Last year, when I was asked to contribute a prediction here, I mentioned that we in journalism would be looking more at our social impact than our total pageviews or other metrics. This year, working with Chicas Poderosas in Latin America and witnessing all that’s going on in the region, I believe the path to generating that social impact journalism should strive for is community and collaboration.
Though the journalist’s job has been traditionally seen as a lonely one, focused on competition for bylines or scoops, the realities of the industry and the world open the door to a new, more collaborative way of doing journalism.
In a scenario where news outlets continue to close, newsrooms continue to shrink, and journalists remain expected to do more with less, cooperation between journalists and/or newsrooms offers the possibility of improved coverage, the chance to tackle important issues with a more complex approach, and of learning and exchanging experiences.
Social protests, the rise of feminist struggles, and migrations going in the region show us that, to cover current affairs, we need more dynamic approaches. We need teams that gather different skills and expertise, that are more diverse, and we need a regional reach to fully tell the story.
The possibilities provided by collaboration are endless. We’ve seen it with regional projects that have helped uncover corruption. In 2019, at Chicas Poderosas, we’ve witnessed it first hand. In the mediathons we held in Argentina, Colombia, and México, we’ve seen the ideas, creativity, and power that is generated when journalists, communicators, and designers are gathered to work on projects combining their skills and their different perspectives — provided by their socioeconomic backgrounds, ethnic origins, age, and training. Stories get generated that offer a different perspective, which pose new questions and provide a more complex understanding of issues. In a regional investigation we created with 11 reporters to tell the stories of migration and non-binary people in Latin America, we’ve seen the possibility of creating new narratives that question traditional stories, include more questions, and provide new perspectives of how journalism processes can happen.
In 2020, we’re excited to see where the paths of collaboration take us, what we can create with this approach, and how these practices are replicated. But there’s one thing I’m certain about: The future of journalism is collaborative.
Mariana Santos is founder and CEO of Chicas Poderosas.
Last year, when I was asked to contribute a prediction here, I mentioned that we in journalism would be looking more at our social impact than our total pageviews or other metrics. This year, working with Chicas Poderosas in Latin America and witnessing all that’s going on in the region, I believe the path to generating that social impact journalism should strive for is community and collaboration.
Though the journalist’s job has been traditionally seen as a lonely one, focused on competition for bylines or scoops, the realities of the industry and the world open the door to a new, more collaborative way of doing journalism.
In a scenario where news outlets continue to close, newsrooms continue to shrink, and journalists remain expected to do more with less, cooperation between journalists and/or newsrooms offers the possibility of improved coverage, the chance to tackle important issues with a more complex approach, and of learning and exchanging experiences.
Social protests, the rise of feminist struggles, and migrations going in the region show us that, to cover current affairs, we need more dynamic approaches. We need teams that gather different skills and expertise, that are more diverse, and we need a regional reach to fully tell the story.
The possibilities provided by collaboration are endless. We’ve seen it with regional projects that have helped uncover corruption. In 2019, at Chicas Poderosas, we’ve witnessed it first hand. In the mediathons we held in Argentina, Colombia, and México, we’ve seen the ideas, creativity, and power that is generated when journalists, communicators, and designers are gathered to work on projects combining their skills and their different perspectives — provided by their socioeconomic backgrounds, ethnic origins, age, and training. Stories get generated that offer a different perspective, which pose new questions and provide a more complex understanding of issues. In a regional investigation we created with 11 reporters to tell the stories of migration and non-binary people in Latin America, we’ve seen the possibility of creating new narratives that question traditional stories, include more questions, and provide new perspectives of how journalism processes can happen.
In 2020, we’re excited to see where the paths of collaboration take us, what we can create with this approach, and how these practices are replicated. But there’s one thing I’m certain about: The future of journalism is collaborative.
Mariana Santos is founder and CEO of Chicas Poderosas.
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Heidi Tworek The year of positive pushback
Seth C. Lewis 20 questions for 2020
J. Siguru Wahutu Western journalists, learn from your African peers
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Jakob Moll A slow-moving tech backlash among young people
Gordon Crovitz Fighting misinformation requires journalism, not secret algorithms
Sonali Prasad Climate change storytelling gets multidimensional
Joni Deutsch Podcasting unsilences the silent
Juleyka Lantigua A changing industry amps up podcasters’ ambitions
Cristina Kim Public media stops trying to serve “everybody”
Mario García Think small (screen)
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Kevin D. Grant The free press stands against authoritarians’ attacks on truth
Sarah Alvarez I’m ready for post-news
Brian Moritz The end of “stick to sports”
Raney Aronson-Rath News deserts will proliferate — but so will new solutions
Whitney Phillips A time to question core beliefs
Tom Glaisyer Journalism can emerge newly vibrant and powerful
Sarah Stonbely More people start caring about news inequality
Dan Shanoff Sports media enters the Bronny era
Heather Bryant Some kinds of journalism aren’t worth saving
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Lauren Duca The rise of the journalistic influencer
Elizabeth Dunbar Frank talk, and then action
Rick Berke Incoming fire from both left and right
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Monique Judge The year to organize, unionize, and fight
Alexandra Borchardt Get out of the office and talk to people
Jeremy Gilbert and Jarrod Dicker A call for collaboration between storytelling and tech
Don Day Respect the non-paying audience
Anthony Nadler Clash of Clans: Election Edition
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Meg Marco Everything happens somewhere
Irving Washington Leadership isn’t something you learn on the job
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Meredith Artley Stronger solidarity among news organizations
Barbara Gray Join local libraries on the frontlines of civic engagement
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Nathalie Malinarich Betting on loyalty
John Keefe Journalism gets hacked
Peter Bale Lies get further normalized
Mike Caulfield Native verification tools for the blue checkmark crowd
Richard Tofel A constraint of the reader-revenue model emerges
Margarita Noriega The platforms try to figure out what to do with single-subject newsrooms
Steve Henn The dawning audio web
Joshua P. Darr All that campaign cash will make the media’s problems worse
AX Mina The Forum we wanted, the forum we got
Jim Brady We’ll complain about other people living in bubbles while ignoring our own
Rachel Glickhouse Journalists get left behind in the industry’s decline
Elizabeth Hansen and Jesse Holcomb Local news initiatives run into a capital shortage
Rachel Schallom The value of push alerts goes beyond open rates
Mary Walter-Brown and Tristan Loper Power to the people (on your audience team)
Carrie Brown Engaged journalism: It’s finally happening
Kerri Hoffman Opening closed systems
Greg Emerson News apps fall further behind
Fiona Spruill The climate crisis gets the coverage it deserves
Jeff Kofman Speed through technology
Ernie Smith The death of the industry fad
Errin Haines Race and gender aren’t a 2020 story — they’re the story
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Kourtney Bitterly Transparency isn’t just a desire, it’s an expectation
Victor Pickard We reclaim a public good
Laura E. Davis Know the context your journalism is operating within
Bill Grueskin Our ethics codes get an overhaul
Joe Amditis Collaborative journalism takes its rightful place at the table
Brenda P. Salinas Treating MP3 files like text
A.J. Bauer A fork in the road for conservative media
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Sarah Schmalbach Journalist, quantify thyself
Julia B. Chan We 👏 take 👏 breaks 👏
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Helen Havlak Platforms shine a light on original reporting
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Matthew Pressman News consumers divide into haves and have-nots
Michael W. Wagner Increasingly fractured, but little bit deliberative
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Alana Levinson Brand-backed media gets another look
Lucas Graves A smarter conversation about how (and why) fact-checking matters
Nicholas Jackson What’s left of local gets comfortable with reader support
Bill Adair A Nobel Prize, a Brad Pitt film, and a Taylor Swift song
Masuma Ahuja Slower, quieter, more measured and thoughtful
Rachel Davis Mersey The business of local TV news will enter its downward slide
Mira Lowe The year of student-powered journalism
Cory Haik We’re already consuming the future of news — now we have to produce it
Emily Withrow The year we kill the news article
Carl Bialik Journalists will try running the whole shop
Nushin Rashidian Are platforms a bridge or a lifeline?
John Garrett It’s the best time in a century to start a local news organization
Jennifer Brandel A love letter from the year 2073
Dannagal G. Young Let’s disrupt the logic that’s driving Americans apart
Sarah Marshall The year to learn about news moments
Jasmine McNealy A call for context
Francesco Zaffarano TikTok without generational prejudice
Linda Solomon Wood Everyone in your organization, moving toward a common goal
Josh Schwartz Publishers move beyond the metered paywall
Sue Robinson Campaign coverage as test bed for engagement experiments
Alfred Hermida and Mary Lynn Young The promise of nonprofit journalism
Nico Gendron Make better products if you want to reach Gen Z
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Joanne McNeil A return to blogs (finally? sort of?)
Geneva Overholser Death to bothsidesism
Cindy Royal Prepare media students for skills, not job titles
Logan Jaffe You don’t need fancy tools to listen
Jeremy Olshan All journalism should be service journalism
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Catalina Albeanu Rebuilding journalism, together
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Knight Foundation Five generations of journalists, learning from each other
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Tamar Charney From broadcast to bespoke
Ben Werdmuller Use the tools of journalism to save it
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Colleen Shalby Journalists become media literacy teachers
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Candis Callison Taking a cue from Indigenous journalists on climate change
Craig Newmark Formalizing newsrooms’ battle against disinformation