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April « 2009 « DigiDave - Journalism is a Process, Not a Product
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DigiDave - Journalism is a Process, Not a Product

Collaboration is Queen, Communication is Key. I am Just a Pawn…

Journalism Business Ideas

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I want to continue my posts of “journalism business ideas.”

I still think the best idea I have (aside from Spot.Us) is a newsroom cafe. Combine that with Copy Camps and you have a newsroom that is at the center of a community.

This post has three more ideas. Admittedly they seem more like side-projects than entire business models - but why not just throw them out there?

1. WalkablePath.com

picture-1Today I walked from the Civic Center of San Francisco to Chestnut and Divisadero and back to my apartment in the Mission. Anybody that lives in San Francisco knows it isn’t the distance that makes walking tough, it’s the hills.

Perhaps this already exists - but I’d love an interface where people could insert the general ascent of their streets (mild hill north, steep hill west, etc) into the map.

Then some simple logic could determine the least resistant path for a walker. The logic could also include “extra distance walked” to avoid hills - and allow you to toggle that to your preference.

2. AmatuerWeather.com

A simple site where you can enter your zip code and then predict the weather for the next five days. The site then compares your predictions to the real outcomes and rewards you with points. Granted it is a niche site - but I could imagine some weather nerds geeking out on this.

Extra points if you predict something that Weather.com got wrong.

3. And just to be cheeky, I’ll throw out East Bay Express‘ idea presented in “Saving Newspapers: The Musical.”

Hey - East Bay Express, I’m raising money for freelance journalists in the Bay Area. You are in the Bay, you probably use freelancers. Idea: Give me a call.

That’s right… I’m calling you out!!! Or - you can always try and make more viral videos.

On Being Young and Using the Internet

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You always want to keep an eye on young-guns growing up underneath you. I’ve already publicly said that the Co-Press kids scare the bejasus out of me (in a good way). This group of students is growing and they have the ability to accomplish a lot.

As an example…. Daniel Bachhabur. I dare you to not be infected with his enthusiasm.

(Full disclosure, Copress brought me in as an advisor - but only because I flattered them as much as possible).

From the Skoll World Forum - Keith Hammond Reports

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The following is a guest post from Keith H. Hammonds who has been attending the Skoll World Forum this week: A gathering of  “figures from the social, academic, finance, corporate and policy sectors engaging with each other to accelerate, innovate and scale solutions to some of the world’s most pressing social issues.” Try saying that three times fast.

I was flattered Keith and Ashoka wanted to host this guest post on my blog - and was even more excited to go through the post. In full disclosure - I suspect Ashoka first came across my site after winning the Knight News Challenge. I hope they stayed for the content ;)

Keith H. Hammonds

So, we just attempted to crowdsource the future of news.

With a few hundred social entrepreneurs.

In an hour and a half.

It was the right moment. As Sasa Vucinic, founder of the Media Development Loan Fund, observed, “Someone has hit the reboot button on journalism.” We are, he said, caught in the metaphorical “five minutes” between the point when an existing, well-understood system dies and the moment when a new system becomes concrete and comprehensible. The public conversation is very much focused on journalism’s failing institutions — and that conversation pales next to the relentless examination within the media world of its own impending demise.

And it was definitely the right crowd: the sixth annual Skoll World Forum in Oxford, England, an oddly glam gathering of 700-plus of the world’s leading social entrepreneurs, the people who fund their work, and various academics, media, and other hangers-on (many of them exercizing very robust Twitter accounts) who think that work is important.

Which it is. Social entrepreneurs attack big social problems with solutions rooted in business strategy. Health care, poverty, climate change, water, literacy, human rights—social entrepreneurs abhor vacuums.

The future of news: Big vacuum in need of solutions.

Ashoka, which supports and productively connects over 2000 social entrepreneurs around the world, understands that what comes next for news is hardly incidental. Ensuring flows of reliable, relevant, valuable information that engages people as effective citizens is foundational to democratic society. It also is central to solving most other big social problems. That’s why we’ve partnered with the John S. and James K. Knight Foundation on a program to identify, fund, and otherwise advance the work of social entrepreneurs in news and knowledge. We’ve already elected our first cohort of Fellows, a bunch that includes a guy doing mobile news texting in Sri Lanka and another creating an independent online news agency in Senegal.

Which is how we scored a big theater and 200 or so of these social entrepreneurs at Oxford’s Said Business School.

Bill Drayton, Ashoka’s founder and CEO, and Paula Ellis, Knight’s vice-president for strategic initiatives (and a former newspaper editor and exec), described the challenge, which should be familiar. Rapidly changing technology and the escalating needs of information users have together forged three new dynamics: the dramatic decentralization of information; an explosion of innovation in storytelling; and the emergence in media of a powerful participative culture.

That confluence also has raised questions around the values that will underlie new media strategies and institutions. Like:

  • How do we equip people with the tools and skills to be effective, responsible information participants — and what are the delivery mechanisms for those skills?
  • The web has eroded human connection, devaluing our historical skills for trusting. How will we adapt those skills or learn new ones? What will it mean for information to be trustworthy, and how will we know when it is?
  • Having left behind the monopoly press, how do we prevent the rise of a new set of bigger media monopolies (like, say, Google)? How do we ensure competition?
  • Information drives systems, which is why people perpetually want to control those flows. How do we guarantee that information flows freely?
  • What will the new public discourse look like, and how do we ensure that it advances society?

All of which amounted to asking something like: How do we reinvent the world? Or rather, how do we help shape a set of foundational values that ensure this reinvented world better informs, engages, and connects its citizens? (We steered clear of the pesky corollary question, How do we pay for it?  Another time.)

For our crowd, the challenge around trust was critical — a key to all the rest. “With the exponential growth in online media,” asked one participant, “how do we address the blurring of the traditional distinction between facts and opinion? It’s fact rather than opinion which in the long-run changes people’s behavior.”

Is it? Paula Ellis observed that information per se is far less important than one’s relationship to that information. We rely on trusted sources to tell us which information is worthwhile and relevant to us. Historically, information that comes from The Economist has meant something different to each of us, better or worse, than information from Rush Limbaugh.

Only now, we’re appointing new agents of trust – professional colleagues, friends, friends of friends, whomever we’ve decided to follow on Twitter: these self-constructed social networks act as our editors, essentially determining by committee not just what’s truthful, but what’s most urgent and most valuable to us at any given moment.

Which may be at once compellingly democratic and flat-out dangerous. Democratic, because we enable as information participants a ton of people who weren’t in the game before. Dangerous because many of them don’t know what they’re doing: the risk, we agreed, is that a largely news-illiterate crowd will accept and distribute information that’s “just true enough.”

That’s troubling because of the increasingly tight linkages between information and action. More and more, Paula noted, news will assume and inform action, becoming more of a continuum; information will, in fact, activate communities.

That phenomenon, of course, could go either way. We could see historically passive audience members transformed into active, effective citizens, joining in networks whose use of truthful, trustworthy information strengthens and advances democratic society. Or we could devolve into an era of self-interested hype, sensationalism, and propaganda.

Which forced us to confront yet one more question: “Is the ‘theory of change’ behind traditional journalism out of date?” asked David Bornstein, a journalist and chronicler of the social entrepreneurship phenomenon. His challenge betrayed the distinctive social entrepreneur ethos: What’s important isn’t what journalists do or how they do it, but rather the systemic linkages by which they effect impact on society. “Do the new understandings into human behavior — i.e. that people are not ‘rational actors,’ that aspirational stories are more influential in stimulating action than critical ones — require that journalism rethink how free presses help societies improve?”

Well, yes, absolutely. Which is where this crowd closed for the day —left with a bunch of ambitious questions, and with about as much satisfaction, for now, as anyone else.

Reports Back from the First Spot.Us Reporter

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In my recent switch to Wordpress (officially complete) I am late to write about my new-found friend Alexis Madrigal’s post in the Nieman Reports Journal on his experience with Spot.Us.

In fact, Alexis was the very first Spot.Us reporter. He was our monkey shot into space. I’m happy to say he has come back down from orbit and continues to do interesting and innovative reporting projects at Wired (my old stomping ground).

I particularly like his wit about how our friendship began and his response to the now tired (but still always asked) question about Spot.Us and the influence of money.

It seems to be a time-honored journalistic tradition to launch partnerships over beer. So whatever else David Cohn and I might have gone on to do differently, know that some things are still sacred among reporters.

….

People—OK, only other journalists—often ask me, “Did you think about who was funding your story?” Sure, I did. I wanted to thank them by providing the most honest reporting I could. Even if I’d wanted to write what the funders wanted, I don’t think I could have. It would have taken a lot of research just to figure out their angle on biofuels. As I told a Dutch weekly when they interviewed me about it, “There was no John ‘I Love Ethanol’ Smith on the [funders] list.” And besides, this was my story that they’d agreed to fund, and I was the one going to report it. None of my funders contacted me or in any way suggested that I push the story in a given direction.

And now that the transition to wordpress is complete - expect blogging to resume at a new and inspired pace (for a few more days and then I’ll get bored and go back to Twitter again).

Updates on Spot.Us

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There are more updates to spot.us than I can really fit into a MediaShift IdeaLab post. For the list-y version of recent milestones - scroll down to the bottom.

But first, I want to highlight a very specific example of forward momentum both for Spot.us and the notion that news organizations don’t try new things. I try and avoid the “new media v. old media” debate. What I often say is “I have constructive criticism for both sides.”

Details on new media criticism: It needs to mature and blossom.
Details on old media criticism. It must learn to be agile - fail early and often.

Recently Spot.Us and the Oakland Tribune have come together to partner and the collaboration can be an example on how both sides can address their weaknesses.

The Project: Oakland’s streets face dire future without change.

My hat goes off to Martin Reynolds at the Oakland Tribune. From the first time I explained Spot.Us he has had a “yes” attitude.

I have to admit at first I wasn’t ecstatic about the subject. But having time to reflect, it is the perfect pitch. This is the quintessential local story. In some ways it is almost cliche - but in the case of Oakland, the streets really are in poor condition. It is also a story that can be repeated in San Jose, Palo Alto, and beyond (yes, I’m calling out future news organizations to repeat).

“This is a problem we all have as a community” Reynolds said to me in conversation. And that is when I realized why this project made perfect sense. The Tribune is an Oakland organization that is the best suited to tackle this issue, to find out what challenges the city faces, hold people accountable, and perhaps even enact change.This is an act of more than just journalism - but community.

The reporter they chose is somebody that freelances with them regularly. Fine by me - in fact, preferred.

Community Journalism: Check!!!

A big part of this story will be a map-mashup. The map alone won’t tell the story - but for obvious reasons it makes the whole story that much stronger.

One reporter cannot find all the potholes in Oakland. Sean Maher might know of some trouble spots - but this is a job for distributed reporting.

Spot.Us is going to organize “The Great Biking Pothole Search.” (details to come on our blog … seriously, this is going to be exciting!!!)

Still in the early stages of planning, the idea is to get as many bike-lovers as possible to meet on a beautiful Saturday afternoon and bike in different directions for 40 minutes (20 one way and 20 back) making notes of all the major potholes they see. These will then be recorded on the map.

Community members doing acts of journalism.

Alone the map doesn’t tell the whole story. And while some community members will donate 40 minutes of a Saturday afternoon - others will donate $10. That money will be used to pay a freelance journalism chosen by the Tribune - because we still need a reporter. And this is where new forms of media can learn to mature. It helps to have a reporter, in this case Tribune freelancer Maher, at the head of the project. He is accountable to ask questions to the right folks, find out what the challenges are, stick to the story, etc.

The idea: Some parts of journalism are best done distributed. Others are not.

Which is to say Content is King and Collaboration is Queen

Think in terms of Chess: The King is the most important piece, but the Queen is the most powerful.

Content is King: You want to make sure you produce quality reporting and a crafted narrative. This is best done by one person at the head.

Collaboration is Queen: If you don’t involve the larger community you will never be able to map the potholes in your community and in the case of Spot.Us you’ll never be able to afford the reporter who takes care of the content.

Life is a big game of chess - and the analogies abound.

Some updates on Spot.Us in List-y Form.

Trying to Evangelize

How to Build Your Own Community Funded Reporting Project.

Publishing stories

Almost ready to publish!!!

  • Oakland PD investigation: This story was funded six days before the Oscar Grant shooting. Since then the Chief has stepped down, four officers have been shot and the story continues to evolve. I do think that Alex Gronke at the Oakbook is wrapping it up and I am very excited.
  • Oscar Grant short documentary: The case has now been put on hold. The reporter has captured an interesting moment in Oakland’s history.
  • A Tale of Two Census Tracts: I read the draft yesterday and was incredibly moved. If you live in San Francisco then you know the Tenderloin is falling apart. The reporter has gone through census data and really paints a picture of stark contrast between SF’s rich and poor neighborhoods. But the story is also told with a beautiful narrative. This will be published in Race Poverty and the Environment, but we also hope to distribute it wider through Street Sheet, Street Spirit and perhaps the SF Guardian.
  • Oakland Schools Phasing Out. The reporter got an educational reporting fellowship with New American Media based on the work she was doing for Spot.Us. As a result - she is able to go further into the story. We were thrilled!
  • Newspapers in the face of changing times: Still in the works. A draft is being tossed around. In truth I was very hesitant to tackle this piece and almost took it down, but people started donating to it before I could.
  • Is the Bullet Train Still on Track? In collaboration with the Bay Area Monitor.

Stories we hope to fund soon.

Working with News Organizations

We’ve now worked or partnered with the following in some form or other.

  • Oakland Tribune (big w00t)
  • Berkeley Daily Planet
  • SF Appeal
  • RawStory.com
  • Kalw
  • Public-Press
  • Roxbury News
  • NewsDesk.org
  • VidSF.com
  • Bay Area Monitor

And hopefully more collaboration in the making.

We’ve refunded two stories!!!

I am INCREDIBLY excited about this. The biggest appeal Spot.Us has to donors is the notion that they have the chance of getting their money back so they can reinvest it towards a second article. I am happy to say we’ve done this twice now.

Boulavards.com, On Earth Magazine

Thinking Outside the Box

In-person fundraising events are in the works. Think of these as “rent parties.”

I am still a big believer in online organizing - but since we are working in communities, doing community journalism, we intend to put our faces out there as much as our Tweets. You need both.

New Features

If you haven’t visited Spot.us in awhile - you should check out our new features.

The site remains incomplete. Potential ideas we have.

  • “Join the reporting team” could turn into ‘pick up assignments’ ala IAmNews.com
  • More social networking features: Tweet this, Facebook it, etc.
  • The ability to show support for a story without donating money ala Digg.
  • Easier registration/login process.
  • Refine the new “group” functionality - which has been successfully tested
  • Widget that allows donations on any blog via Flash-widget cool-y-ness (far off)
  • A beat pitch: I’ll cover city hall for X weeks if we can raise y dollars by date Z. If we reach the goal - I’ll keep going.

Personal thoughts

I continue to have nothing but passion. This last weekend I spoke to the Alaskan Press Club. It was an honor to be invited out. At the beginning of my talk I said: “I will not lie to you” … but at the end of that same sentence I said “I am optimistic for the future.”

And I remain so. Spot.Us is making progress. We are far from being a fully fledged news organization, but that isn’t our goal. We are learning all the time and with each passing week getting closer and closer.

I’m also happy to say that we have funded almost (emphasis on almost) one story a week.

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