Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Media’s Next Challenge: Overcoming the Threat of Fake News

Media’s Next Challenge: Overcoming the Threat of Fake News | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The last year has turned the United States into a country of information addicts who compulsively check the television, the smartphone and the good old-fashioned newspaper with a burning question: What fresh twist could our national election drama and its executive producer, Donald J. Trump, possibly have in store for us now?

No doubt about it: Campaign 2016 has been a smash hit.

And to the news media have gone the spoils. With Mr. Trump providing must-see TV theatrics, cable news has drawn record audiences. Newspapers have reached online readership highs that would have been unimaginable just a few years ago.

On Wednesday comes the reckoning.

The election news bubble that’s about to pop has blocked from plain view the expanding financial sinkhole at the center of the paper-and-ink branch of the news industry, which has recently seen a print advertising plunge that was “much more precipitous, to be honest with you, than anybody expected a year or so ago,” as The Wall Street Journal editor in chief Gerard Baker told me on Friday....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Good read on the next challenge ahead for mainstream media post-election: fake news. What will happen after the circus leaves town?

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10 facts about the changing digital news landscape

10 facts about the changing digital news landscape | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Digital news continues to evolve, pushed by a variety of innovations in recent years, from groundbreaking new technologies like virtual reality and automated reporting to experiments on social platforms that have altered campaign coverage.

 

As journalists and media practitioners gather for the annual Online News Association Conference, here are 10 key findings from recent Pew Research Center surveys and analyses that show how these rapid digital shifts are reshaping Americans’ news habits...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Pew Research provides valuable insight into the changing digital news landscape. rrecommended reading for PR, journalists and marketers. 9/10

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Online Video Pioneer: News Sites Will Bring Video Out from Pay Walls | Mediashift | PBS

Online Video Pioneer: News Sites Will Bring Video Out from Pay Walls | Mediashift | PBS | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

As an early adopter of convergence, award-winning journalist Sam Meddis made the leap to the web as USA Today's online technology editor in the '90s....


IJNet: What are the differences in storytelling techniques between print and visual media?

SM: In a text story you still want to describe things visually, but I think what you’re doing with a video story is concentrating more on what people will see and not describing it. You don’t have to describe what people are going to see — I think that’s a big mistake. It’s a different way of describing the visual element, but it is important if you’re writing a script that you’re not repeating what people are seeing.Print reporters are really good storytellers, and the storytelling is the thing that’s important. The technology — like how to use a videocamera and microphone — those things can be taught pretty quickly and easily. It’s really: Are you a good storyteller....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This is a very good read on storytelling, journalism, and technology trends in the newsroom.

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A Troubling Trend That Impacts Every Spokesperson | Mr. Media Training

A Troubling Trend That Impacts Every Spokesperson | Mr. Media Training | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Over the past couple of years, several popular websites have incentivized their writers with a compensation plan that sounds reasonable: If your stories generate more clicks, we’ll pay you more.

But think about the real-world implications of that for a moment. If a writer / aggregator / reporter / blogger (let’s shorten that to the acronym “WARB”) has a direct incentive to generate more clicks, do you think they’re going to go with a straightforward headline or a more sensational one? Do you think they’ll look to exploit inadvertent “mini gaffes” more than they otherwise might?

I want to be careful not to suggest that all WARBs with a financial incentive would sensationalize their reporting. Perhaps the needle of public interest and popularity can be threaded, in some cases, simultaneously. And this overall trend of writing with traffic in mind is far from new. But, even with all of those caveats, it’s yet another troubling trend that makes a spokesperson’s job that much more challenging.

You’ll find a few examples of this trend below. Some of the sites listed in these news articles have since gone defunct, while others may have subsequently altered their revenue models....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Brad Phillips looks at the impact of pay per click journalism.

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BuzzFeed’s newest political reporter is a bot

BuzzFeed’s newest political reporter is a bot | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It was a case study in the difficulty of covering national political conventions, hurry-up-and-wait affairs that feature a tricky combination of canned speeches and bouts of breaking news at nearby protests. Even in an epicenter of media scrutiny, it's impossible for news organizations to have someone at every street corner.


That's why, when the Republican National Convention kicks off in Cleveland Monday, BuzzFeed will have a reporter in everyone's pocket.


On Sunday, BuzzFeed launched BuzzBot, an automated chatbot for Facebook's Messenger app. The bot, developed by BuzzFeed's Open Lab (an R&D skunkworks based in San Francisco), is capable of having a limited back-and-forth with users to gather news about the convention throughout the week.It works like this:


Users can open up the Facebook Messenger app and search for BuzzFeed News (or follow this link) to open up the dialogue. Then, BuzzBot will begin asking users a series of multiple-choice questions related to the convention:


Are they following the news?


If they live in Cleveland, are they attending, protesting or living there?...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Will a bot avoid plagiarism? Who knows but it's fun to contemplate.

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