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Making magazines distinctive from online

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 November 2007 at 18:24
Tags: Magazines, Wired, pr

The US edition of PR Week has an interview with Wired business editor Jason Tanz, who has some advice for magazines looking cope with the disruption caused by the Internet:

I think we have a philosophy that, the Internet can do a lot of things really great, so focus your magazine on the things the Internet can’t do really great—write long stories, print it on nice paper, have beautiful layouts. I think that a lot of other magazines are trying to make stories shorter and become adaptable to the web, and essentially make the magazine product something that dovetails quite nicely immediately into the web format. So why buy the magazine? Even though we do put all the content of our magazine online for free, people still do find a different experience in coming home and opening it up and spending time with it. I’m very proud to be working at a place that believes in that kind of flight to quality.

The whole interview is well worth a read. Tanz also explains how Wired handles the print and online newsrooms, the growing workload of journalists who are also blogging, and discusses his boss Chris Anderson’s recent controversial decision to blacklist the e-mail address of PRs who send unwelcome press releases.

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Are email interviews ’stilted, over-rehearsed, and evasive’?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 24 April 2007 at 16:51
Tags: Journalism, Wired, email, interviews

Jason Calacanis finds it ironic that a journalist from Wired magazine has refused to conduct an interview exclusively via email.

On his blog, the Internet entrepreneur explains the email-interviews-only policy that he and some other high-profile bloggers have adopted, and publishes the email that he sent to the magazine writer:

Frankly, you need to adapt. Journalists have misquoted people for so long–and quoted them out of context that many people like to have their words on record.

I don’t want someone taking half a sentence or paraphrasing me… Just too much risk.

Besides I have 10,000 people come to my blog every day–i don’t need wired to talk to the tech industry.

It may be ironic that a journalist from a tech savvy magazine would eschew email, but there are plenty of good reasons why a journalist would adopt a no-email-interviews policy.

As one commenter on Calacanis’ blog puts it, email interviews tend to be “stilted, over-rehearsed, and evasive”.

For a journalist on deadline, moreover, speed is essential. And unless a source responds immediately with full and and unambiguous answers that require no follow-up, a quick phone call is always a faster way to exchange information than email.

Being written rather than spontaneously spoken, email interviews result in overly formal-sounding quotes. Worst of all, email don’t allow for spur-of-the-moment followups or requests for clarification.

A high-profile blogger’s concern about being misquoted is understandable — but so is a journalist’s concern about having an less-than-ideal interview medium dictated to them.

10 comments

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All the news that’s fit to Twit

Posted by Martin Stabe on 21 March 2007 at 13:54
Tags: BBC, British Press Awards, CNET, CNET News.com, CNN, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, Mashups, New York Times, Press Association, Wired, twitter

Just in time for its first anniversary last week, the Twitter has gained a huge surge in attention to go with accelerating growth in its user base.

The service, which combines social networking and blogging, allow users to send 140-character updates detailing what they are doing at the moment. Users can chose to have their friends’ messages delivered directly to an instant massager account or mobile phone via text message.

Helped by a flurry of adoption among the digerati at TED and SXSW conferences, Twitter has become the current darling among the usual early-adopter crowd — and has frustrated some by slowing down tremendously as a consequence.

Twitter invites users to reply to the question “What are you doing right now?” It then sends the responses — by RSS, IM or, crucially, mobile phone — to all of those friends who have signed up to follow that user’s messages.

Inevitably, this invitation has meant that the service is being used primarily for communicating the most banal aspects of everyday life — and this has led to a Marmite-like devision of opinion among the online commentariat.

Some A-list bloggers are contemplating shifting most of their everyday writing to the service. Weblogs Inc founder Jason Calacanis, for example, announced that “90% of my blogging is now on Twitter”, prompting howls of disapproving comments from some of his regular readers.

While the enthusiasts can’t get enough Twittering, its detractors are equally unflinching.

“Of all the masturbatory ego-fluffers on the Web, nothing chafes me worse than Twitter,” complained Steve Bryant of eWeek. “Not content with blogging — itself a microchunked, short-form version of diary keeping — we’ve taken to journaling the minute-by-minute factlets and factoids of our bite-sized lives.”

Like the blogging naysayers, the Twitter-haters are absolutely right when they complain that 99 per cent of the communication produced with the service is utter rubbish. Even the closest of friends are probably not interested in receiving a text message every time one of their mates farts.

But by focusing on the banality of most Twitter messages, the service’s critics are guilty of the same logical error as those who dismiss blogging because of the stupidity they observe in many bloggers: they confuse medium and message, technology and content.

Twitter may be encouraging its early adopters to use the service in a relatively banal form of content, but technology adoption never works out quite as the developers of new services imagined or even intended.

The technical idea underlying Twitter is interesting: It is a gateway service that lets users easily post and receive between three normally incompatible short-messaging services: web site comments, instant messaging and SMS text messages.

And like many of the Web 2.0 sites, Twitter has been clever about encouraging such unintended uses, by providing an API that makes it easy for skilled users to find innovative uses for the service.

Anil Dash of Six Apart, put it well when he wrote on his blog: “The sign of success in social software is when your community does something you didn’t expect. “

And that is certainly happening. US presidential hopeful John Edwards is using Twitter to keep supporters abreast of his campaign.

One user has created service that automatically provides service updates for the London Underground.

And of course, many people have seen the potential of the service for distributing news alerts. The Press Association announced last week that it would be using Twitter to distribute updates of Gordon Brown’s budget announcement today.

PA’s experiment is not the first attempt to use Twitter as a vehicle for distributing news, but what’s unusual about it is that it is being produced in-house rather than by their enthusiastic readers.

A few months ago, Twitter user Mario Menti created a mashup that ports the latest headlines from CNN and the BBC into Twitter, allowing users to receive headlines and links to breaking news headlines on their mobile phones by joining the publication’s network of Twitter friends.

A similar service have appeared for Google News headlines. Blogger Dave Winer created a Twitter headline service for Wired after a journalist at the magazine suggested it on one of the magazine’s blogs. The New York Times has both an official Twitter account and another one produced by Dave Winer. There is what looks like an official Twitter feed for technology site CNET News.com.

While I was writing this post, my phone chirped with a Twitter message from Guardian blogs editor Kevin Anderson revealing that something Twitter-related is afoot at Graun towers as well.

Of course, we’re not beyond jumping on the Twitter bandwagon ‘round here. Next Monday evening, you’ll be able to get the British Press Awards winners on your mobile phone as they are announced. Just follow the user ‘pressgazette‘ on Twitter.

Update: Even political blogger Guido Fawkes seems to be Twittering.

Update 22/3: The Guardian’s Twitter feeds, created by Ben Hammersley, are ‘guardiannews‘ and ‘commentisfree‘. Simon Dickson notes that Nick Robinson’s frantic budget micro-blogging for the BBC might have been a good use for Twitter (a bit like PA’s experiment, perhaps).

Update 23/3: Jack Lail ponders the journalistic applications of Twitter.

8 comments

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Reddit to power Wired’s long tail?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 1 November 2006 at 15:18
Tags: Digg, Journalism, Reddit, Wired

So Condé Nast’s Wired Digital has purchased the social news recommendation site Reddit.

Reddit is a tool much like Digg, but far smaller. According to GigaOm, the site has 100,000 members more than 1 million unique visitors last month.

The deal certainly makes sense from the point of view of a rapidly-growing four-person startup’s point of view. But some have been puzzled why the Condé Nast would want to bring something like this into the same stable as Vogue and GQ.

Robin Hamman, for example, notes that unlike Digg’s reported suitor News Corp, which might have some use for applying recommendation technology to its existing online publications, Condé Nast has few obvious uses for a social recommendation engine:

… Conde Nast titles don’t deal with the type of content that would find it’s way into Reddit, at least not at with Reddit’s existing userbase and implimentation.” Ok, so Wired might make good use of it, but how many readers of Details, House and Garden, or Bride are really going to want to recommend an article and/or vote it up or down the list of stories? It’s not the type of content that gets the blood stirring.

But Wired may be enough. The acquisition makes perfect sense when seen in the light of the pet theory of editor-in-chief Chris Anderson.

Recommendation tools like Reddit have an important place in Anderson’s theory of “long tail” digital economics. Merely making more niche products or information online is not suffient for the emergence of a “long tail” economy, according to Anderson. To become economically viable, technological systems need to be in place to connect niche supply and niche emand. ”Filters” are necessary to help people find obsure items of interest and “drive demand down the long tail”.

These online filters generally use some sort of mechanism to harness the wisdom of crowds” effect to help their users find material that is relevant to them. Search engines are the classic example, of course, but so are social recommendation sites like Digg, del.icio.us — and Reddit.

On his blog, Anderson writes of the acquisition: “Reddit is an evolution of the ‘voting’ system pioneered by Digg: it’s fast, clean and very scaleable to niche subject areas (read: Long Tail media).”

Others have already used Reddit’s technology to good effect. It will be very interesting to see what Wired does to put its editor’s theory into practice.
Anthony Mayfield has some thoughts on the acquisition, as well.

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Computer programming as journalism

Posted by Martin Stabe on 18 October 2006 at 16:21
Tags: Journalism, Wired

A key point in Tim O’Reilly’s speech at the recent AOP conference was that the skills needed by journalists and computer programmers are moving together and that it is becoming possible to see computer programming as journalism.

On Monday, Wired News published a great example of how a journalist with programming skills can develop important investigative stories.

Kevin Poulsen wrote a script, consisting of more than 1,000 lines of Perl code, that allowed him to trawl more than 1 million MySpace profiles to compare them to details also occuring on a list of registered sex offenders.

Paulsen’s script confirmed 744 sex offenders with MySpace profiles and led to a police investigation of a man who appeared to be on the prowl for underage boys.

Wired News is now planning to publish the script under an open-source licence so that others can undertake similar projects.

(Hat Tip: Ethan Zuckerman)

(more…)

4 comments

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Wired joins rush to Second Life

Posted by Martin Stabe on 18 October 2006 at 09:32
Tags: CNET, Journalism, Reuters, Second Life, Wired

Wired magazine has become the lastest real-world news organisation to establish an office Second Life, the 3D virtual world.

The magazine joins Reuters, which opened a virtual bureau this week, and online publisher CNET, which opened its Second Life building last month.

Last Friday, Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail, gave a presentation and virtual book signing in Second Life, and the current issue of the magazine features a trave guide and fact sheet about Second Life.

1 comment

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