My 10-year-old daughter has become a blogger! (Kudos go to her teacher; I never thought to introduce her to blogging myself.) No, you won’t find her posts out in the blogosphere; they are safely contained behind EduBlogs.org. But her class is engaged in a unit on blogging, and you can imagine that I’m delighted. One thing that struck me was how many of the kids in her class post videos on their blogs. Video sharing has become an integral part of the digital native’s world, and it’s remarkable how engaged children are with the medium. Hardly a day goes by that Sarah doesn’t show me a video she discovered from someone at school. At this age, kids are also getting more interested in news. I remember being introduced to current events by my 4th grade teacher. Could this be a teaching moment for the news industry? I was looking over the web properties owned by a potential client today, and I noticed that they contained comparatively little video, and that the news agency itself lacked their own YouTube channel. Now, when I was at DNAinfo.com we started with a heavy video element, but we eventually re-balanced the video against text, image, and interactives when we saw that our demographic wasn’t clicking video as much as we expected. I believe that every smart, forward-looking news agency has been looking at similar metrics. But we may be missing an opportunity. Think about it: the next generation of news consumers are already keenly engaged with online video. My daughter is a digital native. She thinks that NPR and The News Hour are boring. She won’t read newspapers. “They’re for grandpas” is a direct quote. No surprise, right? When I was her age I just read the comics section. But she’s curious about the greater world around her, and it’s time to introduce her to online news sources. She needs a site that is rich with video and images and focused on the types of stories kids are interested in, including stories involving local kids (sports, community programs, theater, music, and other events). News sites of course carry a lot of material that...
Read MoreCategories
- Digital Marketing (8)
- eLearning (2)
- Future of eBooks (10)
- Future of News (11)
- More Visitors: SEO & SEM (8)
- Newspaper Revenue (3)
- Tablet and Mobile (9)
- Technology & Analytics (6)
Contents:
- Data Preparation for Analytics
- Community Engagement: Moving from Broadcast to Conversations
- Schema.org, Entity Search, and Semantic SEO Tagging
- Responsive Design: One Site for All Devices
- How Mobile Fits Into Your Overall Digital Strategy
- Designing Tablet Reader Apps: Information Architecture
- Designing Tablet Reader Apps: User Experience Design
- Designing Tablet Reader Apps: Content Analysis
- Designing Tablet Reader Apps: Audience and Purpose
- Designing Tablet Reader Apps: More Bells and Fewer Whistles?
- The Work Behind Social Marketing
- Search Engine Marketing (SEM) Tips: Analytics and Performance
- Search Engine Marketing (SEM) Tips: Keyword Management
- Search Engine Marketing (SEM) Tips: Competitive Analysis
- Kids, News, and Video
- Tablets, eBooks, and eLearning Make Middle School Less… Awkward
- Epilogue: The Miranda Proposal, Future and Facts
- The Long Tail of Publishing
- Who Will Develop the Next eBook Platform?
- What is the eBook Platform of Tomorrow?
- The Rise of eBook Applications
- Social Reading: Beyond Gutenberg? Beyond Zuckerberg!
- eBooks and the Triple Bottom Line
- The Future of Books
- Prologue: It’s Time for eBooks to Evolve
- Journatic, The Tribune, and Offshore Outsourced Journalism
- Warren Buffet is No Fool
- The Ultimate News Device: Tablets
- The Future of News: It’s Not About You, It’s About Them
- Newsroom Software: WordPress and Other Open Source Options
- Paywalls: The Wrong Solution for News
- How to Drive Online News Revenue
- Don’t Build Your Own Newsroom
- Digital Editions and Portable News
- Why Photos are Critical to Online News
- Site Analytics: Intelligence Gathering for News Sites
- How To Do SEO Right
- From Newspapers to Digital Media: Follow John Paton
- What is SEO?
- SEO and SEM for News
- Trusted Advertising: The Value of Newspaper Web Sites
- Capitalizing on News Assets
- Where Did Newspapers Go Wrong?
- The Fall of the Newspaper
- Why Blogging Writes?