Another post to save to your bookmarks: Knight Digital Media Center has an article about the Top 10 search engine optimization tips for online news startups.
Posts Tagged ‘online news’
SEO tips for online news
Posted by Mediascaper on May 21, 2009
Posted in Online journalism | Tagged: online news, search engine optimization, SEO | 1 Comment »
A reporter’s worst nightmare
Posted by Mediascaper on May 14, 2009
If not the worst, then close to it: According to one irate journalist, when the New York Times incorporated the former site of the International Herald Tribune with its own, it erased the IHT archives. And along with it, at least one journalist’s entire output:
Thomas Crampton writes:
1- Every one of the links ever made to IHT stories now points back to the generic NY Times global front page.
2- Even when I go to the NY Times global page, I cannot find my articles. In other words, my entire journalistic career at the IHT – from war zones to SARS wards – has been erased.
Posted in Online journalism, news industry | Tagged: IHT, International Herald Tribune, New York Times, news industry, online news, Thomas Crampton | 2 Comments »
If print is dead, we’re all at the wake
Posted by Mediascaper on April 13, 2009
If you believe the estimates of Martin Langeveld, print is outdrawing websites by a country mile:
All generally accepted truths notwithstanding, more than 96 percent of newspaper reading is still done in the print editions, and the online share of the newspaper audience attention is only a bit more than 3 percent. That’s my conclusion after I got out my spreadsheets and calculator out again to check the math behind the assumption that the audience for news has shifted from print to the Web in a big way.
Not that Langeveld is advocating a contrarian’s course of action in response to the “death of print” meme:
The fact remains, of course, that not only is online revenue alone insufficient to sustain news operations, but the print operations of our larger newspapers, having lost most monopoly pricing power, are not sustainable either, recession or no recession. Finding a solution for these industry problems demands careful monitoring of where the audience is actually spending its time and attention. While the audience’s online attention seems to be a surprisingly low 3 percent, online is clearly where the audience is migrating to. In my mind, as I’ve written pretty consistently since last September, the solution is an online-print hybrid in which print is consolidated to one, two or three editions per week, not seven.
Posted in Newspaper industry, Print Journalism, news industry, newspaper websites | Tagged: Columbia Journalism Review, death of print, Martin Langeveld, news industry, Newspaper industry, online news | Leave a Comment »
Q&A with SeattlePI.com’s Michelle Nicolosi a must-read
Posted by Mediascaper on March 20, 2009
Michelle Nicolosi, executive producer of the new SeattlePI, offers some great insight into the direction of the former Post-Intelligencer’s new online endeavor.

Nicolosi talks with Content Bridges about news sites that she goes to for inspiration (The Guardian, Sydney Morning Herald), partner content for PI, it’s impressive resource of Reader Blogs, and much more. Here’s Nicolosi on:
Posted in Mainstream media, Multimedia, Newspaper industry, Online communities, Online journalism, The Internet, aggregation, blogging, civic journalism, headlines, hyperlinks, investigative journalism, news industry, newspaper cutbacks | Tagged: aggregation, Content Bridges, Michelle Nicolosi, news industry, news website, online news, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, SeattlePI.com, Twitter | 1 Comment »
MinnPost and the cult of personality
Posted by Mediascaper on March 5, 2009
Take a cue from MinnPost, whose Web traffic is up. Way up. The secret? Having the same writers write a lot:
“I’d say the most dramatic thing we learned was that having regular writers writing very frequently has a huge impact on traffic,” says [MinnPost founder Joel] Kramer. “Having interesting, lively content with a lot of frequency by the same writers, that’s really what’s made the most difference. …
… “When we launched we had no full-time staff or contract writers,” says Kramer. “It was 100 percent freelance by-the-piece. Now the substantial majority of the site is written either by staff writers or contract writers.”
This isn’t surprising. Some news execs and their webmasters will tell you content is content: people don’t care where it comes from. Maybe that’s true for certain niche sites or sites that aggregate general news items, but from personal experience, I’ve found that I’m more likely to bookmark a website if there’s a particular writer whose style and content I look forward to reading. More about the increase in page views:
Posted in Online journalism, news industry | Tagged: MinnPost, online news, Web traffic | 2 Comments »
The best online news on the Web
Posted by Mediascaper on February 12, 2009
At Recovering Journalist, Mark Potts lists his picks for the best examples of online media from traditional news organizations and small startups. Among his choices, these are the sites that I found particularly well done, appealing for their clean design, quality content and clarity of purpose.
Map-based:
LocalExplorer (Washington Post)
TimeSpace: World (Washington Post)
Local focus:
Posted in Online journalism, news industry | Tagged: Blogrunner, Chicago Tribune, CinciNavigator, Local Explorer, Mark Potts, MinnPost, New York Times, Obameter, online news, Pegasus News, politico, PolitiFact, Recovering Journalist, St. Petersburg Times, TimeSpace: World, TribLocal, Washington Post | Leave a Comment »
Organizing the online newsroom
Posted by Mediascaper on February 11, 2009
Gina Chen at Save the Media offers the second part of “What’s an online-first newsroom.” A few highlights of Chen’s recommendations:
- The best of the Web should come back to print
- Fellow reporters should follow each other on Twitter to cross-post tweets
- Traditional walls between editorial departments need to come down so that reporters can work together for the benefit of readers
- More writers than a traditional newsroom
- Organize the website along topics
- A thoroughly revamped print product
Posted in Multimedia, New Media, Online journalism, blogging, hyperlinks, news industry | Tagged: blogging, crowdsourcing, Gina Chen, online first, Online journalism, online news, online newsroom, Save the Media, Twitter | Leave a Comment »
Heard it through the Newsvine
Posted by Mediascaper on February 4, 2009
Mark Briggs at Journalism 2.0 runs down a list of news companies that he says “offer a glimpse of toward a sustainable future for journalism.” One of the more interesting of these is Newsvine, which seeds its site with content contributed by its users.
The vast majority of that content, based on my visit, is from other news sources. Another interesting note: Newsvine claims it doesn’t employ any editors. Instead, the placement of stories is based on votes by readers, to come up with a popularity score.
Posted in New Media, Online journalism, news industry, online advertising | Tagged: Journalism 2.0, Mark Briggs, news industry, Newsvine, Online journalism, online news, St. Petersburg, Tampa, Tampa Bay news, TampaBays10.com | Leave a Comment »