The digital makeover of a journalist: Here is your one-year plan!

by John Einar Sandvand on February 27, 2011 · 12 comments

So you got stuck, working for the printed newspaper all these years? And now you realize your future is with digital media? Here is your digital makeover plan!

Many of my journalist colleagues these days find themselves in the same trap: They realize that the future holds limited demand for print journalist experience alone and that the brightest career potential in the business is within digital media.

The only problem is: They have no experience with digital media whatsoever!

What should you do? Is there a digital makeover plan you can follow?

One thing is for sure: It will require hard work on your part. But if you want to stay in the media business, you better get on with it! And please don’t wait for your employer to fix it for you. Your competence is your own responsibility.

Also I think you can be sure of the following: Career opportunities in the media business will be fewer and fewer every year for people with only print experience. Especially that applies to any kind of management position.

Why is that?

Because most media companies will realize they have a digital competence deficit in their staff. As digital media takes a stronger position in the media houses, top managers realize it will be foolish to hire editors and managers with only print experience. Rather they should look for people who know how digital platforms work.

To put it even more clearly: Your print experience will be in less and less demand over the next years! If you look at it in a perspective of 5 – 10 years, changes will be dramatic. As a print journalist you are indeed naive if you don’t believe that this will affect you professionally in a big way.

So you got to do something, don’t you?

Yes, you do! And you better get on with it!

Here is my suggestion for a one-year first-step digital makeover plan for journalists:

Step 1: Get yourself on social networks

If you are not on Facebook yet, you better register now. Understanding social media is essential for digital journalists and there is really no other way to do this than to participate yourself. Therefore your first step will be to get active on some of the most common social networks. As a minimum I suggest  you start using actively Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. Also familiarize yourself with YouTube and at least one location based social network, like Foursquare or Gowalla. And if you are really dedicated to the task, you might consider starting your own blog. Really, there is no better way of learning digital media than maintaining an active blog.

Let us not forget an important aspect of this step: Start interacting with your readers! Respond to their comments, ask for tips to stories, use readers’ expertise in your articles, follow all discussions about your own content.

Step 2: Get experience in online journalism

If you work in a media company, start talking to the web people in your organization. The best alternative is to ask if you can work for the web site for a while, gaining useful experience. If that is not possible, show active interest in writing exclusive stories for the web site, including special versions of the print stories that you write. Your main purpose at this point is to gain as much experience as possible and to learn from your online colleagues. Study their writing style and what makes stories work on the web as opposed in the newspaper. Experiment with different headlines and see which ones make readers click. And especially: Take good note of which print stories that do not work on the web site! There will be more of them than you probably thought ahead.

Too many technical terms the online people expect you to know? Check out this digital survival guide for journalists!

Step 3: Learn basic photo editing

In big print organizations specialists often take care of the photo editing. So far, at least.  Hardly any web site editorial organization can afford that luxury. Instead it is expected that all journalists know how to crop and photo shop an image. And I tell you: There are hardly any journalists under the age of 30 that do not know photo shopping today at some level.

The most used software is Photo Shop. You may decide to start with Photo Shop Elements, which is a simpler version.

How to learn it? There are numerous online courses!  A great place to learn is Lynda.com, which has easy-to-follow videos for self-study of any type of software.

Step 4: Start making short video clips

Video is an essential and growing part of the web. As digital journalist you might as well start to learn using video at once. The best starting point is making small video clips, for instance with your iPhone. This can be short clips from the interview you are writing about, like what I have done in this story about the social media strategy of 20minutos.es in Spain.

Using video can be incredibly sophisticated or amazingly simple. At this stage you should start with the simple solutions. You will realize they can still create great value for the reader.

Digital journalists should of course learn more sophisticated video recording and editing as well, but I suggest you start with the shorter and unedited clips and then move on as your confidence grows.

Step 5: Start experimenting with interactive elements, like maps and time lines


Digital journalism opens up for many new story telling techniques, such as sound slides and time lines. Until recently many of these techniques required a lot of technical knowledge to use. Not any more. Today there are lots of sites offering to help you make your story telling more interactive.

Here are three tools you can start playing with:

Time lines:  http://www.dipity.com/ Create exciting time lines to illustrate how the topic of your story has developed over time

Maps: http://www.umapper.com Make maps that users can click on for more information.

Live log: http://www.coveritlive.com A great tool for live events, allowing you to live log and communicate with readers as the events pass.

After finishing your work, all services provide you with a code that you embed into the story. You will probably need some help from an experienced web journalist for this part. But I tell you: Learning how to embed external elements like maps, time lines and Youtube videos gives you unlimited creative possibilities in digital journalism.

A great blog for getting tips on interactive multimedia journalism is 10.0oo Words.

Step 6: Start analyzing traffic data for your site

Almost all news sites will have some analytics system installed. Many use more than one system, depending on the purpose of the analysis. Live logging of traffic is for instance often a separate system.

Ask for access to the analytics of your news site and try to learn the basics of the service, whether it be Google Analytics, Xiti or another system. Try to understand the traffic pattern. Where do users come from? What stories are most popular?

The easiest and most fun software to learn using will typically be the live log, where you can see which stories people click on right now. By following the live log regurlarly you will learn a lot about what actually works and what does not in driving traffic to a web site.

Step 7: Get yourself a smart phone – and use it to its full potential

A significant shift in platforms is taking place – and it will have major influence over the media industry over the next years. It is driven by the growth in smart phones, but also tablets like iPad is pushing the development.

If you don’t have it already, hurry up to get a smart phone. Whether it is an iPhone or an Android-run phone is not that important. What matters is that you get a smart phone with lots of apps, GPS and all other features that are part of a modern phone.

Try to use it to its full potential. It will revolutionize your media consumption, and give you a new perspective of where journalism might be headed.

—————————————

My suggestion is that you make this list of 7 steps your plan for this first year of a digital makeover – although not necessarily in the same order.

If you spend time on all these steps – and try to learn as much as possible – you will be much better positioned in a year from now than you are today.

However, let me tell you: It is not enough! There are many more things you need to learn. But it is a starting step, putting you in the right direction.

But do not be fooled: It requires hard work! And you have to do it yourself. Don’t sit around and wait for your employer to come around with a course or two. Only you can be the manager of your own professional future.

And please, please, dear print colleagues: Do not fall into the typographers’ trap!

————————————–

Bonus:

After this article was written I was made aware of an excellent guide to become a good multimedia journalist:

Reporter’s Guide to Multimedia Proficiency

It is written by journalism professor Mindy McAdams at University of Florida.  I really recommend that you read it! It is highly useful and very instructional.  (thanks to Blue Lady Blog for giving me the link)

Share
  • Pingback: links for 2011-02-28 « Sarah Hartley

  • Pingback: 7 tips para periodistas que quieren diseñar su futuro en medios digitales « elcuartopoder21

  • Christian Eriksen

    You might also want to include a brief note on pitfalls in web journalism and web ethics. Issues like rights to media content, what can and can’t be done with e.g. Scanpix/bureau photos (no cropping), Creative Commons etc., will be new to a print journalist used to working with his Word document and nothing else.

    • http://www.betatales.com John Einar Sandvand

      Thank you, Christian! You have just given me the idea for another blog post! I would really appreciate if you and other readers would elaborate on points that should be included in a “Here are the pitfalls in online journalism” article!
      Just post them as comments here.

      • Christian Eriksen

        Sorry for the delay, been some crazy days. Here are my two cents.

        I would say the aforementioned points are important: A lot of web journalists will be searching Scanpix and other databases, selecting and publishing photos themselves, and to avoid unnecessary expenses one should know a bit about restrictions on these. I mentioned cropping – I think it might be allowed as long as it doesn’t change the content of the photo. Now what constitutes a change in the content? Probably up to Scanpix to decide. This principle holds also for other kinds of photo manipulation.

        Creative Commons will probably be new to many. There are a lot of good sources, but these may also have restrictions. E.g. you might have to share your own photos to rightfully be able to use someone else’s.

        Another thing that comes to mind is the speed with which the web journalists operate, and that one might be tempted to cut corners to publish faster. What we in Norwegian call «samtidig imøtegåelse», that the accused is given the opportunity to defend him-/herself in the same article, is as valid and important on the web as in print. This is the norm that is violated the most in Norwegian journalism.

        With this in mind, I will mention two distinct features of the web: What is posted spreads unbelieveably fast, and it stays there. This is no newspaper that is discarded the same evening. It sticks. If you do crappy research, your story may be across the globe before you have the time to correct it. And when it’s indexed by Google or others, it stays there for a long time. So do it right the first time.

        Looking forward to hear your thoughts on these issues in a blog post or comment.

  • Pingback: links for 2011-02-28 : The ChipCast || by Chip Mahaney

  • Pingback: Daily bookmarks & places archive | Chipcinnati

  • John Kirch

    This was very helpful. I wonder if you might be a little more specific when you talk about using social networks. I use Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc… But I mostly use them to post stuff I’ve written on my blog. I don’t typically get any ideas from others on these social networking sites. Do you have any suggestions on how to more effectively use social networks to get news tips. Also, I have a wordpress blog (Media Politics in Perspective: http://mediapoliticsinperspective.wordpress.com/). Do you think that wordpress blogs are taken less seriously? Is there an advantage to having your own domain?

  • http://www.adhost.dk/sogemaskineoptimering.shtml søgemaskineoptimering københav

    If anything, the acclaimed Washington Post political journalist was digitally disabled — more comfortable with a portable typewriter than a laptop. Most remembrances published since David’s death Wednesday at age 81 focused on his role as elder oracle …

  • http://twitter.com/TedSchnell3 Ted Schnell

    I switched from the copy desk to Web content editor three years before I was laid off in December and feel I am better positioned to return to the industry. I’m just not certain that I want to at this point and am exploring other options that will be more stable for my wife and five children. That said, I’ve been saying for some time that these are very, very exciting times for journalism. Paradigm shifts like these are never bloodless, but they do offer hope for the future of the craft. It’s just going to be different, and that is not necessarily bad — there will be troubles, but they will be sorted out as the craft adapts to the technology.

  • Aleksandar

    Ahh, easier to say than to do. I know all of this. I’m using FB, Lidn, Twiter but that doesn’t make me a specialist. Take a ton of knowledge to go on that track.

  • http://www.spacify.com/dining_chairs_leather-265-225.html Leather Dining Room Chairs

     NBC4 Los Angeles is undergoing a multi-million dollar makeover that … Expanded the consumer/investigative unit with veteran journalist Ana Garcia. station …

Previous post:

Next post: