This might be more hope than prediction, but 2018 will be the year journalists stop waiting for someone else to save journalism.
Despite the recent success of The Washington Post and The New York Times, the news business remains in financial free fall — particularly at the local and regional level. And this at a time of relative economic prosperity, which is all the more worrying.
I don’t have to remind anyone here what the death of local news could mean for democracy. But for journalists, this crisis is existential. Marketing managers and sales executives can always find something else to sell or market. When the local paper in a one-paper town is gone without anything to take its place…well, that’s a future we simply can’t allow to happen.
I don’t know a single journalist who got into the business to spend time learning about ad models, paywalls, funnels, and the like. But that’s exactly what has to happen, and soon.
After all, journalists are the reason people pay for news in the first place. We are the product. The problem is, we’re still producing a 19th-century product and selling to a 21st-century audience, with predictable results. That has to change, and journalists need to be the ones driving that change.
I am seeing some small, but significant, steps in this direction: Two journalists, Natalie Hanman and Amanda Michel, grew The Guardian’s membership program from a few thousand to nearly 800,000 paying supporters in a year. The New York Times will soon be led by journalist A.G. Sulzberger, who, from the 2014 Innovation Report on, has brought much more of a business focus to the newsroom.
The Washington Post recently appointed a product editor as a way to bring the newsroom and business side closer together. Product management is a subject now taught in journalism schools and discussed at just about every conference I’ve attended at over the past 12 months.
All of this is good, just not nearly enough. Leaving the business of news to the business side is a luxury newsrooms can’t afford much longer.
Aron Pilhofer is the James B. Steele Chair in Journalism Innovation at Temple University.
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Jim Brady With the people, not just of the people
Corey Johnson The pro-fact resistance
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Evie Nagy Pivot to mobile video frustration
Alfred Hermida Going beyond mobile-first
Laura E. Davis Writing answers before you know the question
Charo Henríquez Training is an investment, not an expense
Miguel Castro The arrival of the impact producer
Matt Boggie The intellectual equivalent of the Dead Sea
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Heather Bryant Building the ecosystems for collaboration
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Jacqui Cheng Retailers move into content
Mike Caulfield Refactoring media literacy for the networked age
Millie Tran and Stine Bauer Dahlberg (Hint: It’s about your brand)
Elizabeth Jensen Show your work
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Jarrod Dicker Honesty in advertising
Alastair Coote The year of self-improvement
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Sarah Marshall Loyalty as the key performance indicator
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Sara M. Watson Feeds will open up to new user-determined filters
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Pia Frey Address users as individuals
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Ray Soto VR reaches the next level
Jared Newman Venture funding and digital news don’t mix
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Carlos Martínez de la Serna The new journalism commons
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Luke O'Neil The end is already here
Will Sommer The year local media gets conservative
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Jennifer Coogan The future is female
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Matt Carlson Attacks on the press will get worse
Pablo Boczkowski The rise of skeptical reading
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Nicholas Diakopoulos Fortifying social media from automated inauthenticity
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Aron Pilhofer We can’t leave the business to the business side any more
Lanre Akinola Making noise is not a strategy
Manoush Zomorodi Self-help as a publishing strategy
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Michelle Ferrier The year of the great reckoning
Molly de Aguiar Good journalism won’t be enough
Ernst-Jan Pfauth Publishing less to give readers more
Sally Lehrman Trust comes first
Amy Webb Listen to weak signals
Tamar Charney We get serious about algorithms
Ståle Grut Reclaiming audience interaction from social networks
Felix Salmon Covering bitcoin while owning bitcoin
Lam Thuy Vo Breaking free from the tyranny of the loudest
Eric Ulken The year local publishers get smart(er) about change
Zizi Papacharissi Women come back
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Amy King Let’s amplify visual voice
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Claire Wardle Disinformation gets worse
Jassim Ahmad Thriving on change
Mandy Velez texting is lit rn, fam
Monique Judge Letting black women tell their own stories
Pete Brown Push alerts, personalized
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David Skok Finding an information-life balance
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Matt DeRienzo A recession, then a collapse
Julia Beizer A longer view on the pivot
Rick Berke Value is the watchword
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Edward Roussel Eyes, ears, and brains
Adam Thomas Sharing is caring: The year of the mentor
Bill Keller A growing turn to philanthropy
Joanne McNeil Gatekeeping the gatekeepers
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