Journalism 2.0: How to Survive and Thrive
Publication Date:
June 25, 2008
Authors:
Mark Briggs, Jan Schaffer (editor)
What people are saying
"This is a fabulous resource!!! I teach at a community college and I will use this text is my class in the fall. This is a great supplement to my primary text. "
— Tarshel Beards
What people are saying
"I don’t have words to describe what a great and much-needed resource this is. I plan to share this with all of my colleagues. "
— David Murphey
Introduction
This is a book about people, not technology. Sure, there’s a lot of technology in the pages to follow, but if you boil it all down to its core, its essence, you’ll find people trying to extend a noble and grounded craft into a new and unpredictable landscape. And it’s the people who matter, not the latest software or Web site.
If the people in this equation learn how make technology work for them, the rest is just details.
As journalists, we need to change our practices to adapt, but not our values. We’re like sailors in the English proverb I chose for the title to this introduction: No amount of wishing for a return to smooth seas will calm the water around us.
To carry the sailing metaphor even further: It’s time to tack. It’s time to turn the bow of our ship and make the wind in this new sea work for us, not against us.
We’ll use the best practices of other working journalists to point the way. We’ll draw from the groundbreaking and innovative work being done at newspapers, radio and television stations and Web sites around the U.S. We can learn from their experiences.
As Benjamin Franklin famously said, “When you’re finished changing, you’re finished.”


