Taking the tech beat to the next level

If I were to assume, without any research, what group of people has the best online resources or methods to connect with each other, the tech community would be my first guess.

I believe that’s an intriguing question, but maybe you’re already thinking of numerous smartphone apps and tech news sites that do that job well – TechCrunch? Cnet? Mashable? AlleyWatch? GeekWire?

Well, do they? Do they really help connect technology professionals and enthusiasts? Do they provide engaging, clear and informative content? Do they offer enough resources on their web or mobile platforms to assist their audience further their knowledge and improve their skills?

I don’t know the answer to that, but I am determined to do some research and find out. If I find a gap or flaw worth exploring, the tech community might become the target of my first startup idea.

Although I don’t have a specific plan yet, since a great deal of research and planning will be needed, I do have a few vague ideas of what could work in a new tech news enterprise. I’ll list those ideas in a second, but first let me tell you why I am considering this community.

Over the past several weeks, I have learned in Studio 20 that a journalism organization should provide more than just content. It should offer resources and a platform for people with shared interests to connect with each other. The idea of merging news, resources and networking on one platform would, and already does, work in the tech community. Just visit TechCrunch, for instance, and you’ll see a variety of tech news stories (content), an events calendar (networking) and a jobs board (resource). There are many other tech websites with similar features, and that shows that the tech community is likely engaging and hungry for such services.

TechCrunch’s events page: techcrunch.com/events

Another advantage of working with technology enthusiasts is the revenue potential. Forgive me for assuming, and I promise I will do some research on it, but I think those who visit tech news sites often read about new products, gadgets and services. And many of them probably consider spending money on the items they just read about. Now the possibilities open up: e-commerce, sponsored content, targeted advertising, commerce links and others. It may sound like a cheap idea, I know, but why should I launch my first startup in a field with little revenue potential?

Anyway, here are some things I think this new tech news enterprise would feature:

  1. Mobile-first
    All content, resources, networking features and other components of this tech news startup would be created for mobile first. Then, all of it would be adapted to the desktop site. This would allow my team to experiment with virtual reality, augmented reality, 360° video and other emerging storytelling features.
  2. Audio
    Every single article would come with a “Listen” option. That feature provides a convenient option for drivers or those who don’t feel like reading a somewhat long article to still take advantage of the app and be informed. Logistically, that means the startup would hire at least one person with a good, clear and engaging voice to read every article BEFORE it’s published.
  3. NYC-focused
    The startup, at least in the beginning, would focus on the tech community in New York City. It would feature, for instance, new products or services being developed in the City or by New Yorkers. I believe this would help make the business plan more feasible and keep the community closer together.
  4. Events
    This startup would not only help the community promote its own events in the New York City area, but it would host its own, such as meet-ups, expos, panel discussions, presentations and debates. Events help promote the company, bring in revenue and connect the community, but it would also help us collect data about our audience.
  5. WeChat
    This also needs research, but I believe there are many people in New York and in the U.S. who use WeChat, China’s all-in-one social platform. Therefore, I would look into posting content on their app in addition to all the social platforms that are popular in the U.S.

Those are just vague ideas I’ve thought about over the past two days or so. None of them is revolutionary, but I think they could add value to a new platform that helps the tech community become even more informed, engaged and connected to each other.

One thing I didn’t mention, and perhaps the most important feature of any startup I may end up launching, is insightful and investigative journalism. I don’t know how low the bar is for these existing tech news sites, but I really didn’t find any examples of great writing on them. And whatever I end up producing has to include at least some investigative, old-fashioned journalism. There are many things happening and issues going on in the tech industry that are worth pursuing and I would love to see that happening – even if takes a membership-driven revenue model, but that’s probably a topic for another blog post.

A glimmer of hope for local newsrooms

I believe we can all agree that crisis – though perhaps not a strong enough term – accurately describes the state of local news media across the United States today.

One key figure makes my point: the number of full-time newsroom jobs dropped to 32,900 in 2015, down from nearly 57,000 in 1990, according to a report by the American Society of News Editors.

While this crisis continues during what appears to be a crucially important moment in American history, it’s encouraging to learn that more and more nonprofits and donors are investing in innovative ways to support local journalism.

An ambitious project announced on Monday aims to strengthen local journalism and help restore public trust in the Fourth Estate by placing at least 1,000 reporters in newsrooms across the country over the next five years. Report for America, led by the GroundTruth Project, a nonprofit media organization, is based on community service projects like Teach for America and AmeriCorps.

The goal is to allow reporters to work on critically important stories while strengthening the ties between newsrooms and the communities they serve.

Report for America was announced Monday, Sept. 18, 2017.

It works like this: Newsrooms and emerging journalists will apply for the program. After a selection process, Report for America will pay half of a reporter’s salary, with the news organization paying a quarter and local donors contributing another quarter of the salary.

That arrangement will last for a year, with the option to renew if the newsroom takes up a larger share of the costs.

Emerging journalists are defined here as young or recent graduates and those making a career change. Eligible news organizations include local newspapers, radio stations, TV stations and digital publications.

The GroundTruth Project is partnering with Google News Lab, Knight Foundation, Lenfest Institute for Journalism, Galloway Family Foundation, Center for Investigative Reporting, Solutions Journalism Network and other groups.

Google News Lab plans to provide corps members with training on data and digital journalism as well as hardware such as 360-degree cameras. Reporters will also be required to do service projects in the community.

The project was first designed by co-founder Steve Waldman, an entrepreneur and former national editor for US News & World Report. The other co-founder is Charles Sennott, founder and CEO of The GroundTruth Project and a longtime reporter, editor and entrepreneur.

“At a time of deep divisions in America, this is really a patriotic call to service, an invitation to a new generation to go and live and report in local communities in rural Appalachia, or the border towns of Texas or in faded industrial towns of the Midwest, or to any community where stories that enlighten and inform need to be told,” Sennott said in a news release.

The project is slated to launch in early 2018. Successful applicants need to show they have the skills to make an impact in local communities. As for newsrooms, Waldman told Poynter that they have to show the Report for America board they plan to use the emerging journalist for civically important journalism, “not just clickbait.”

Having worked in three local newspapers in Connecticut in recent years, I know how fast newsrooms are shrinking and how essential local journalism is for communities around the country. I applaud this effort by GroundTruth and I hope it turns into impactful journalism that will help the public trust our industry again.

I doubt this effort will significantly change the number of newsroom jobs around the country, but it may show philanthropists, local organizations and even the audience itself that it’s worth investing in local journalism. I certainly hope so.

The evolution of my news diet

Children and adults are told on a nearly daily basis that an appropriate diet must consist of high-quality foods. Not many of us actually succeed — or even listen to that advice — but I wonder what would happen if people were taught from a young age how to have a healthy and balanced news diet as well.

For this inaugural blog post, which is part of the Studio 20 graduate journalism program at New York University, I will look into how my own news diet has changed over the years. But I hope to discuss in a future blog post what impact news literacy courses would have on American society if taught in high schools.

I would say that my news diet during my teenage years was intense, but not very diverse. From the age of 10 or 11 until I was about 20 — right before I left Brazil and moved to the U.S. — I would read my hometown paper and Brazil’s biggest national paper roughly every day.

At times, my family would subscribe to those papers and other times my mom would bring them from work in the afternoon. I often spent two hours flipping through the pages of both papers and reading as much as possible. It was a hobby — or maybe an addiction?

I also enjoyed watching the nightly newscast on TV and the Sunday night news shows, but I wouldn’t do that as often as reading the paper.

After I moved to the U.S. almost 10 years ago, most of my news consumption quickly shifted to the web. I bookmarked websites like the New York Times, the Washington Post, the local newspaper and at least two Brazilian newspapers. I actually kept the habit of following the news from Brazil and still do it to this day, though not with the same frequency.

It was about five years ago that Twitter became my main news channel. I have increasingly used Twitter to consume information, and overall I like the experience. Sure, sometimes I feel like I’m creating a bubble with my favorite news outlets, but my news diet is definitely much more diverse since I am constantly discovering new journalism sources.

Over the past few years I also spent a lot of time watching cable news. I’m not very proud of that, since much of their air time consists of partisan pundits talking about the latest news in D.C. and not much about the rest of the country and the world. Anyway, I’m without cable since June and I feel just fine.

Nightly newscasts were never a big part of my news diet, but I always admired how some of them, especially on NBC and CBS, are able to summarize the most important news of the day in only half an hour.

Overall, I believe I can make my news diet way more “nutritious,” with more international journalism, perhaps, or just a wider variety of news topics. But I’m happy with the progress I made in finding more variety on Twitter in recent years and I’m fine with using Twitter or Tweetdeck as the main channel for me to find news stories.