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Charlie Beckett

March 5th, 2013

What Good Is Twitter? (for public service journalism?) New Polis Report

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Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Charlie Beckett

March 5th, 2013

What Good Is Twitter? (for public service journalism?) New Polis Report

1 comment

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Screen shot 2013-03-04 at 18.12.06How can journalists working in public service newsrooms use social media to improve the quality of their work? Polis has a new report out by EBU Fellow Nadja Hahn that asks, What Use Is Twitter?

This research paper is a report with a purpose. It will be presented at the Polis Annual Journalism Conference on April 5th. Its author, who is ultimately responsible for the views it contains, is exactly the kind of journalist who should be using social media. Nadja Hahn is an experienced business journalist with Austria’s public service broadcaster ORF. She makes good radio news content that informs the listeners on the critical economic stories of our times.  She had already dabbled in social media before embarking on this project but she is limited in what she can do professionally by Austrian regulations.

Nadja Hahn
Nadja Hahn

In a clever and pithy blog post for Polis during her stay at the LSE she showed how social media could have improved a recent radio feature she had made.  The title said it all: ‘What It’s Like To Tell A Story Without Social Media And Why I will Never Do So Again”.[1]

However, the reasons she sets out in this paper for using social media are not because it makes journalism easier, speedier or sexier. The case she sets out is that it improves the public service value of the journalism.

Add Depth

I have long argued that journalism changes when it becomes networked[2]. It can become more open, responsive, more creative and diverse. It can add depth, variety, and reach. It can tap into wider expertise and accountability networks beyond the newsroom.

This paper tests that thesis in the time-starved, resource-constrained world of European public service broadcasting. It sets it in a context where private media is anxious about the threat of online platforms and worried that subsidised channels might reduce the opportunities they offer commercially.

This paper draws in particular upon the mixed media ecology of the UK with its relatively advanced social media networks to show that cohabitation is both possible and desirable for private and public media.

Respond Please

Anyone working in a PSB at any level will learn from this report. Indeed it has ideas for anyone interested in better journalism wherever it is made. And we welcome any responses that you might have. It is designed to stimulate debate and new approaches rather than to advance a single point of view or policy. Each national media market will have different circumstances and each society will have different priorities.

But in the end Nadja Hahn’s report sends out a clear and urgent message. PSB management across Europe needs to take social media more seriously, to defend the role of PSBs in this new media environment and to invest in adding public service value to these new platforms and networks.

This report was produced as part of the EBU newsroom fellowship at Polis, the journalism and society think-tank at the London School of Economics. We are grateful to the EBU for their support and to all the many people who gave their time to contribute to the research.

Contact Nadja via polis@lse.ac.uk or on Twitter @NadjasNews


[1] Accessible here https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/polis/2012/11/02/what-its-like-to-tell-a-story-without-social-media-and-why-i-will-never-do-so-again-guest-blog/

[2] Beckett, C ‚ 2010‚The Value of Networked Journalism’ (Polis, LSE) Accessible here:

https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/polis/2010/08/19/new-report-on-networked-journalism-2/

 

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Charlie Beckett

Posted In: Journalism | Research | Research and Publications

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