
Two dozen smart and experienced people who actually run newspapers were
here at Poynter recently for a conference about the future of news --
and how to get there. You can sample below what some of them wrote at
the conclusion of the event. Here is my own (non-conforming) take:
A bright future for newspapers depends on two things that may sound the same but are actually different:
(1) Editors and newsroom staff must continue as
the primary news providers in their communities, adapting and
delivering reports on multiple platforms, innovating in form, voice,
variety and audience-focused content.
(2) As businesses, newspapers must generate new
sources of income as traditional ones fade. That includes online
display advertising, rich and competitive local classified, local
search, other online income and multiple niche publications. They must
also get the best results -- discovering new lines of business and
holding on to the old -- in the paper edition.
This
implies some redefinition of business/news roles and dynamics. Editors
might NOT be right in thinking that going with the gradual audience
flow to the Web is sufficient. It is necessary, but not sufficient.
Ownership needs to stay on board for high-end, watchdog public-service
journalism. The business side needs to be responsible for generating
income and for balancing earnings against needed investments in a tough
transitional period.This is not to say we should cling
to the old wall separating the business and news sides of the industry.
But perhaps there will be some return to traditional roles and parallel
tracks: We make the money. You create great journalism on multiple platforms.
If that happens, such trends as news staff cuts, excessive margins, the
editor as a business person and determining what revenue attaches to
what content might all soon fade as workable solutions.
But, as Dennis Miller
says, I could be wrong. Mid-course corrections are certainly to be
expected, since we are only in the early stages of serious work on the
transition.
* * *
There
is no question that editors are in a proactive mode these days on all
matters Internet and interactive. That sure beats the posture of a few
years back, when online endeavors were lumped with contract printing as
"other" on the balance sheet and held little interest for top editors.
|
REFLECTIONS FROM THE CONFERENCE
|
Before they headed back to their newsrooms, the editors, publishers and news researchers who attended the Future of News
conference at Poynter in May composed short reflections on what we can
look forward to in the news business. Some of the comments have
been trimmed to avoid repetition.
Click on the links below to see what they think, in their own words:
- Challenging the Conventional Wisdom, by Byron Calame
- Toward a Definition of News, by David Zeeck
- The Value Proportion at Its Core, by Howard Weaver
- Future of News Is Secure; Future of News Organizations Is Not, by Clark Hoyt
- A Lesson from Hurricane Coverage: We Can Be Indispensibe, by Sharon Rosenhause
- Writing Our Own Future and Paddling Like Hell, by Carl Redman
- No Longer the Gatekeepers, but..., by Peter Bhatia
- It's All About the Culture, by Gary Kebbel
- Needed: Talent, Training & Leadership, by Wes Turner
- Sharing the Responsibilities of News, by Bob Zaltsberg
- Job One: Deciding How Best to Tell Each Story, by Marty Kaiser
- Shift the Culture: From Reactive to Anticipatory, by Joe Pepe
- Get Nimble, Regain Lost Ground, by Henry Freeman
- Focus on Quality, Not Platform, by Ron Royhab
- Internet Just One Stop in the Evolution of News, by David Shribman
- Profitability & Usefulness, by Bennie Ivory
| |
But
as I listened to these editors and publishers at Poynter, I thought I
heard a leap of faith: That where editorial attention turns, audience
and dollars will surely follow. There were more than a few expressions
of old-time religion that news is "inevitable."
I'm not so sure.
It reminds me of a conversation I had a few years ago with a Disney
executive who said the company was having a progressively tougher time
getting theme-park rides made, because hand-
lathing is a dying craft. Once the underlying demand for
lathe work faded in home-building, only 60-year-olds continued to do the work.
In
a mega-philosophical sense, people will always want the news. But the
craft, as taught at Poynter and practiced by the professionals at 1,500
newspapers in the U.S., could end up much diminished unless economic
models with more pep are invented over the next decade.
In the Future of News session I moderated, Tom Rosenstiel's
presentation
struck a chord because he provided some elegant and practical thinking
about elements with competitive value that editors have under their
direct control in an age of information overload.
I was also struck by a comment from Harvard Business School professor
Clark Gilbert,
who said he believes a reluctance to innovate is more pronounced now on
the business side than among editors. Similarly, Paul Ginocchio,
the Deutsche Bank analyst, said the best thing newspapers could do next
would be to hire new sales staffs.
Clark Hoyt, concluding his term as editor of
Knight Ridder's Washington bureau, shared some of my perspective in his
wrap-up essay.
He argued that news organizations need to crack the nub of their
business problem -- the notion that the online product isn't as
lucrative as print -- or their future is not certain.
Howard Weaver, vice president of news at the nation's second largest chain,
McClatchy, also split the problem in two, but simply
expressed confidence that his business-side colleagues can solve their half.
With
6 percent of revenue online and that segment of the business growing at
30 percent plus annually, it makes all kinds of sense for newspapers to
invest in online development. But, to me, neglecting the source of 94
percent of the revenue or encouraging the migration of audience from
the paper to the Web doesn't. Walking away from the print edition, as
some progressive thinkers now propose, would be a wild gamble.
Here
is a small sample of how the business side of online news remains every
bit as much under construction as its content and design. There has
always been some sleight of hand in talking about unique visitors per
month as if that were a meaningful measure of audience reach for
advertisers.
It turns out, according a
fine essay earlier this year by Northwestern University's
Rich Gordon,
that the unique-visitor count itself is badly flawed. One methodology
treats visits from different computers (say, home and work) as
"unique." Another basically misses the at-work market, a significant
source of newspaper site visits.
The good news, Gordon reports,
is that some newspaper companies, seeing those flaws, are starting over
and are identifying a substantial cadre of "heavy use" visitors who
visit four or five times a week and hop to the site four or five times
a day -- in other words, true online readers. Combine good numbers on
the size of that group with click analysis of how they use advertising
on-site, and we could be headed up the path of making online ad buys
more valuable.
* * *
I
missed the first night of the Future of News conference, but was told
by Poynter colleagues that the conversation got testy between print and
online execs.
Tim McNulty, public editor of the
Chicago Tribune
-- invited to observe and comment on the conference -- noted in his
closing remarks "an undercurrent of resentment." Maybe we all need "to
go to a sweat lodge," he joked, to unload the residual bad feelings.
I
mention these sidelights because mid-2006 still finds some of the same
old, same old divisions, even as ramping up online content has become a
central focus of newsrooms. Many news executives still see the
digerati
as dogmatic, impractical and blasé about some of the basics of accuracy
and attribution. Many of those with a whole-hearted online vision think
the industry is moving, but not nearly fast enough or knowledgeably
enough.
The schism got a public airing in a pair of pieces about
Editor & Publisher's annual
Interactive Media Conference -- one by consultant
Vin Crosbie, the other by Forbes.com editor
Paul Maidment.
Both made merry over the comment of one editor there: "I don't know
what to do, but I'm ready to do it." Is that a confession of
cluelessness or what?
I think that perspective is a little harsh
and unduly hostile. The editors at our Poynter conference were eager
for examples of best practices that they could take home to their
papers. The trouble is that consensus best practices -- especially with
a proven business payoff -- are hard to find as yet.
So they are
left with the broad strategy of trying to attract more visits and
getting the visitors to stay longer, with a fuller business model to
follow. Poynter faculty and staff found, on a reconnaissance survey of
more than a dozen news organizations this spring, that everyone now
embraces the need to get breaking news online and to experiment with
the rich panoply of new forms -- audio, video, podcasts, blogs, photo
galleries, Flash, etc. That's still not sexy enough for those eager to
dump the 94 percent of the business still paying the bills, but it is a
start.
In early 2005, you could have stumped the majority of an audience of editors or news executives with questions such as: Who is
Craig Newmark? Or what is
Wikipedia?
We have progressed quickly, but editors still know that they and the
newsrooms they direct are on a steep learning curve. They need to know
more about the size and behavior of online audiences, more about young
readers, more about what is out there and popular on the Internet, news
or non-news. This isn't a case where you can learn first and do later;
it's both, together, on the fly.
Just before the conference participants wrote their summary essays, my colleague
Jill Geisler conducted a session proposing a leadership style, borrowed from
a pair of Stanford professors,
for "fast and effective change." Don't talk about how long it is going
to take -- that's de-motivating. Sell the necessary direction of
change, even if the outcome is not known. Project confidence -- even
overconfidence -- knowing that updating will be necessary.
There
is a flavor of all that in the essays that follow. But make no mistake
that most editors and publishers also recognize the devil in the
details.