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Convergence in the Newsoom. “Convergence brings together the depth of newspapers coverage, the immediacy of television and the interactivity of the Web” . http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ibJaqXVaOaI&feature=related (Henry Jenkins- MIT). Converge.
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Convergence in the Newsoom “Convergence brings together the depth of newspapers coverage, the immediacy of television and the interactivity of the Web” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ibJaqXVaOaI&feature=related (Henry Jenkins- MIT)
Converge To tend or move toward one point: come together To come together and united in a common interest of focus To approach a limit as the number of terms increases without limit Not a synonym for media consolidation
Convergence Culture • Generation of Immediacy • Content is atomised • Niche markets with highly focused purposes • “Readers have large appetite but a short attention span” • Supersaturated • Blurring of the audience/ content producer distinction resulting in the changing of labour divisions.
New Media New Media is changing and re-engineering journalism resulting in increased intertextual content. “ [This] has led to a double fragmentation: first, for newsmakers, whose daily work has been interrupted and rearranged by additional responsibilities and news pressures of time and space: second, for news audiences, whom marketers have segmented into narrow units and who are encouraged to forge symbolic or imagined communities on the basis of marketing concerns”
Where are we now? • Old models of journalism have been irreversibly “disrupted” and the new models are different on a fundamental level. • Mainstream news organisations began loosing their audiences before the internet reached mass audiences. • “Legacy” media now has to compete with faster, more efficient vehicles of mass media. • The Sky- the known unknown • Slow to recognise/ paralysed by impact • Consumers have benefitted: choice, speed, delivery, platform options etc. • Adapt or die? Not just a matter of riding out the storm • Crisis of legitimacy
Changing of news habits • Challenging the comfort zones of journalists • No lone wolf journalism- telling a story through a variety of mediums • Musical chairs- no one can afford to sit this one out • No one area of speciality
From scarcity to plenty • Information abundance • Loss of limits – infinite competition • Have to think about your audience- ‘customer is always right’ • Should read what they want or what they need to read? • Has journalism moved from being a 4th Estate? • “virgin territory”
Change in the way news is “reported, aggregated, distributed and shared”
Can a picture tell a thousand words? • Cannot simply transfer a story from print to online to television to radio- mediums have different expectations • Have to think about which medium will tell the story best • Have to think how each one will compliment the other and how the overall story will be packaged • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNic4wf8AYg
Prosumers • User-generated content • As people use a site, so it’s value goes up – Readers now accredit and contribute • Huffington Post – 4 million comments a month; more on technology than content? • “turning your customers into publishers” • Focus group all day long • Journalistic sweat shop – interns, UGC etc. • How to develop sources and audiences
Advertising • Shift in power from media houses to advertisers • Track exact demographics and target them • Loss of “pass-along” audience • “We’ve lost the power of the package” – Michael Golden – NYT Co. • “The definition of a competitor now is someone who gives your story away for free” – and makes Ad money • Decrease in media credibility- Health Care Ad • Los Angeles Times- advertisers play a key role in shaping journalistic content
Negative effects of convergence on the newsroom • Slow reaction to change • Inter-group bias : one staff-shaped collision at a time • Stress- newroom cyclone • Decreased creativity - time in the field • Lazy SAPA/ PR journalism – churnalism! • Redundancies to come? • Immediacy: from idea to market- mediocre journalism • “Scooping” each other – rather do the work + credit! • Multi-skilling – more time, less money • Clashing of newsroom cultures + 2 bosses? • Loss of investigative journalism – or hierarchical issues • “visual information at the expense of textual dept”
Positive effects of convergence on the newsroom • Increased bonding/ collegiality : “Proximity breeds collegiality, not contempt” • CV “booster” – increased morale • Multi-skilling – presentation and opportunity “learning the language” • Breaking of the “self-defining and self-limiting” bubble • Resource sharing – ideas, people etc. • Decrease in internal competition
A Good Example- Daily Dispatch • Integrated newsroom – no offices • Combined online and print meetings: which story will suit which medium, which should be reserved for print • Open-flow of communication • Investment in investigative stories and technology • Good cross-use of media • Dying to live project
A Work in Progress- M&G • Separate newsrooms : more than a physical wall • Duplication of stories due to lack of communication – inhibits cross-media projects • No formal policy • Weekly paper- daily online?
Where to from here? • Divergence? • Platform specific -platform agnostic? • Monetising new media • Who regulates? • Synergy • Mobilising the journalistic image • Give public what they want or need? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ILQrUrEWe8
References • Bloom, K & Mavhungu, J. 2009. “Successful ‘New Media’ Business models: Case studies of independent commercial print media in South Africa. • Dupagne, M & Garrison, B. 2006. “The Meaning and Influence of Convergence” Journalism Studies. 7:2. • Grueksin, B., Seave, A., and Graves, L. 2011. “The Story So Far” Tow Centre for Digital Journalism. • Klinenberg, E. 2005. “Convergence: News Production in a Digital Age. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 597:48. • Singer, J.B. 2004. “Strange Bedfellows? The diffusion of convergence in four news organisations” Journalism Studies. 5: 1. • Van Noort, E. 2007. “Newsroom Convergence at the Mail & Guardian: A qualitative case study”, Honours Thesis.