Posts Tagged ‘guardian’

My dream job lies with the ‘Huffington Experiment’

October 17th, 2008

(This post forms part of the Tomorrow’s News, Tomorrow’s Journalists topic for October: What is your dream journalism job?)

I was considering not entering this round of TNTJ posts. You see, the thing is, I’m looking for a job. And while the whole world of journalism seems to be at your mercy while you’re studying, many of us will find that opportunities seem to seize up somewhat when you ask for the ‘m’ word.

Yup, I’m talking about money. Nobody has any. Every job I see is short-term this, casual that, freelance this, temporary that. It seems the staffer is dying a slow, painful death.

So that’s why I was hesitant about writing this post. After all, if I came on here and outlined a dream job, I am, potentially, putting any employment opportunities that come my way at risk. I don’t want someone to arrive at this site (or my own blog) with the purpose of perhaps offering me an interview or even job and then being talked out of it by my ambitions of something else, something greater.

But let’s be clear. Ambition in this world is like currency. With ambition, you can straddle the days of photocopying or pint pulling safe in the knowledge that it’s all a means to an end.

Every employer out there should be looking for ambitious people. People who get an itchy backside if they stay in one position for too long. You know, maybe journalism is destined to be a short-term contract kinda industry anyway. How fresh can Bob’s input be, when Bob has been at his desk for 20 years? Bob doesn’t believe in video, blogs or social media. He’d much rather get out and talk to real people, he’ll protest, but you’ll be watching him for a long time before he gets out of his chair — and that’ll be to go home.

Journalism can’t afford to have Bobs anymore.

My dream journalism job would be to play some part in the next step in what I have been calling ‘The Huffington Experiment’. Do you read the Huffington Post? You should, there’s some really great stuff on there.

It may be sickening Liberal, yes, but one thing the Huffington Experiment shows is that online newspapers WORK. They work very well. What the Huffington Post does well is showcase its own journalism alongside good journalism elsewhere. It’s what Jeff Jarvis has been banging on about lately — the link culture of the web.

Readers aren’t fools. They know that they can find stories on many sites. They won’t just stick to one place. If I were to narrow my reading habits greatly, I’d say I was a Guardian reader. But a quick look at my viewing history today will show you that I have read the Times, the Telegraph, the BBC and even the New York Times all in the past two hours. Has the media junkie ever been so well served?

So we should stop pretending that our website — whoever we may be working for — is looked upon as the best source by our readers. It won’t be. It’ll be one of the sources, yes, but not the definitive one.

So then, back to me (ha!). The next step of the Huffington Experiment is where I want to be. Bring the style and drive of the Huff Post to British shores. Quite frankly, I don’t care if I edit the thing or just write for it. All I need to know is that it’s there.

Take the overheads out of printing and distributing and channel them into brilliant journalism. Hell, why not use a model similar to that of Spot.Us? We won’t subscribe the the outdated wire services. If the wires have a good story, then we’ll just, y’know, link to it.

We’ll use cheap yet powerful tools to produce stories that are spearheaded by passionate, talented journalists. Journalists whose spirits haven’t been splattered all over the office walls of some management monkey who is demanding 500 words of regurgitated copy by the next hour.

Creating Britain’s first fully-online national newspaper. Seeing it flourish as a hotbed for the country’s finest news, features and opinion. Bringing everyone in Britain to the forefront of what should have happened years ago — interactive, people-powered news.

That’s my dream journalism job.

(But in the mean time, folks, you can download my CV here!)

How should we be using Twitter?

October 11th, 2008

Twitter. For months we weren’t sure whether it was useful or not, but it seems journalists have come to accept that it is very handy indeed. If nothing else, it helps recreate a little of the newsroom banter that, some argue, we have lost over the years.

But from a journalistic point of view, what should we be doing with Twitter? How should it be used? How often should we update?

So many questions. I’ll outline my thoughts here. I encourage everyone reading this to do the same, either in their blogs, or in comments.

Let’s compare some approaches. For this, I’ll divide Twitter feeds into two types: journalist or organisation.

Organisation feeds are those that aren’t tied to an individual. Example: BBC News

Journalist feeds are those that are maintained by a specific journalist. Example: the Guardian’s Jemima Kiss

Organisations

So, you’re a mainstream media news organisation. You want to use Twitter. Good! But first you need to a) convince your journalists it’s a good idea, which can be very tough, and b) find a good strategy for when to update, and, crucially, what to update with.

Let’s deal with b. The main BBC News feed appears to update as and when a new story goes online. Given the frequency of updates on the BBC, this means your Twitter update feed is quickly dominated by the Beeb. This leaves little room for what Twitter is best at: conversation! The BBC feed has 4,241 followers. And how many is it following? Just one.

The confusing thing is that this seems to be a BBC News feed too. But that one seems to be an experiment by a tech-savvy employee. But the user doesn’t need that. If the Beeb is using Twitter, it needs to make it clear where the official feeds lie. Right now it’s a mess.

I used to subscribe to the BBC News feed. But now I don’t. If I want to see the latest news on the BBC website… I’ll look at the BBC website. The Twitter feed, I’d argue, adds nothing to the BBC user experience.

But I do subscribe to BreakingNewsOn. Rather than giving me every update imaginable, BreakingNewsOn just pops up with breaking news. And when I say breaking, I mean breaking. It’s lightning quick. It can be a fun game seeing a BreakingNewsOn update, and then seeing how long it is until MSM sites pick it up. It can be as long as half an hour.

Even more impressively, I’ve not known BreakingNewsOn to make any serious errors. This has gained it a good reputation — it has 7,488 followers. And, interestingly, it follows 846. In other words, BreakingNewsOn is getting involved in conversation.

I’d argue that this is how it should be done. A breaking news BBC feed, please. Not just another RSS powered aggregator.

Journalists

This is where it gets much more interesting.

Twitter was designed with the personal user in mind. ‘What are YOU doing?’ it asks.

For journalists, the dilemma is about how personal you make your feed. I think it’s important for journalist Twitter feeds to be as human as possible. They don’t stop when the working day stops. Quite the opposite — they should be an all-day sort of exercise. I’ve already mentioned Jemima Kiss in this, but I think of all the journalists I follow, she’s got it sussed. A while ago she asked whether she should have two feeds. One for Jemima the Guardian writer, and one for Jemima the person. Everyone rallied in with a resounding ‘no!’.

We like our reporters to be real people, don’t we?

Twitter feeds add a new dimension to how we can report. I often read of people saying how it can be used as a collective tool, but I’m sure it’s not that. It’s about personalities. It’s about journalists that live and breath their profession. Not in an obsessive work-is-life kind of way, but in a dedicated I’m-an-expert-and-a-fan kind of way.

And that’s that sort of reporter I want to listen to.

Labour conference across the web

September 23rd, 2008

We often see breaking news coming into its own on the internet — there is no better place for it — but sometimes it’s good to see the other side of the journalism world: the diary story.

Gordon Brown’s speech today at the Labour Party Conference, in Manchester, was dubbed the ’speech of his career’. Which is perhaps a step down from Obama’s ’speech of his life’. Life or career? There’s something rather British about the difference in semantics there. Anyway.

We all knew it was going to happen, so how did it play out across the ‘net?

Sky News Online rigged up their fun ‘CoverItLive‘ system which, it seemed, was specifically designed as some sort of vitriol bucket, catching every instance of Labour hate imaginable. ‘Cheryl’ was doing a cracking job of giving running commentary — but this was perhaps wasted. I — and everyone else in the UK — could just watch it live on the BBC’s iPlayer (or, indeed, Sky’s live player. But it was nowhere near the same quality as the Beeb’s). Maybe Sky should consider getting some experts in to participate with these live miniblogs. Guido Fawkes?

The BBC did their usual. And I’m glad they did. As the public-funded broadcaster, they need to just be a platform. No space for ridiculous, over-the-top and uninformed opinion a la Sky. As expected, the live coverage on the BBC News channel was tip top, a good, reliable live stream available online.

While we’re discussing the BBC, it became an ongoing gripe that they kept on suggesting that some of Brown’s comments were aimed at David Miliband. For a media organisation that is so intent on cutting out spin in politics, it seems odd to me that they insisted on towing that particular line.

Twitter was surprisingly quiet. Perhaps in a sign that the micro-blogging site hasn’t really come of age in the UK just yet, there were very few (according to Twitter’s search function) instances of ‘Gordon’, ‘Brown’ or ‘Labour’. I follow 138 people on Twitter, and often the people I followed appeared in the global feed. In the UK, at least, Twitter is a very small community, and should not be overestimated.

The Guardian had a great blogpost providing what they called ‘instant reaction’. Written by Andrew Sparrow — who bears an uncanny resemblence to David ‘Not running for leadership’ Miliband, look! — he didn’t make use of fancy-pants software like Sky, but instead just repeatedly edited a standard blog post with timed updates. It worked well. Special marks to Andrew for his interaction with his readers — it’s great to see a journalist dipping into the comments thread on his posts. It should happen a lot more often.

The Independent had no such web-focused coverage. Their leading piece is this monstrosity of an article that is impossible to read on a screen. I’m sure the article is very good, but at 2,281 words, it’s about 1,800 words too long.

The Times had this cool little word count thingy. A nice touch, but ultimately useless. It tells us nothing we don’t know already. Fun though. On a slightly unrelated note, it does feel like The Times’ site is looking a little dated these days, particularly their blogs.

The Telegraph. Speech coverage FAIL. What in God’s name is this? Quite possibly the most useless piece of video I have ever seen on a lead story. “We need to know what’s going on,” spouts the journalist in the piece. Yes we do. So why aren’t you telling us? We know what a journalist does, thanks. The Telegraph’s video is edited together like a crappy internal training video. Not what I’ve come to expect from one of the best producers of online video news in the UK. Utterly rubbish.

Let’s make this an awards ceremony.

The award for best coverage goes to: BBC

Now while they did nothing special online other than the usual, the live BBC News channel stream offered by far the best quality of broadcast and analysis.

The award for worst coverage goes to: The Telegraph

A un-related video and a one-man band blog do little to interest me. This is all about what the country thinks.

Experimentation award goes to: Sky News

If they can dip in some experts into their online chats, I think they’re onto a winner.

My personal thoughts on the speech…

I thought it was terrific. I’m no Labour supporter, but Gordon Brown did a mighty fine job out there today.

The Great Journalism Job Drought 2008

September 4th, 2008

I am unemployed. Now I’m not whinging — I’m confident my qualifications, contacts and experience will get me something sooner rather than later — but my daily routine of life consists of systematically checking through the various journalism job sites, searching for any gems that pop out at me.

Where are all the jobs? I had a bit of a Twitter-whinge about the lack of real journalism positions out there, and was advised to go over to journalism.co.uk to look at their jobs listings.

The ‘Job of the Week’ right now is for a Senior Proposal Writer. The job entails writing proposals for investors at the London Business School.

Is that journalism? Clearly not. Although, admittedly, they don’t say it is. But why is it one of many on the site that are not journalism positions, despite being on a journalism jobs site?

It’s all to do with the journalism job cycle. There are no jobs in journalism, and it’s decreasing all the time. Yet, the amount of people wanting journalism jobs is increasing all the time. Here we are, flocking to these sites in search of work in the journalism world.

But there isn’t any. Instead, these chancers who know we’re a bunch of wannabe hacks desperate for work, will look at these other non-journo positions, see the salary (40k for that proposal writer), and go ‘oooooh!’ and that’s it. Another potentially good journo lost.

No room at the inn, or is there?

One possible reason for this jobs drought could be a simple one: there are no vacancies. Seems reasonable, in the era of job cuts and redundancies, that there just isn’t any need to hire more staff.

The recruitment sites back up this theory. I totalled up the roles in journalism advertised on the biggest recruitment sites for journalists. It makes painful reading:

At the DMGT, the blanket group which includes the Daily Mail, Evening Standard, Metro, London Lite as well as the groups of Northcliffe and Associated Newspapers, there are a total of eight jobs listed as journalism. Four of those are trainee positions. And only two of them are on newspapers.

Given that the group owns over 100 newspapers, not to mention the entire thisis network, this is worrying. Are there only TWO empty desks at their newspapers across the entire United Kingdom? Unlikely — and I’ll be returning to that point later.

Maybe the magazine sector is looking a little better. Haymarket, publisher of a whole host of magazines including Media Week and Campaign, lists five jobs in editorial within the entire group.

Other mag groups don’t do much better. Emap has three — one of which is a Digital Sales Executive. Not much journalism going on there, then. Future has an impressive (in comparison) 11 places on offer. The ever-stylish Condé Nast lists a whopping 27 places… but none in the UK.

At the Guardian, I counted three jobs in editorial — and they were all for sports subs.

I can’t find careers sites for either the Telegraph or The Times. There is one vacancy listed at the Independent, and surprise surprise, it’s not for a journalist.

And the BBC — the biggest newsgathering operation in the world — has only 19 journalism jobs listed as vacant. And, again, not all of these are journalism positions.

There are jobs, you just have to wait your intern

All this would suggest there isn’t much going in the UK journalism industry, right? Wrong.

Take a look at this (you may have to click on ‘First Job/Interns’). No less than 15 internships available today, and that’s just on one site. Look at the positions listed: Features, picture desk, news, reporter, fashion… all jobs that need filling, yes, but why pay when you can get a reporter for free?

I’ve been on many work experience placements where I have been very busy. The work is there — always — but for some reason, nobody is being hired to do it. That ’some reason’ is of course money. So long as there are graduates willing to work for nothing — not even expenses, in some cases — this will always happen.

Two weeks is a placement. One month is an internship. Three months is a job. A job, by law, requires wages. Sorry, Sunday Times, “There is a payment of £50 a week for expenses” is an insult to young journalists, the industry, and your publication as well. If the ‘lucky’ candidate is good enough to work for your publication for three months, then they are good enough to be paid.

Mixing with the right crowd

Now there’s another theory in my head that is bugging me. Over the past year or so, possibly longer, I have been reading stories such as this one about job cuts at Trinity Mirror. There are many like it. But usually, in these cases, we see that new areas are being created. I heard, recently, that the Telegraph are looking to hire new journalists to fill digital roles. Are they? I don’t see them advertising jobs anywhere. Do you?

This other theory, then, is that recruitment in journalism is a thoroughly insular affair. Job vacancies are not being advertised, they’re being filled by friends of a friend.

If journalism is to improve, journalism recruiters need to look beyond their crowd. Journalism is meant to represent all types of people, so why does it not have all types of people working within it?

Now I realise there’ll always be an element of head-hunting involved. That’s good — it’s productive to promote good work within an industry.

But soon I worry that the wealth of talent that should be coming through UK journalism educating is going to run out when jobs just disappear.

I, and many others like me, can’t afford to work for free. And, without sounding too biased here, I don’t think it’s a strong statement to suggest newspapers need the type of people who come from families on lower incomes if they are to truly represent their entire readership.

Styleguide from 1928

August 8th, 2008

I’ve no idea how long this has been available, but you can now download the 1928 styleguide for the then-Manchester Guardian.

Is interesting to look at. My favourite bit comes on page 6 — it’s very important we write our the full titles for our servants. Yes.

Guardian: Life after death on Facebook

August 6th, 2008

guardiangrabI’ve always wanted one of those little boxes on the Guardian homepage. Lovely stuff. Read my article about death and social-networking here. Comments are disabled on the piece, so please, if you have any thoughts about it, please get in touch by emailing me or commenting here.

I’ll be posting my newly improved journo-CV on here tomorrow too, so if you’re the sort of person who can give me a job, email me. Yes!

Some queer goings on at OneNewsNow.com

July 1st, 2008

This has made my day.

In current affairs this morning — we spend half an hour each morning discussing the news — we were chatting about FairFax’s decision to axe a pub-full of sub-editors from some of its papers. This was in addition to yesterday’s news from the UK that City AM has decided to remove the subs’ desk altogether in a cost-cutting masterstroke.

Well the typo-ed Guardian article that I pointed out in that post shows that single humans can’t be trusted with subbing copy. And now some quite glorious proof that machines can’t be trusted with snubbing out errors either. This gem of an entry from the brilliant Regret the Error blog explains that the over-cautious chiefs over at OneNewsNow didn’t ever want to use the word ‘gay’ when referring to a homosexual. How best to achieve this small detail? Simple: Use a machine to change it automatically! Genius!

Genius, that is, until a rapid young chap named Tyson Gay won a race.

He suddenly became Tyson Homosexual when the site’s filter got a hold of an AP story. Boing Boing has a screen grab of the hilarity:

But perhaps the best part of the story was this:

Asked how he felt, Homosexual said: ‘A little fatigued.’

I don’t think this post needs anymore words, do you?

Could the newspaper habit be dying out?

June 29th, 2008

Finally, Jim Tucker has started blogging. I say finally because I’ve listened to thoughts coming out of the man’s head for the past month and a bit and thought they’d make great blog posts. If only I could write them.

Anyway, blame a rainy Sunday, maybe, but it has happened. Read Jim Tucker’s blog, ‘Tuckr’, here.

He writes in one of his first posts about the habit of reading a newspaper. It’s very, very true — for some people. Some people just love a bit of Sudoku, don’t they?

I started to wonder what my newspaper habit is. I don’t have one. I pick up the paper, skim the news, then put it down. Sometimes, I won’t even get as far as that. I’m perfectly content getting all I need by reading the newspapers respective websites.

Apart from Mondays and Thursdays. Monday for the Guardian’s Media section. Thursday for its Technology. Specialist sections that I know I can only really enjoy when I pick up the print edition, because I want to read at length. I don’t need that with general news.

That is my newspaper habit. What’s yours?

Could more specialist sections be the way forward for newspapers? What is neccessary to recreate the newspaper habit for young people. What do we want?

Do we even want a newspaper habit?

Introducing the Guardian’s new daily column

June 3rd, 2008

It’s called: Stating the absolutely bloody obvious and wasting everyone’s time

In part 1 of STABOAWET, we’re entertained by recruitment “guru” Peter Clayton who has these earth-shattering observations on The Apprentice:

None of the would-be apprentices show much in the way of intellect or strategy. The programme-makers have deliberately put people together who will rub each other up the wrong way.

Cheers for that, Sherlock.

Coming up in Part 2, being-really-hard “guru” Floyd Mayweather lifts the lid on the WWE. Apparently, it’s all just for the cameras: They don’t actually want to hit each other with chairs.

Well that’s ruined it for me.