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This is the blog of Julie Starr. I write about the news business and consult on newsroom integration and change projects.
I am currently working on...
* Newsroom change management and web-and-print development for Fairfax Media NZ.
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Figuring out the building blocks of news communities
The prospect of (some) journalists becoming community managers over time continues to appeal to and intrigue me.
By that I mean journalists opening up the news gathering, reporting and analysis process to readers, allowing communities to develop around areas of interest – enabling people with expertise and views to contribute material for news stories on, say, how health is administered in the Waikato, or pest management in the Waitakere ranges. The journalist becomes a community manager as well as news gatherer and news writer.
Building communities, however, doesn’t necessarily come easy. There are plenty of examples of companies that have started intranets which failed to inspire users; wikis introduced into classrooms that never got used. iYomu, a New Zealand based social network, failed to gain traction despite considerable resources. This StartUp article looks at iYomu’s demise and at what makes another local example, Geekzone, successful.
So what of news communities? I like keeping an eye on the beat bloggers, a group of US journalists experimenting with using blogs and other social web2.0 tools to develop their beats, to see what they’re learning along the way.
And I’ve just read a useful passage in Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody. In a chapter looking at wikis, and particularly at why Wikipedia works as well as it does, he says that people have to care about the content to want to edit it.
There’s a community development workshop running at Webstock in Wellington next February which I’ve signed up for – not because I’m managing a community or am likely to in the immediate future, but because it’s hard to see how I can go on being involved in news and journalism education without understanding more about how successful communities work. I’m looking forward to it.