OVERVIEW All citizens media initiatives entail a level of community management that is very different from newsroom management. Citizens need to be educated about the various ways they can participate, encouraged to participate, and be thanked when they do so. Citizens need to feel enough of an attachment to the emerging enterprise to police any misbehaving interlopers and news organizations need to be willing to put on the brakes if discussions get too heated or uncivil. Overall, while mainstream journalists have voiced concern about the potential for improper citizen content, few problems have surfaced and they have been managed with various interventions from editors.
"We
want many entry points into our community forums and we want many ways to get back to our journalism content. ... So we're trying to
push people in both directions." One
feature promoted by CNHI's Web platform is easy-to-find entry and exit
points to and from the forums so that people can quickly bounce
between journalistic content and community discussion. "We want to focus
all of our community interaction through our forums," Muldrow said.
--Muldrow The local sections are all run through a central CNHI forum, allowing moderators from both the local newspapers and CNHI to edit content. Muldrow said this allows CNHI to help the small newspapers that do not have the manpower to fully moderate their discussions. He gave several recommendations based on his experience at Fredericksburg.com and CNHI, including:
"We did have to pull forums off the site for six months in Fredericksburg because we hit a comfort-level problem that we couldn't surpass," he said. The biggest problems Muldrow saw on forums arose when posters got too personal, sometimes because they already knew each other. CNHI's sites do not guarantee privacy to their users; all that is collected on registration is an e-mail address so there is not much information to give to people filing complaints. Muldrow said he sees the forums as eventually creating revenue through classifieds and private party text ads. "If you converse with someone on the boards for three months and you find out they're selling a refrigerator, you might be more willing to buy from them," he said. Besides forums, CNHI's content platform offers polling, blog tools and a community calendar. Muldrow said that CNHI plans to improve the calendar feature so that people can call in with events and have them listed immediately on the Web site, then eventually in print editions.
Recruited columnists now contribute 20 to 30 percent of the content, with editors adding another 10 to 20 percent, depending on the week. Fulton said this alleviates the concern that there will be a week when they don't receive enough content to fill the print edition. The rest comes from community contributors.
"Maybe
today it's a photo and tomorrow it's a recipe ... Maybe the next
day, they take on an injustice in the world."
Fulton
credited the print edition with boosting contributions and traffic to the
Web site. "The print edition ... is a huge motivator. People get that
great feedback from their family and friends about the articles and the
pictures and it creates so much
good will," she said. "And people in the community then become evangelists
for
us."
--Fulton
Asked how she measures success, Fulton said she looks at the number of contributors and the depth and variety of contributions. "If participation is too narrow and it's always the same people, you lose the diversity of the voices," she said.
"Participation
works. ... It does take thought and structure to make it happen."
When
starting a citizens media site:
--Fulton
Fulton said that since planning began on NorthwestVoice.com two years ago, she has learned several lessons and discovered some things about participation in media:
"I
had my own office in the newsroom and it was decorated like
a dorm room. We had inflatable furniture and posters and crazy
lamps and everything.
...
Teenagers would call after school and ask if they could just
come over, and inevitably it became a real community."
In
addition to giving teenagers a place to voice their opinions
and discuss subjects that interested them, YourMom also
provided young people a link
to the local newspaper, Rhodes said. As many as 50 teenaged contributors
regularly visited Rhodes in her office, which was in the Times newsroom,
and became comfortable
in a newspaper environment, she said. Rhodes also posted her own personal,
insider's
view of YourMom. Through that, she said, her readers grew to know her. "Because
I had a personal relationship with them, they all trusted me," she said.
--Rhodes Rhodes' staff at YourMom included an online editor who was also responsible for the Quad-City Times content, two teenaged interns and a teenaged photographer. She said that at first, the Times staff was not very welcoming to the teen presence, but eventually they got used to it and the marketing staff would even come in to get leads on potential advertisers from the teens.
"We
trained 40 to 50 teenagers to be comfortable in a working newsroom."
Rhodes'
tips to get and keep writers:
--Rhodes
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is a center of the University of Maryland Philip Merrill College
of Journalism. It is a spin-off of the Pew Center for Civic Journalism
(www.pewcenter.org). © 2004
University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism
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