.

    But the biggest challenge is finding a way to work with the ‘army of citizen journalists’:

    “We need to go to them and our reporters need to be building relationships with them. If we can engage with them on local terms we can create a potent force for live news.”

    But it was Hull Daily Mail editor John Meehan who suggested that liveblogging and live-tweeting could be a revenue opportunity for news groups:

    “If paid content on the web is part of our salvation we have an obligation to develop services that go far beyond news and traditional reporting (…) It used to be paid-for live coverage in print (…) Covering it live on the web, real-time and interactive, may be one of the keys to earning revenue from content published online,” said Meehan, who used the Mail’s coverage of transfer deadline day in September as an example (500 posts on CoveritLive by journalists; 6,200 comments received on all-day liveblog).

    “We’ve got no plans to make them pay for it, but I think we as an industry should have an eye on where we can make money from. If that many people are going to spend that much time on a service, they really value that service (…) Mainstream news is a commodity; we need to find the things that aren’t commoditised.”