Posts Tagged "Outside.in for Publishers"

13
Nov 09

More on the #NewBiz Conference at CUNY

picture-12My colleague Jared provided a great commentary on this blog after the recent New Business Models for News Conference and HyperCamp at CUNY. Thought I’d add a few more thoughts from the revenue angle.

As Sean Blanda points out in his recap, and repeatedly expressed by the confab attendees, a major unmet need in the hyperlocal space is around selling. In other words, what I heard loud and clear is: “I need revenue!” As this conference re-affirmed, there are plenty of journalists, bloggers, publishers (large and small) who are producing and featuring hyperlocal content, the challenge is how does one monetize this content.

Not surprising… after all, who doesn’t want to make some money? But here is why this is interesting:

  • No real mention of the usual self-service online sales route, such as Google or other ad networks). You can read into what is NOT being spoken aloud here… Google AdSense is not enough. Generating pennies off of clicks may work for the behemoth that is Google, but not for the independent local news site. Folks are well aware of how big the local ad market is ($100B+) and appear hungry to go after some of this big pie.
  • I sensed a DIY attitude when it came to ad sales. Individual publishers want to know how to sell. Journalists may not “do spreadsheets” but maybe some will do sales? I’m usually a fan of the DIY mentality and entrepreneurial spirit, but to make local ad sales work, DIY will not cut it. Local networks need to form to provide scale and efficiency. Rather than you sell what’s yours and I sell what’s mine, how about the best person sell on behalf of everyone in the market?
  • Not every hyperlocal site or news org should have to sell. The staff of the new news organization should focus on what they are good at, and in most cases, that will not be sales. The ability to sell is not something you teach and voila: You’re now making money. I wish it were that simple. Not only does it require recruiting the right people and training them properly, but you also need to equip them with the right tools and products to sell with, and most importantly, incentivize and motivate them to sell something that is not theirs. But local sales teams that have the skills and relationships already exist. The key is how to connect them with the relevant inventory that best services the advertisers… Sounds very similar to the challenge of connecting the big media folks to the local network of bloggers.

So, what does all this portend? Well, the future is still being shaped (by some of the folks there at the conference and other thought leaders and innovators), but a few things are clear on the ad sales front: Training will not be the answer and generating meaningful local dollars will require more cooperation and collaboration amongst the relevant parties. Yes, more group hugs are in order, as Jeff Jarvis insisted. And local networks being sold by the right sales teams will be the key in this new ecosystem.

29
Sep 09

Outside.in Partner Roster Keeps Growing with the Addition of Dow Jones Local

seacoast online logo

Dow Jones Local Media Group, which operates community newspapers in California, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon and Pennsylvania, has recently partnered with Outside.in to power “Your Town” news sections on their sites.

The first site we are live with is SeacoastOnline.com, where you can find an Outside.in powered map of the Portsmouth, NH metro area on their homepage.

seacoast online homepage map

Outside.in for Publishers was also used to create Neighborhood News Pages for some of their key “Your Town” neighborhoods. Check out the Hampton or Portsmouth town pages where they have aggregated some great local content.

This partnership is a great example of how we collaborate with local media partners in smaller markets to expand our coverage and help publishers reach a hyperlocal audience.

18
Sep 09

New York Post, Welcome to Outside.in for Publishers!

Ever since the beta launch of Outside.in for Publishers, we’ve been busy over here at Outside.in headquarters working with numerous local publishers in markets all over the country. And as we continue to talk to interested publishers and help existing partners optimize their online local experience, we often get asked the same question: “What other companies are you working with?” Thus, we recently started to announce new (and existing) partners on this blog (so be sure to check in often). Well, here’s one of our newest: the New York Post.

The New York Post recently launched a nifty redesign of their site NYPOST.com and have expanded their Local News section. There are separate sections for each of the five boroughs, and better yet, users can now drill into specific neighborhoods within each of the boroughs for hyperlocal news. You can see the Neighborhood News Pages in action whether you’re looking for Brooklyn news or the latest on Chelsea. With Outside.in for Publishers, NYPOST.com is able to provide their users with comprehensive local coverage amassed from news outlets and local blogs.

We’re excited to be working with the New York Post team and welcome them to our growing network of publisher partners.

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17
Sep 09

The News Tribune Partners with Outside.in

Outside.in for Publishers recently added a new publisher to our ever-growing partnership network: The News Tribune of Tacoma, WA. We welcome The News Tribune, the third largest newspaper in the state of Washington serving news to the South Puget Sound area.

tacoma news tribune logoThe News Tribune is leveraging the Outside.in for Publishers platform to to power the Tacoma Blog Central, which is a curated set of blogs and other news sources in the Tacoma region. This allows them to feature and prioritize their own collection of blogs, while supplementing it with feeds from other sources. Check out their implementation of the map widgets on town pages and headline lists in the news section.

16
Sep 09

More Partners Join Outside.in for Publishers

We are powering hyperlocal news for local TV news sites through a a partnership with Local TV LLC, which owns and manages a portfolio of 19 television stations across all major networks. Outside.in for Publishers delivers an easy and quick solution for these sites to cover every neighborhood in their markets by supplementing their content with other news and blog sources in the area and creating new local pages and inventory for additional ad sales opportunities. Some of the Local TV sites were able to go live with our product on the same day they registered for their accounts–it really doesn’t get much faster than that!

Many of these sites have put up interactive maps and headlines for select neighborhoods, while others have chosen to use a list of local headlines on their homepage. We are also seeing an increasing number of partners driving traffic to their Neighborhood News Pages with direct links in their navigation. We are paying close attention to engagement metrics to see what works for each of the partners and how we can help them execute on their local needs.

We are excited to be working with the teams at Milwaukee’s Fox6Now, St. Louis’s Fox2Now, Kansas City’s fox4kc, Memphis’ WREG and Cleveland’s Fox 8, just to mention a handful. We’ll be implemented across more sites within the Local TV LLC family soon, so stay tuned.

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

24
Jun 09

Outside.in for Publishers–Quick Start Guide

Here are the 5 simple steps to launch Neighborhood News Pages in under 30 minutes:

  1. Go to publishers.outside.in. Sign up for a Beta Invite by entering your email address, name, and site name.
  2. Receive your Beta Invite Email (if it doesn’t arrive within 30 minutes, check your spam folder).
  3. Return to publishers.outside.in. Click on Register Now. Enter your email address, create a password, enter the Beta Invite Code from the email, fill out the Captcha, and click Register.
  4. Enter the name of your site and choose your market, enter your site’s feed(s) or skip this step and click Continue to Dashboard. Click Configure Layouts and configure your layout, accepting all defaults.
  5. Paste the code onto your site.

It’s that simple to get the quick and dirty version of Neighborhood News Pages live on your site.  But, this is just the beginning of your relationship with Outside.in for Publishers.

In building the OIP platform, we strove for simplicity with the opportunity for complexity. The simplicity lies in the user’s ability to generate code for Neighborhood News Pages and have them live in under 30 minutes. The complexity comes with a variety of levers and dials that publishers can tinker with in order to curate the content and look of their pages.

Under Tag Stories, we show you all of the stories you should expect to see on your Neighborhood News Pages, all the stories from Your Feeds, and all of the stories in your market that didn’t get GeoTagged.  From here, you can add your own GeoTags to those we’ve already created, suppress stories you don’t want, and remove sources altogether so that their stories never show up.

You can also blacklist feeds in the Manage Feeds section, where you can see all the feeds we aggregate in your market, organized by Active Feeds, Inactive Feeds and Your Feeds.  Deactivate and reactivate feeds whenever you want.  Know about any great sources that aren’t listed?  Add them here with the Add a New Feed button.

In My Layouts, you can build more Neighborhood News Pages and Map Widgets, customize their look and feel, and save their stylesheets for later use.  And, you can always refer to The OIP Blog for tips and updates on improvements.

With Outside.in for Publishers, your journey towards being the premiere destination for hyperlocal news in your market begins quickly and easily, and it opens the door to a new frontier.

Welcome.


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