This blog is about the relationship between organizations and the people who work for them. And, it’s dedicated to the millions of people around the world who go to work every day wanting to do a great job.
Lessons from the newsroom
The need for news is and always has been a fundamental human need. What we get and how we get it certainly has changed fundamentally thanks in part to Web 2.0 and social media. And, it’s changing the newsroom forever. If it hasn’t already, it will change our Corporate Communications function and our profession forever too.
So, my interest peaked when I heard Tom Rosenstiel, Director Pew Research Centres Project for Excellence in Journalism, interviewed the other day on CBCs The Current. Here’s the change he described:
| From | To |
| Journalists and their editors decided what was important for us to know and when [basically from 6am to 10 pm] | We decide what we want to read, listen to and watch and when [any time] |
| Editors decide what’s of interest to us based on instinct [surveys are expensive] | We can find out what’s of interest to our ‘readers’ immediately |
| Traditional media are trusted | Traditional media are distrusted and they are most distrusted by those of us who are the biggest consumers of news |
| Large news rooms and good budgets with the ability to follow many stories | Shrinking news rooms and limited budgets means following only a few stories |
| Social consensus – we all knew basically the same things at the same time | No social consensus – we may or may not know the same things at the same time. We may be more informed [ie: go deeper on a story] or completely uninformed [doesn’t interest us so we go elsewhere] |
| Story telling was everything | Story telling is only part of the story. News media need to provide:
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| Product | Service |
What do you think? Are there lessons here for us:Â
- As professional communicators?
- In terms of our function? What we do? How we do it? When we do it? What skills and experience we need and how we’ll get them?
- In terms of our professional associations?
I am interested in social consensus in the work place: do we need it? is this necessary, but in sub-groups, as opposed to company-wide? What are the issues that necessitate social consensus at work? Does everyone need to know everything at the same time? I think it probably depends, but it’s interesting nonetheless!
Glad to get your comment Neil. I think it’s an element that we rarely and should always be thinking about. And not just for internal. Love to talk…