15 for '15 Online

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Logan Aimone, MJE Permission granted for educational classroom use only. http://slideshare.net/loganaimone http://loganaimone.com 15 for ’15 Improving your online news operation this year O N L I N E E D I T I O N

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Fifteen things today's online news staff should think about and do for 2015 — or before. Updated and revised from the 2014 edition.

Transcript of 15 for '15 Online

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Logan Aimone, MJE Permission granted for educational classroom use only.

http://slideshare.net/loganaimone http://loganaimone.com

15 for ’15 Improving your online

news operation this year

O N L I N E E D I T I O N

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Why try?• Improve constantly. Every year, every month, every

week, every story.

• Experiment. What you do, and how you do it, should be in flux. Figure out the best practices for your site.

• Engage. Better content yields an engaged audience. You want both.

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Try some new endeavors to improve your online news operation. !

You don’t have to try all 15 at once, but you can get started right away.

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No more issues.• Think online first. Don’t save things for the paper.

• The website is live. Update it frequently (like, every day).

• Don’t just dump your print content online. Post when stories are ready.

• Nobody cares about your PDFs.

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Go get the audience.• The audience is well beyond your school/student body.

• Attract them through social media promotions and referrals, commenting and contextual linking.

• Share more. Make it easy.

• Referrals matter.

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Be the #1 news source.• Your role on campus is to inform your audience, not just to

write stories or take photos.

• You have a responsibility — an obligation, even — to take that seriously and to do it well.

• Your audience needs you to tell the story in a truthful, authentic way.

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Cover your school.• Cover things your audience likes — and needs.

• More recreation and leisure (horseback riding, boating, hiking, etc.), video games and student views.

• Less rehashing of world events, parroting professionals and prognosticating about college/professional sports.

• When you commit to a category, you’ll create content for it (health, fitness, finance, consumer news).

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Use print + website.• Don't assume the audience is reading both.

• If coverage spans both platforms, make sure a reader can catch up through a printed summary or a digital sidebar.

• Use website for updates between printed editions.

• It’s not just about a story page. Social media posts contribute to communicating to the audience. Consider using Storify.

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Provide context.• Tag or categorize related stories.

• Use contextual linking, which aids the reader who might be coming late to a story.

• Use mug shots and pull quotes. A sidebar can also add a list of facts or summarize past coverage.

• Use short links, which are based on the database, not the initial URL. Kill the “http://domain.com” for internal links.

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Use the platform.• Tell the story in the most appropriate format.

• Embed video and audio clips, images and multimedia pieces to enhance the story for the reader.

• Don’t just upload the JPEG file from your paper. Make the image come alive online.

• Take advantage of free multimedia resources like Prezi, ThingLink and Infogr.am.

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Do more lists.• Listicle: A simple, arbitrary grouping

Example: “18 selfies with dogs”

• Definitive list: All-encompassing inventoryExample: “The 43 best moments from Homecoming 2013”

• Framework list: Only exists to structure a narrative; number is arbitrary — whatever it takes to organize/tell the storyExample: “36 reasons why you should volunteer for the Red Cross”

• More info here, here and here.

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Tell us about you.• Include staff profiles with useful information and clear,

professional mugshots that fit the space provided.

• Put your policies, awards, practices and interesting trivia in the “About” section where people can find them.

• Provide the name of school and physical address.

• Make it easy for visitors to contact you, even with a generic “contact” email. With a form, make sure a confirmation is sent when the form is submitted.

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Engage your community.• Allow and encourage comments. Develop a policy.

• Develop a robust and appropriate conversation with your audience via story comments and social media. Interact.

• Ask followers for story ideas, tips, sources, submissions and feedback on how you are doing. It’s a two-way conversation.

• Nerd alert: Use Akismet (free for nonprofits; flags spam). You’ll be glad you did.

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Try new social media.• Instagram, Tumblr, Vine, Reddit.

• Each has a distinct audience.

• Discover the journalistic use for things your peers are already using.

• Anticipate what's next: Snapchat? Pop? Something else?

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Know your audience.• See what people are searching for, how they got to the site,

what they are spending time with.

• What’s popular? Why?

• Use them as a classroom motivator. Can you get more visitors? Can you increase acquisition from certain platforms?

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Watch this, and think.

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Audience experience.• Is the site responsive for mobile and tablet readers?

• Focus on the content, and make it great.

• Have a well-designed UI.

• It’s about the UX!

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Details matter.• The home page is your dashboard.

• Reconfigure based on the news of the day. You have to manage the site every time you post, including balancing widget lengths.

• Showcase the most important stories in the carousel, not just the most recent. Help the reader see what matters.

• Only use a Twitter feed that compiles tweets or mentions or is specific (sports scores, other interesting links).

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Design the story pages• Because of referrals and social media, readers land on the

story page first.

• Less hub-and-spoke navigation to/from home page.

• More inter-category clicking.

• Make it easy for the reader to find information and understand the story with context and navigation.

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Remember the audience.• Doing a good job means thinking about what the reader

needs and using tools to meet those needs

• It doesn’t mean just providing a digital versionof the printed newspapers.

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Thanks!Questions? [email protected] @loganaimone http://loganaimone.com slideshare.net/loganaimone