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Page 1: Fostering Innovation

toFostering Innovation

Within an Existing Organization

THE SECRETS

Dan Pacheco, The Bakersfield Californian

A Primer for Newsroom Leaders

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Bakersfield’s Successes• First U.S. newspaper to deploy “citizen

journalism” with The Northwest Voice (2004)

• Among first to experiment with free Classifieds and social networking (Bakotopia.com, 2005)

• Award-winning print redesign (2006)

• Local niche network approach. Eleven online brands, 6 with print editions, since 2004.

- New products generate unique share of 7% local audience, 22% advertisers in city of 300,000.

- 30,000 user profiles, 29,000 friend connections, 1,000 blogs.

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And most recently ...

• Knight News Challenge recipient.

- Printcasting: a digital-print hybrid strategy. Grows local audience and revenue by giving niche print publishing tools to consumers, and self-serve print advertising tools to local businesses.

- $837,000, two-year project started in June (and my full-time job).

- Timeline: Alphas & betas this Fall, full launch in March 2009, extend to five partners in other cities in late 2009, fully open source in 2010.

- Learn more at http://www.printcasting.com

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But that’s the past• Much as we hate to admit it, newspapers have a

culture that is really focused on the past and what happened yesterday.

• Our continued existence is all about focusing on tomorrow.

• Unfortunately, our office culture often struggles with staying current with today, let alone defining the future.

• How do we get there?

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First, the Truth

• There are no formulas, no silver bullets, and really no secrets. This is an organic process.

• You either embrace change and risk, or you resist change and embrace status quo. News industry’s future depends on change.

• Strive for the former!

- General lack of action has inspired some influential people to encourage journalists to jump ship en masse. Example: http://tinyurl.com/636wg3

- The less you do, the more we’re going to hear this -- and the better the advice will sound to your staff.

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Innovation Starts With You

• Leadership must expect and support creativity.

• Difficult, because this means less focus on supporting existing business.

- But existing businesses are faltering. Keep a core team focused on shoring them up. Use revenues as your own Venture Capital firm for innovations that will be tomorrow’s core businesses.

• Leadership must BELIEVE in the future, and put its money where its mouth is.

• Listen to and encourage people who pitch ideas. Be a spring board, not a buzz saw.

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Two ways to innovate

1.Innovate from within

2.Innovate from without

(Hint: 2 helps drive 1).

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Innovate From Within (hard)• Difficult for people who are incented to support

current business models to prioritize the future.

• Some ideas from star innovators in Bakersfield (Mary Lou Fulton, Jen Baldwin, Matt Munoz):

- Listen to crazy, creative ideas & communicate with staff so that even top-down mandates look like grass-roots initiatives (JB)

- Empower cheerleaders in the newsroom to inspire change in the newsroom. Without buy-in, you get backlash (JB)

- Make innovation everybody’s job, but also somebody’s job. Make it clear that new ideas are welcome, but also assign someone to gather and evaluate ideas from inside & outside (MLF)

- Use competitors, and use competition to your advantage. e.g. MySpace and Facebook pages for your new products (MM)

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Internal examples• Newsroom video revolution.

- Totally organic. One year after one video editing desk as assigned, 70% of newsroom contributed to videos (see Bakersfield.com home page).

• “Bakosphere”: Newsroom decided to use blogs as their live content management system.

- Live news updates and conversation with community throughout the day. See http://tinyurl.com/55zbzp

• Californian Extra: a daily PDF digest of news for busy people.

- It didn’t survive (good approach, wrong audience), but the idea continues in a different way with Printcasting.

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Innovate From Without• Not all ideas will gain traction in core

organization. Sometimes you need to shelter innovators from core product concerns.

- Send them into the desert, or separate them from core organization.

- In Bakersfield: New Products Group, Mercado Nuevo, Printcasting.

• Don’t expect instant miracles. “Make money on day one” can sfifle the big future opportunities.

- But do expect long-term vision for revenue generation.

• After success, send those people back into the core product.

- Encourage tendency of core product teams to compete with new products.

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External examples• Nine totally new brands created in a network

of 11, in addition to Bakersfield.com and Tehachapinews.com

• Bakotopia.com

• The Bakomatic social media platform

• Inside Guide business directory

• Personal Inbox and news feed

• Interest Groups

• Printcasting

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Create Innovation Vehicles• Create transparent process that makes it easy

for anyone to pitch an idea that grows audience & revenue in new ways.

• Encourage anyone at any level to pitch ideas.

- Say, “If your idea is chosen, you can have a role in its implementation.”

- Surprise! Most people have an innate entreprenurial spirit, but they lack a safe framework to let it be seen.

• Validate best ideas with research. Then, get busy!

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Make Room for Play• Creative people learn by playing with new

things, and it gives them energy that results in more new stuff for you.

- e.g. Bakersfield’s Second Life experiment. Some laughed, but it resulted in a renewed appreciation for a Personal Inbox & micro-payments that later surfaced in our social media platform, Bakomatic. (And to our surprise, it was profitable!)

• The difference between play and competitive research is very thin these days.

- Allow staff to casually play with Facebook apps, Twitter, Seesmic videos, iPhone apps, etc. If jobs get done, what are you worried about?

• Google reserves 10% of everyone’s time to work on projects of personal interest.

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Make Room for Accidents• July 7 WSJ report on Innovation -- read it! (http://tinyurl.com/59stjo)

• Some of the most world-changing innovations in history are the result of accidents (e.g. discovery of Smallpox vaccine)

• Let creative people jump between projects (otherwise, we get bored!)

• Don’t call unexpected results “failures”.

• Encourage pack-rat-like collecting. Stumble through your collection periodically.