I haven’t really thought about any of this for a year and a half or so, but yes, this is a great checklist to run down when you’re launching a new WordPress blog.
10 Things to do After Installing WordPress – Pro Blog Design
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I haven’t really thought about any of this for a year and a half or so, but yes, this is a great checklist to run down when you’re launching a new WordPress blog.
10 Things to do After Installing WordPress – Pro Blog Design
As is my habit, I’m running behind on my Carnival of Journalism post this month, set to the timely and tuneful whistles and bangs of talk about whether a newspaper’s online revenue could support the newsroom, how long the newspaper of record will keep the press running, and what a major metro in a failed JOA can do to survive online.
So, the question, posed by Paul Bradshaw (and be sure to check out the Seesmic thread as well) is as follows:
“How do you financially support journalism online?”
Of course, as is my habit, I’m going to have to sharpen that question up a bit, lest I fall prey to the temptation to speculate wildly about the future of major metro newspapers and their finances, as I’m sure I’ve done in the past.
So let’s get specific.
Here’s what I’m not interested in talking about:
Whether the current online revenue of a giant newspaper could support its newsroom staff. I think that’s an apples/oranges problem. Shutting down the press is not a hydraulic maneuver — it does not occur in a vacuum — it affects brand and upsell revenue and staffing and all sorts of parts move and grind against each other when you flip that switch on a large scale. So, looking at two columns in a spreadsheet and saying “oh, they match” is a bit simplistic for my taste.
Great, so, moving on.
Well, wait, not yet. One more thing to get out of the way:
I’m not (that) interested (today) in trying to figure out what revenue, then, will support major metro newspapers online. When a major city loses its last print edition, it will be because it has already been replaced, in terms of reporting, advertising, commentary, and yes, journalism, by (mostly) smaller organizations.
And by definition, I expect a newspaper.com in a no-print city to look and feel infinitely different than it does now, to be a distributed news service, the sum of dozens of tiny parts, a portal to a wide variety of platforms where bits of news pushed out and pulled in.
(Right, so again, these are all the things I’m not going to talk about today. Right. Sure.)
My question, then, is how to support a small, agile, online-only news organization.
And that’s a much easier question to answer, isn’t it?
Let’s start with three obvious ways:
After that, there are less obvious ways to keep a small organization financially afloat, but they’ll vary based on your skills, staffing, and neighborhood.
Does that local business need a Web site to go with their banner ad? I hear there are these new things called “blogs” that might be easy for them to maintain once you set them up with one, handling the hosting, domain management, and upgrades for a fee.
Other moving parts to keep an eye on: