Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Journalists engage readers with crowdsourcing

Friday, August 12th, 2011

By Yimou Lee
Voices

The 24,000-plus pages of the emails Sarah Palin sent as governor of Alaska proved to be problematic for news organizations such as The New York Times, which were eager to publish substantial reports. So they turned to an unlikely ally to help them: their readers.

The New York Times and The Washington Post asked readers to dig into the documents and provide story ideas. Mother Jones, MSNBC.com and ProPublica partnered with a research company to create an online database for the emails.

The approach to invite the audience to research a vast and sometimes specific material, often called crowdsourcing, has been an evolving phenomenon in many fields, and journalism is now beginning to benefit from the technique. It’s a way for journalists to both expand their network of sources and engage readers, media experts say.

“Crowdsourcing as a method holds potential to do more accurate, more informative and more interesting journalism,” said Tanja Aitamurto, a visiting researcher at the Center for Design Research at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., who specializes in crowdsourcing and open innovation. “It holds also potential to create a closer relationship to readers, as readers are given a chance to participate in the journalistic process, which traditionally is a closed process.”

Crowdsourcing takes many forms, from requesting for photos during a breaking news event to asking for help from witnesses or seeking feedback on Twitter and Facebook. Often, these bits of information reveal much of what’s happening on the ground, where reporters aren’t able to immediately reach, or even make for a more fascinating project.

During the uprising in the Middle East and North Africa, many journalists did not have immediate access to the hot spots. But many organizations such as Al Jazeera and National Public Radio turned to the people on the streets to tell a more complete story. Andy Carvin, senior strategist for NPR, is one good example. He developed more than 30,000 Twitter followers by filtering and re-tweeting information developed during the uprising. His curation of tweets helped his organization cover the story with much more color and details.

The “Mixed America’s Family Tree” was a crowdsourcing project by The New York Times this year, in which the newspaper asked readers to submit their own mixed-race family story. So far, it has successfully produced 246 stories told by readers.

But crowdsourcing is not a silver bullet that resolves all the challenges in journalism, experts – and even readers – say.

“Don’t you folks get paid to do this work yourself?” was a popular comment by reader Brandon West on the New York Times’ Caucus blog. The tart question, which was formed as a response to the newspaper’s crowdsourcing appeal on Palin’s emails, was recommended by some 341 readers. Other similar comments were posted: “The NYT wants non-journalists to do their homework for them!” and “Both the Times and the Washington Post are sending out identical notices of recruitment. … How many staffers do you plan to let go to cover this assignment with ‘just plain folks’?”

“We have to remember that crowdsourcing is still a new phenomenon not only for journalists, but also for readers,” Aitamurto said. “Journalists have to be able to answer that question: first to themselves when planning crowdsourcing activities, then when communicating about the crowdsourcing initiative itself in a proactive way, and then to readers’ inquiries.”

Crowdsourcing hardly reduces journalists’ workload. The common belief is that it is an alternative for media to save money, time and labor.

“I’m not cynical enough to believe it’s meant to save money, and I doubt it really saves much time,” said Robert Quigley, a former social media editor for the Austin American-Statesman and a senior lecturer starting this fall for the Journalism School at the University of Texas at Austin.

Quigley covered a 2010 plane crash in Austin, Texas by using the Austin American Statesman’s Twitter account to ask witnesses information and seek photos from the public.  Using his reporting background to carefully but quickly get facts and verify them, Quigley was able to write stories he wouldn’t have been able to otherwise.

“A good crowdsourcing project takes a lot of effort, both on the front end and in presenting information,” Quigley said. “The keys for news organizations are to do their part in verifying information and to present the information in a way that makes sense to consumers.”

Popular hashtag leads TV reporter to sources, story ideas

Friday, August 12th, 2011

By Kay Nguyen
Voices

“Is anybody out there?”

That was the message Stephen Clark sent out into the universe via Twitter in February 2010.

The anchor at Channel 7 WXYZ-TV was testing out what many industry experts have dubbed the latest tool for newsgathering. He started tweeting with #backchannel, using the number symbol – or hashtag in Twitter language – to make searching for words and phrases easier.

Using #backchannel, viewers can interact with anchors during the Channel 7 Action News Team’s morning and 11 p.m. broadcasts, as well as throughout the day.

Clark chatted with Voices to explain his take on the quickly changing world of social media.

QUESTION: When did you begin utilizing social media for work?
ANSWER:
I started using social media for more personal use, starting with MySpace. Probably two years ago, I started on Twitter and started to see glimpses of how I might be able to use it for stories.

So, I would go on during storm coverage or something and see what people were saying and find ways to locate where things were happening.

Q: When did you realize Twitter could be applied to newsgathering and community conversation efforts?
A:
About a year and a half ago, I had my BlackBerry on set with me during the 11 o’clock newscast. I had never really tried it, but I just tweeted out during the newscast. I wrote the phrase, ‘Is anybody out there?’ because I was kind of bored because we were airing a pretty long package.

People immediately started answering me back, and it was kind of interesting because I realized I could begin having this real-time conversation with people who were watching us on the air.

Q: How did #backchannel start?
A:
There was really no plan. I just started this conversation where I talked to people. We had dozens and dozens of people just conversing, and it started going from people conversing directly with me to people also actually conversing with each other.

I didn’t know much about (Twitter) at that time, but a friend told me I should have a hashtag. I didn’t understand them at that time, other than seeing them all the time and didn’t know how they worked.

Q: About how many people are you able to interact with during a newscast?
A:
Most nights we hang in the range of about 30 to 40 people. Depending on what’s going on, it’s been up to 130 people. All during the day, people are weighing in and using the hashtag though.

Q: How are others at the station using social media?
A:
Morning people also use the #earlyrisers, which was created by morning show anchor Alicia Smith. It’s almost a rivalry between the #earlyrisers and the #backchannel, though many use both. There are unique #backchannel people and #earlyrisers, but by and large it’s one big group.

Q: Do you pick up stories through the #backchannel?
A:
What I saw was a thread from a lot of people saying: ‘Why do you always have to give us such bad news?’ Everybody in journalism has heard that about a million times. So, instead, I said, ‘Instead of complaining about the bad news, why don’t you give me some good news?’

I wanted them to tell me the stories I ought to be covering. We all have cell phones and Flip cameras. If you post it on Vimeo or YouTube and post a link to the #backchannel, and I look at it and everyone thinks it’s a good story, I’ll go out and cover it.

Through that, I’ve covered over the last year probably three or four dozen stories that have come directly from our #backchannel people that we would have never heard about. I think it’s a good way to crowdsource stories because not only do we see it, other people will look at it and say, ‘That’s really cool. That’s really neat.’ And that tells me that we need to cover it.

Follow Kay Nguyen @kaynguyen.

Search Voices:



©2011 Asian American Journalists Association. Images and stories cannot be duplicated without permission.
Website design and WordPress programming by Jenn de la Fuente @ Rosebud Designs.