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Focus on 'what,' not 'where,' in planning your journalism career
Posted: 2008-10-09
So you want to do journalism but are worried about all the change hitting the craft?Do what digital pioneer and entrepreneur Elizabeth Osder has done: "I always tried to be about what I get to do rather than where I get to do it." But the economic models just aren't working for newspapers online, lamented one student attending USC Annenberg School of Journalism Director's Forum. Not true, said Osder, fresh off consulting work with Tina Brown's just-launched "The Daily Beast." Plenty of people are making plenty of money online. (As if in confirmation, David Westphal, Annenberg's executive in residence, noted that McClatchy right now makes more money online than it costs to pay all the editors and publishers in the company.) Here's how to think about it, Osder told the group: "Start with the impact you want to have. Figure out how what audience you need to assemble to have that impact. And what kind of content is needed to do that. Then price it out: How much money do you need to do it?" "If I wanted to do that, I'd have gone to Marshall (USC's business school)," a student groaned in reply. Understandable, said Osder, but having to do this kind of thinking brings a needed discipline. "It forces you to be relevant and useful versus arrogant and entitled." Hmmmm. This nostalgia we're feeling: Is it for The Wall, which guaranteed the purity of our journalism -- or for the folks on the other side of it, who had to worry about whether it was read and paid for?
Related stories: entrepreneurial journalism, management, revenue
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From Robert Niles on October 9, 2008 at 9:38 AM
Oh my goodness, I can't possibly count the number of times that I've wished that I had a sales staff to handle managing, billing and supporting advertisers on my websites. Or that I had a travel office to book my flights. Or a promotions department to write and send out press releases, design and order award plaques, etc.So, yes, I would love to have "the other side of The Wall" working for me on my family-owned niche news webites.
But you know what? I never, not once, felt that my reporting or writing was being compromised because I wear all the hats in my company, as opposed to just the one of "journalist." In fact, when I land a new advertiser, or sign up for a new ad network, I more often say to myself, "Cool! Now I can afford to fly to [X] and cover [Y]."
I don't feel that I have sacrificed any "purity" of my journalism. At most, I miss not having additional time to report, but frankly, I enjoy the tech, business and administrative sides of this work as well. So, if I had to choose, I would cast my vote for Geneva's second option.
Ultimately, though, I don't care. I'm having the most fun of my career right now. I work from home, with my wife, on a couple of profitable websites that reach more than 250,000 absolute unique readers a month. I don't have to wear a security card around my neck; I can pick up my kids from school every afternoon.
Keep your Wall. Give me these wide open spaces online.
What do other readers think?