Saturday, June 4, 2011

The news/analysis divorce: Who gets custody of the cash?

NiemanJournalismLab reporting:

One of the must-read articles of the week is “The News Article is Breaking Up,” by Sulia CEO Jonathan Glick. Glick makes the pretty standard evaluation that the traditional news article is an outdated medium for conveying information. Consumers, he argues, want either a quick, tweet-sized update — something that they can take in as part of the stream, particularly on increasingly ubiquitous smartphone platforms — or an immersive longform experience that puts those bits of information into context.
Unlike Jeff Jarvis, who argues that “the most precious resource in news is reporting,” Glick argues that “the news” should be given away for free, as a loss leader for analysis. “Long-form writing will survive and will do so by abandoning news nuggets,” he writes. Furthermore: “The good news for writers is that this dovetails with their financial and intellectual interests.”
...
Glick may not arrive at the right answer, but he is asking the right question: If short articles, once the journalist’s daily bread, can indeed be replaced in part by snappier, tweeted updates, how will reporters make money?


http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/06/the-newsanalysis-divorce-who-gets-custody-of-the-cash/?utm_source=Daily+Lab+email+list&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=429c805c41-DAILY_EMAIL

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