Archive for journalism

What drives traffic to news websites?

Cross-posted from the Mandate blog: The Newspaper Marketing Agency’s latest (September) figures (PowerPoint slides) for the sources of web traffic to newspaper websites paintsa useful picture of which social media sites really matter – and which don’t. The top ten domains that referred UK traffic to newspapers during the month were: Google Yahoo MSN News.bbc.co.uk [...]

When is it ok to ban a journalist?

10 November 2009 , , , , ,
Portsmouth FC have banned a local newspaper journalist from their ground after taking  dislike to a piece that he wrote. Although the club has neither suggested the article broke any law nor is libellous, it has decided to ban Neil Allen for an “indefinite period” from home matches, press conferences, speaking to the players and [...]

David Wooding vs The Guardian: do you think they're talking about the same story?

David Wooding (Whitehall Editor, The Sun): “News of the world cleared by PCC of hacking into thousands of phones to get stories. The Guardian stories were wrong, it ruled.” The Guardian: “The [PCC] report confirms the central allegation made by the Guardian and has not produced any independent evidence of its own to contradict a [...]

Newspapers should worry more about trust and less about technology

5 November 2009
I’m increasingly of the view that much of the debate about the future of newspapers is far too much about technology and far too little about trust (click on link for MORI data). The technological changes and challenges are certainly big, striking and interesting – but when it comes to addressing the question of people [...]

"National newspaper websites need just 5% of readers to pay"

4 November 2009 , ,
So says Dharmash Mistry of private equity firm Balderton Capital: National newspapers need to convince less than five per cent of their current online readers to pay for access to content to make a move away from an advertising revenue model successful, a private equity financier told the Guardian. (The Press Gazette) That estimate fits [...]

Should it be illegal to publicise someone else's products?

31 October 2009 ,
Supposing someone decides – openly and honestly – to publicise your products. They point people at your products and they are a reputable outfit themselves. What are the circumstances in which you send them a threatening legal letter demanding the cease, er…, providing you with free advertising for your products? It’s pretty hard to think [...]

Should journalists be learning from politicians?

5 October 2009 , ,
For a long time, the contest to be the least trusted profession in the UK has been a tussle between journalists and politicians – with the occasional strong showing from estate agents. The latest MORI annual reputation survey shows that, in the wake of the expenses scandal, politicians have pipped journalists to the least trusted prize (net [...]

The curious case of Iain Dale, the Daily Mail and the missing comments

Today’s Ephriam Hardcastle column in the Daily Mail made the sort of snide unpleasant comments about Iain Dale that you expect of homophobes. It’s generated a lot of hostile comment around the internet, including this post from Stephen Glenn, people being encouraged by Kate Bevan via Twitter to complain to the Press Complaints Commission and [...]

Who trusts who? Surprising results about the public and journalists

29 September 2009 ,
Two findings caught my eye from the latest MORI polling into how much people and MPs trust different professions and groups of people. First, MPs trust the public more than the public trusts the public (!). Second, there is only one category of people that is trusted less by MPs than it is by the [...]

Is no news better than official news?

30 August 2009 , ,
Paul Evans’s blog piece on the pros and cons of local councils in effect challenging the role of local newspapers with their own publications highlights many of the issues. There’s one that I’d add to the list, and it is about holding councils to account. It’s understandable that many councils are sufficiently frustrated by the [...]