If a newspaper makes a website and nobody sees it, does it exist?
It's hard to think up a piece of the journalism puzzle that isn't changing these days. Advertising revenue is shifting online, as are newspaper readers. Television viewers are no longer constrained by time - just as 24 hour news networks changed the 5:00 news, the internet has changed the 24 hour news networks.
The place where people go to get their news continues to evolve. What we used to read in a daily paper became what we saw on twice-daily TV news programs. Then we could turn on the TV at any time to get the news - the 24 networks basically repeat the same things every half hour or so. But why do that when the web is around - just fire up your browser and check out the news on the website with no waiting required.
Just when you thought the immediacy of news was tapped out, social media like Twitter and Facebook hit the scene. Consumers of news no longer need to go to a destination (TV, radio, newspaper, website) to keep current. The news comes to us now through our Twitter feed or facebook page with no effort requried.
Read that last sentence again - the news comes to us now. The same could be said for advertising as well.
The problem that many news organizations are having is that they are not aggressive enough. Stop trying to get the people to come to you. You need to go to the people. Social media and web technologies allow you to do this. We are entering a hyper-competitive era in the news business, and it's not about to end any time soon. If you don't know the answer to the following questions, you need to find out fast:
- How many Facebook users are in your metropolitan area?
- How many people use Twitter in your city's downtown zip code?
- How many people receive Twitter messages from Barack Obama?
- How much does it cost for Barack Obama to send those messages?
- How much should an ad in a Twitter or Facebook stream cost?
- What is a Twitter account worth?
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