Posts FromAugust, 2009

31
Aug 09

Building Blogger Community in Roanoke

We’ve seen some interesting developments in blogger-media relationships in the past week, and at the same time, we were working on our own effort to support hyperlocal reporting. Our first three community resource sites for local bloggers in Tacoma, WA, Jackson, MS, and St. Louis, MO will roll out shortly (stay tuned for official announcements).

Around the same time, we noticed a new site doing just this in Roanoke, VA and we’ve launched a partnership with them. BlogRoanoke is now using outside.in for Publishers to produce neighborhood news pages from the local Roanoke sites in their system, and when these local sites sign up for outside.in, they can grab a storymap to display their stories and show they are part of our blogger network. Then, their posts will show up on BlogRoanoke and their sister site, Star City Harbinger, and outside.in pages and other media partner pages. Just like that, their audience grows significantly. BlogRoanoke put it best: “Just in case you missed it…this is a Big Deal. When you sign up for outside.in, you’ll get exposure on outside.in and its network of mainstream media partners. You’ve just gone from local to big time–while staying local. In fact, while becoming even more local. Hyperlocal, even.”

Instead of only a limited number of bloggers, we’re welcoming all local bloggers in Roanoke (and our three other test-case cities) to join our project. We’ll be offering up tips and observations on hyperlocal blogging over on BlogRoanoke. So head on over and see what they’re doing, and if you’re a local Roanoke blogger, sign up! And of course, if you’re a local blogger outside of these towns, you can still sign up for outside.in to syndicate your hyperlocal posts, grab a StoryMap for your site, and use our geoSEO tools!

Get a map for your blog!

31
Aug 09

US Open Widget Instructions

Check out this really cool widget we made for The US Open! It displays tweets from all the players in the tournament who have Twitter accounts. Watch them get psyched for upcoming matches, celebrate wins, and cope with losses. You can even see where they went to eat the night before a match and how they interact with each other. (Serena Williams and Andy Roddick seem to be challenging each other in other sports…)

andyroddick-tweet-2

If you like the size and styles of this one, pick up the code here: http://pastie.org/600829.

If you want to customize the widget follow these 4 simple steps:

1. Create an account on Outside.in for Publishers (publishers.outside.in), selecting New York Metro Area as your market.

2. Look under manage feeds and blacklist all those that aren’t twitter accounts for tennis players.

3. Go to configure layouts and build a headline list with your styles. (Make sure to NOT show the ‘Explore a Neighborhood Header’ nor the ‘Article Summaries.’)

4. Copy the code and paste it on your US Open page or Sports page.

It only takes a few minutes to make and The US Open only lasts two weeks, so put the widget up today!

31
Aug 09

September Ruby Happy Hour this Wednesday

This Wednesday, September 2nd, outside.in will be hosting our monthly Ruby Happy Hour for rubyists in New York City. Food and beverages are sponsored by Pivotal Labs.

The details:
Location: outside.in’s offices: 20 Jay Street, Suite 1019, Brooklyn, NY (10th floor)
When: Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009 7-9pm

Please RSVP in the comments if you’re thinking of coming by.

26
Aug 09

Seattle Times Partners With Local News Sites – Is It Enough?

Today the Seattle Times announced an editorial partnership with four local news publishers. Obviously, this caught our attention. A major news publisher working with and driving traffic to hyperlocal sites is part of how we envision the new news ecosystem. Thus, we do commend the Seattle Times for taking this encouraging first step and embracing the notion of aggregation, connecting with their community, and taking note of the wealth of great local content being produced in their backyard. But how will this really work? Is this the beginning of a new news model or an interesting experiment? Well, there are some issues that should be addressed.

  • Limited Content: Why isolate this to just four content publishers? Why not 20? Why not 100? If you were the publisher, wouldn’t you want access to ALL the great content producers in your market? Seattle is a blog-rich metro with hundreds of local bloggers (we capture over 300 sources in this market). The barriers to entry to becoming a content producer are extremely low. New content producers are popping up everyday that the Seattle Times won’t have direct access to. My Ballard may have the best coverage on a specific event one day but the next day it might come from an unknown new blogger. If I were the editor, I’d want access to it all rather than limiting myself to an exclusive set of a few local publishers and possibly alienating everyone else out there.
  • Lack of Scale and Automation: Without these two elements, this initiative will likely prove to be challenging to manage on a day-to-day basis. For publishers in other cities that may want to adopt a similar strategy, no doubt the concerns will be around resources. Who will pick and choose what articles to link to and communicate with the bloggers? With so many news publishers strapped for resources, is this a realistic initiative to pull off successfully?
  • Sustainability: This is a one-year ‘project’ funded by the Knight Foundation. A grant from the Knight Foundation via American University will fund a liaison at Seattle Times and provide a stipend to the participating local bloggers. What happens after one year? Who will continue to fund this ‘liaison’ and the bloggers? What seems to be missing is a sustainable model that builds a relationship with the local bloggers and encourages a constant exchange of content, inventory, and revenue–a model that can be replicated at other cities all over the country.

The solution to the above issues and many of the questions is pretty simple–organized aggregation. This is why we built Outside.in for Publishers–a product to automate and ease the efforts of collecting local content.  We give you the ‘fire hose’ of all aggregated content organized by neighborhoods and places, along with simple tools to manage and curate all of this. As news constantly changes, we believe local publishers need this level of flexibility and control.

We will be watching to see how this Seattle partnership works out. As of now, it sounds like a great concept but in practice, I question whether this is a sustainable or an efficient strategy. We are excited to see more publishers like Seattle Times embracing the notion of working with smaller local content producers in their market to give bloggers the much-desired and deserved eyeballs and distribution. But publishers can do a lot more and faster. The tools are there… we invite you to see just how easy it is and take advantage of the opportunities.

20
Aug 09

CASE STUDY: Neighborhood News for Chicagoland

chicago tribune and chicago breaking news logos

Sites: ChicagoTribune.com and ChicagoBreakingNews.com
Market: Chicagoland Metro Area
Neighborhood News Pages: http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/neighborhoods.html

The Chicago Breaking News Center is a combined news force from Chicago Tribune, CLTV, WGN-TV and WGN-AM, but with the launch of Outside.in for Publishers (OIP) we’ve created Neighborhood News Pages that not only present Tribune sources, but we’ve also aggregated all the major local news sites to provide Chicagoans with the most comprehensive local news maps in the area. OIP has enabled us to bring our readers hyper-local content by presenting detailed Neighborhood News Pages for downtown districts such as Lincoln Park, to suburbs in the Chicagoland area like Arlington Heights, Evanston, Naperville, and Joliet—Yvette Quintanar, Product Manager, Tribune

Automated aggregation and audience targeting by town and neighborhood

Prior to OIP, Chicago Breaking News Center (CNBC) aggregated its own news feeds for Chicagoland.  With OIP, CNBC saw an opportunity to leverage Outside.in‘s network of aggregated hyperlocal content and OIP’s automated solutions to expand and specify their own news coverage.

Easy set-up and implementation

It took the Tribune less than two weeks to set up their account and launch OIP-created Neighborhood News Pages on ChicagoBreakingNews.com. By incorporating these pages into their primary nav, CBNC drives traffic to over 180 newly created hyperlocal story listing pages, which surface local stories from CBNC and from around the web, subdivided by region and neighborhood.

chicago breaking news nav bar

Neighborhood map components can also be found on key local pages of ChicagoTribune.com, which cross-link users to neighborhood news sections on ChicagoBreakingNews.com.  To further increase user engagement, the Tribune is currently testing hyperlinking neighborhood names within articles to their corresponding neighborhood news pages.

sidebar maps

Improved user engagement

The Tribune is experiencing strong user engagement on their Neighborhood News Pages. 20-30% of online visitors on a Neighborhood News Page click through to an article (from the map or headlines below the map). Neighborhood News Pages also increase the time users spend on-site by offering over 180 pages of quality hyperlocal inventory that can also be leveraged by the Tribune’s ad-sales team.

Outside.in and the Tribune continue to work together on ways to increase traffic to Neighborhood News Pages and optimize results, such as the recent cross-link integration between ChicagoTribune.com and ChicagoBreakingNews.com. With a comprehensive set of hyperlocal news updated in real-time, ChicagoTribune.com and CBNC are ensuring their sites become the key destination for local news in Chicago.

chicago breaking news neighborhood news page screenshot

19
Aug 09

Uncertainty and Chaos Create Bigger Need for Organization

I’ve been tuned into Aspen Institute’s Forum on Communication and Society (FOCAS) on the theme Of the Press: Models for Preserving American Journalism. There were lots of smart folks talking, debating, listening, refuting, and defending their vision for the future of journalism.

One big theme that jumped out at me as I listened to the questions and comments to Jeff Jarvis / CUNY’s New Business Model for News and what pretty much everyone in the room seems to agree on is that the current news ecosystem is full of “uncertainty and chaos.” With non-profits, big media, local and community papers, local bloggers, and start-ups – there are plenty of players. With all the various revenue options and models (many of which have yet to be proven), the challenges in attaining profitability are also numerous but risky. What all this signals is loud and clear: the need for organization. And that is exactly where Outside.in comes in…what we excel at is aggregating AND organizing the explosion of local content (by region, city, neighborhood, as well as by topic and category). In fact, that is how we are supporting various publishers right now, primarily through our online platform—Outside.in for Publishers (http://publishers.outside.in), which is now being used by dozens of media partners (such as the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and Chicago Tribune / Chicago Breaking News) who are digging into hyperlocal sources in their markets and leveraging our tool to create rich, community news pages for their sites.

The FOCAS participants, though highly accomplished and well-established veterans in their respective industries, seem to be crying out for some organization (note: Jeff Jarvis’s scatter diagram illustrating the various players in the ecosystem didn’t really do the trick) to make sense of the fragmented and disparate news world out there. Well, we have our own vision of the new news ecosystem, which relies on Outside.in enabling the flow of content and inventory from the network of local bloggers and less highly-trafficked content creators up to the publishers who will curate this long tail of content and send traffic and revenue down to the network (see image below of how we picture this). An ecosystem is only effective if there is an exchange of values amongst the parties. And our vision is to build products and provide services that enable this efficient exchange.

ecosystem-graphic

6
Aug 09

StoryMap Introduction Video

Check out this awesome illustration of what outside.in does for bloggers. Our three summer interns (Libby Brittain, Cody Brown, and Phoebe Pundyk) made this great video, and we think it does an excellent job of articulating how our site and tools can help bloggers promote their local content. We’ll let this fun but informative video speak for itself. Enjoy and click here to get a map for your blog!

StoryMap Introduction from outside.in on Vimeo.


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