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BLOGGERS VS BROADCASTERS 14 Things They Can Learn from Each Other Matt Baume mattbaume.com 1 Sunday, May 2, 2010

Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

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For years, I've been jumping back and forth between the worlds of new-fangled bloggers and old-fashioned reporters. Here are some of the things that I think both types of journalists have to learn from each other.

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Page 1: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

BLOGGERS VS BROADCASTERS14 Things They Can Learn from Each Other

Matt Baumemattbaume.com

1Sunday, May 2, 2010

Page 2: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

Blogger vs Broadcaster

2Sunday, May 2, 2010

What's a blogger? What a broadcaster? It depends who you ask. So let's define our terms.

Page 3: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

“Bloggers”People writing for sites that “do news”

3Sunday, May 2, 2010

For the purposes of this presentation, when I say "blogger," I'm talking about bloggers who "do news." *

For example, I've done reporting at SFist, The SF Appeal, NBC Bay Area, Streetsblog, Curbed, and so on.

Page 4: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

“Broadcaster”

Sends information out

Doesn’t engage with the audience

TV, radio, print

Traditional offline media

4Sunday, May 2, 2010

And instead of "old-fashioned journalist," I'm going to use the term "broadcaster." That is, someone who's really good at sending information out, but doesn’t engage in conversation with the audience. A broadcaster could be a TV reporter, a radio reporter, or a print reporter; you can think of them as representing traditional offline media. I've done that type of work myself at places like the Bay Area Reporter.

Page 5: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

Blogger Vs Broadcaster:Which Is Better?

5Sunday, May 2, 2010

So, blogger vs broadcaster. Which is better? I run a site called “Writers Getting Paid” where I interview writers -- online and offline -- about how they work, and I've seen advantages and disadvantages to both. And they both have a lot that they can learn from each other.

I'm going to run through a few of those lessons that I think they should be sharing.

Page 6: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

What Do Broadcasters Have To Learn From Bloggers?

6Sunday, May 2, 2010

First, what do broadcasters have to learn from bloggers?

Page 7: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

1. Use “I.”

Be personal, subjective, and human.

Have an opinion.

Have a smart opinion.

7Sunday, May 2, 2010

Lesson one is the scariest: use the pronoun "I." Be personal. Be subjective. Be human. Having an opinion earns the trust of the audience -- but only if your opinion is smart. Knee-jerk opinions will get you torn apart -- if you take a position, you must be ready to defend yourself from attack, because you will be attacked. A lot.

Page 8: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

2. Win Fights.

Proves you’re trustworthy.

Go for what your audience would consider a win.

8Sunday, May 2, 2010

But that's a good thing! Winning a fight proves that you're trustworthy. You don't have to win in everyone's eyes -- just in the eyes of your audience. Go for what your audience would consider a win.

Case in point: SF Weekly and Broke-Ass Stuart had a blog spat last year over whether Stuart owns the term “broke ass.” When the dust settled, nothing was really resolved, but Stuart’s supporters considered him the winner, and the Weekly’s supporters considered them the winner.

Page 9: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

3. Market Every Story.Get pageviews

Get inbound links from big sites

Foster relationships

Put big sites in your story

Got linked on SFist

9Sunday, May 2, 2010

Grow your audience by marketing each story you write. You'll die without pageviews. Look at related sites with big traffic and ask them to link to your story. *

They'll be more likely to do so if you've fostered a relationship with them, and even more so if you mention them in your article.

Page 10: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

Spend As Much Time Marketing As You Spend Writing.

10Sunday, May 2, 2010

Spend as much time marketing as you spend writing.

Page 11: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

4. Correct Transparently.

Explain what went wrong

Show that you fixed it

11Sunday, May 2, 2010

Correct immediately and transparently. *

Don't make mistakes disappear -- it undermines your credibility. Explain what went wrong and show that you fixed it.

Page 12: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

5. Participate in Comments.

Mandatory

Fact-check

Sources

Contact best ones privately and interview

12Sunday, May 2, 2010

Participating in the comments is mandatory. Commenters can become sources. Pay attention to the good ones, write to them privately, and interview them for your stories whenever you can. If they're interested enough to comment, they may have information you can use.

Page 13: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

6. Moderate Comments.Get rid of anonymous

Get rid of conversation-dominators

13Sunday, May 2, 2010

Anonymous comments do nothing for you. Get rid of them. Get rid of low-value commenters, too: people who want to dominate every conversation. Send them a warning privately, and if they don't back off, ban them.

Page 14: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

7. Link.

Mandatory

They’ll link back

14Sunday, May 2, 2010

Citing your sources is mandatory online. Link to other sites as much as you can. Your readers will love you for it; and more importantly, other sites will love you for it and will link back.

Page 15: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

8. Share.

Make it embeddable

Creative Commons

Walled garden with lots of doors

15Sunday, May 2, 2010

Don't stop sharing there. Make your media embeddable. Creative-commons it so people can remix it and attribute it to you. You can have your walled garden, just make sure it has lots of doors.

Page 16: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

What Do Bloggers Have To Learn From Broadcasters?

16Sunday, May 2, 2010

That brings me to part two: what bloggers can learn from broadcasters.

Page 17: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

1. Own the Story.

Become known for the quality of your work.

17Sunday, May 2, 2010

A walled garden can be good if you have a story that’s so exclusive and interesting that you can own it. Become known for the quality of your work.

Page 18: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

2. Call Sources.

Get quotes

Verify

18Sunday, May 2, 2010

Exclusives are great. You can get them by using this thing called the telephone: call sources, ask questions, get a quote. Verify what they're telling you.

Page 19: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

3. Call Good Sources.

Recognizable names

19Sunday, May 2, 2010

Always call at least one source. They might have an even better story for you to write. Go for the big gets -- the recognizable names. Your readers will be more interested if they know who your source is.

Page 20: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

4. Document Everything.

20Sunday, May 2, 2010

Document everything, and keep your documentation. When Mike Huckabee was quoted as comparing the children of gay parents to puppies, he tried to claim that the reporter “grossly distorted” his statement ... but a tape recorder was on the table in front of him, and the reporter was quickly able to post a recording online proving otherwise.

Page 21: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

5. Go to the Library.

History Center on the 6th floor of the SFPL

Bring a laptop and scanner

21Sunday, May 2, 2010

Go to the library. In particular, go to the history center -- it's on the 6th floor of the SFPL -- they've done half your research for you already. Just tell them what you're writing about and they'll pull out folders full of past articles on that topic. Bring a laptop and a scanner because they charge you for using their copier.

Page 22: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

6. Be Attractive.Make them want to look at you.

Photoshop

22Sunday, May 2, 2010

Be attractive. Your audience will appreciate following someone they they want to sleep with. Get a sexy headshot, then photoshop it to look even sexier. * Because we live in a shallow society, this holds particularly true for women and gays. I wish none of this was the case, but it is.

Page 23: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

Where Do We Agree?

23Sunday, May 2, 2010

Now that I've covered the differences between bloggers and broadcasters, I want to touch on the areas where they overlap -- often without realizing it.

Page 24: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

1. Always be First.

Make competition link to you.

24Sunday, May 2, 2010

Always be first with the story. Be the source so everyone links to you.

Page 25: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

2. Steal and Append.Make it your own.

25Sunday, May 2, 2010

If you weren't first with the story, just steal it and stick something extra on the end. Now it's yours.

When I was researching an article on water, I discovered that in 1998, an Examiner reporter named Lisa Krieger had * lifted large chunks from a Chronicle piece ten years earlier. Journalists copy, and always have.

Page 26: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

3. Constant Sifting.

Newspapers, Twitter, police scanners, forums, newsletters

Ignore the noise.

26Sunday, May 2, 2010

Always be sifting through news sources. Newspapers, twitter, police scanners, forums, newsletters -- sift wide, sift fast, ignore the noise, and focus on the potential stories. *

When I write for NBC, I sift about fifteen hundred items every day. Of those, I’ll turn four into articles.

Page 27: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

4. You Are Writing a Book.

Have a bigger project.

You cannot afford to be writing fishwrap.

27Sunday, May 2, 2010

You are writing a book. Each article that you write is like a little grant, a fragment of research for some bigger project. You cannot afford to be writing fishwrap.

I was recently asked to write for a blog that pays $10 an article. That’s not an unheard of rate. But think about all the work that goes into an original piece: research, interviews, writing, gathering images, marketing once it’s posted. For $10, you simply can’t generate original news. If you’re going to write posts for $10 or less, and lots of online journalists do, they need to be investments in something that can make you more money down the line. If you write them once and they disappear into the cyber-ether, then you’ve just wasted your time for peanuts.

Page 28: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

News Is Interesting

28Sunday, May 2, 2010

The way we consume news is changing, but the reason we consume news it is not. News is interesting. People love amazing true stories, and there are a billion amazing true stories to be told. And we can now tell more of those stories than ever before, which means journalistic scarcity is over. But it doesn't mean that value is over, just that it's changed.

Page 29: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

VALUE = BLOGGERS + BROADCASTERSOld Games on New Platforms

29Sunday, May 2, 2010

And that new value comes from journalists -- bloggers and broadcasters -- who can play the old games on the new platforms.

Page 30: Fourteen Things Bloggers and Broadcasters can Learn from Each Other

THANKS.MattBaume.com

30Sunday, May 2, 2010

Thank you very much.