A good readership tool in the hands of a good team will help the right content reach the right audiences at the right time. It will help maximise reach.
If there’s one factor that
makes old-style editors and journalists extremely uncomfortable about new-age
newsrooms, it is the role readership metrics play. Many newsrooms across the
world today measure reader habits real-time. They have the tools to do so. The
more advanced among these (typically in the U.S. and Europe) have the
capabilities to build a profile of individual readers, helping them serve up
stories in a personalised manner.
In a print-only era, things
were different. Then, readership data were basic, too infrequent, vague, and,
on top of all that, mattered only to the business side within newspapers.
Whatever their inadequacies (and perhaps because of that!), these numbers were
still good enough for the business side to sell the ad space. There was nothing
in it for the editorial side to get excited about. And they didn’t.
Newsrooms cannot continue
this indifference anymore. For, in a digital age,
journalists no longer have the luxury of writing for a captive audience.
Audiences have moved. Their reading habits have changed. They are no longer
wedded to one news source — they have countless alternatives. Engaging them,
therefore, is a real challenge. Data, when used well, can help newsrooms in
meeting this challenge.
The catch: traditionalists
in positions of editorial power may see this as an intrusion into their space,
as this is essentially about what the reader wants. And this was the question
that the editors of an earlier era were supposed to understand better than
anyone else. They were paid for this.
There are two questions that
may arise now. One, are editors getting redundant? Two, are news priorities
going to be decided merely by what is popular?
Let’s take the second
question first. The popularity theme
is what researchers Jonathan Bright and Tom Nicholls, both from the Oxford
Internet Institute, explored in a study conducted last year. They sifted
through 40,000 articles, published over six weeks in five major news outlets in
the U.K. — the BBC; The Daily Telegraph; The Guardian; The Daily
Mail; and The Mirror. They found that “being a most-read article
decreased the short-term likelihood of being removed from the front page by
around 25%.”
They wrote that audience
data in the hands of journalists, “combined with increasing pressures on
editorial business models, has created worries about the potential for
‘populism’ online: that editorial judgement would be overridden by traffic
statistics.”
A disclaimer here: popular
content need not be frivolous content. There’s nothing inherently wrong with
the newsroom having access to a real-time data system that churns out the
following metrics: number of page views, information about where the readers
are coming into a story from, which social networks drive a story, how many
readers of a particular story clicked on to another story, and even who the top
influencers are.
What’s important is how such
data is used. The features described in the above lines are present in The
Guardian’s home-grown tool Ophan. The tool is open to everyone in the
newsroom. Importantly, its use hasn’t made the newspaper resort to cat videos,
an oft-used euphemism for frivolous but extremely viral content and something
Buzzfeed is famous for. A journalism.co.uk article about the tool mentioned how
The Guardian is more concerned about how many people clicked through an
article from Facebook than how many ‘likes’ it got, which is an example to
emphasise that it matters how data is used.
A few months ago,
journalists at The Washington Post and The New York Times were
given access to reader data. More newsrooms will follow. A good tool in the
hands of a good team will help the right content reach the right audiences at
the right time. It will help maximise reach.
And this brings us to the
first question. Editors are still relevant in driving news, deciding what to
cover, allocating resources and ensuring quality. Also, flipping the argument,
can anyone deny that what got played up in the print-era was, in some measure,
an assumption about what “our readers want”? There was no way to back those
claims up.
“Metrics tell you how you’re
performing,” The Washington Post editor Martin Baron told reporters at
the World News Media Congress a few months ago. “They’re not going to tell you
your next story.”
Source | The Hindu | 8
September 2015
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