.@SarahMarshall: “Reporters and editors are good at piecing together information. But they may have jumped to the wrong conclusions.”
https://t.co/S7xEgoNMod
Terrific day yesterday, talking about user needs with @LauraOliver and audience development with @SarahMarshall and her @CondeNast team.
@UOsojc@GEO_London students, and me, learned lots! Thank you for talking with us!
If you're passionate about science journalism, know your way around WordPress, Adobe and Office software, and love researching and editing digital images, come work with us at @QuantaMagazine:
https://t.co/R6diHkyx9M
All openings: https://t.co/2bceSCD8vN
'We cannot allow rich and powerful creators to disguise themselves as grassroots or to seize power online in order to promote extremist ideology.' By @TaylorLorenz
https://t.co/jI23gtum32
Independent newsletters are a burgeoning area. But how do we ensure ethics? @tcarmody on how he was offered money on 'under the understanding that I continue to write stories critical of Amazon.' (He obvs refused) https://t.co/EwEHYdZauY
"Your audience collectively knows much more than you do." by @wfrick. A great thought-starter on how journalists can use predictions markets
https://t.co/ItgCPgop6Y
2023 'should be when media outlets accept that times have changed and that audiences demand to be closer, listened to, and part of something more than what they can read everywhere on the internet.' by @macafut https://t.co/X9CUPMK8Ut
'We need emotionally agile newsroom leaders,' says @ @kathyluwho. 'I believe newsrooms who succeed in hiring and retaining a diverse staff will also be places where people can be their emotional selves without fear.' https://t.co/Gw4LoZmkBI
Predictions for journalism 2023: The year of the RSS reader - by @nikkiusher. I’ve always wondered why more people doing use RSS - it lacks the social aspect - but such a good way to stay up to date. Feedly + Reeder it the perfect combo for me https://t.co/mD6O4MLJmq
This by @SarahMarshall is definitely something all of us in journalism should have at the forefront of our minds. ‘Going into 2023, we would all benefit from developing a core content model for multiple channels’ - not just for websites https://t.co/O8anJ4Y889
My @NiemanLab journalism predictions piece: ‘If 2022 was the year of the start of the end of the social web, 2023 will be when we all supercharge our off-platform audience strategies.’ https://t.co/C8MVikHmB5
'Ask someone in their 50s (a non-journalist) to name a living journalist. They might say Bob Woodward or Carl Bernstein. Ask someone in their 20s, though, and they might say Taylor Lorenz, Dave Jorgenson, or Jack Corbett' | @rkellett https://t.co/2rqEniBSM6
'Bad newsletters will continue to die, just like all bad products should. They simply clog inboxes—& should be flushed. But there's no better way for busy readers to mass consume high-quality content than a well-crafted newsletter' | @JimVandeHei https://t.co/8Lc57Vw48l
Predictions 2023: Newsrooms get nimble in a recession. ‘You can only do more with the same or fewer resources [@heytimgriggs says] by doing 3 things:
Stop doing some things altogether
Do fewer things
Do more of the things that work’ | @snigdhasur
https://t.co/TElCHAVIsH
Nieman Journalism Predictions 2023: Rising costs force more digital innovation. ‘Newsprint prices have risen more than 50 percent in many markets if you can get supplies. Paper mills are converting from newsprint to boxes.’ | @PeterBale https://t.co/wGwW0IKkPb