Ask your readers to help build your products

“My job, and the job of any community manager, is to facilitate the creation of content that solves a problem our readers have, not just reports on it.”

For between 15 and 20 hours a week, I moderate misinformation in the comments section of Wall Street Journal articles. Based on the things I read there, I believe our current levels of discord and misinformation could be significantly reduced if people felt their experiences were more accurately reflected in the journalism they are consuming.

Maybe that’s a pipe dream, but I don’t think so. Here’s why: At its core, journalism is a service, a product. Products depend on users to thrive. Having users believe in a product requires evolving two-way communication into a community that directly influences a product’s development.

Community is a tentpole of service journalism. Even if an editorial product shifts, it should still serve the needs of its corresponding community. In fact, newsrooms should lean on community members (subscribers, readers, followers, etc.) to help guide them where they go next. Similar to tech companies, newsroom community managers should consistently facilitate two-way communication between external stakeholders and internal members of the newsroom to turn feedback into action.

We did this with WSJ Noted., a digital magazine targeting 18- to 34-year-olds that launched in July. With the support of a fellow audience interaction producer, Taylor Nakagawa, I led the rebranding of a LinkedIn group that had previously been the “WSJ Young Professionals” group. It is now called The WSJ Noted. Adviser Network. This virtual meeting place for college students and young professionals is supported by a 200-person adviser network. These advisers were invited to help influence Journal coverage.

The majority of the advisers’ coverage ideas have been born from questions they and their peers want answered. For example, they questioned how to navigate sexual contact and sexual health on campus amidst Covid-19. This question became a two-part story in Noted’s back-to-school issue. Deborah Acosta reported on the lack of guidance colleges were giving students and produced an accompanying guide on “How to Have Safe Sex During the Covid-19 Pandemic.”

Since July, the LinkedIn group has grown to more than 47,000 members and the adviser network has helped influence Noted.’s decision to pivot to career and management focused guides.

My job, and the job of any community manager, is to facilitate the creation of content that solves a problem our readers have, not just reports on it. The strength of a good community manager lies in being part of the community, not just governing it.

That brings me to one last question: If tech products can consistently serve their users this way, why can’t journalism? The answer is simple enough. Newsrooms should commit to having community managers who can close the feedback loop between a community’s needs and the corresponding service journalism.

Nico Gendron is an audience interaction producer for The Wall Street Journal.

For between 15 and 20 hours a week, I moderate misinformation in the comments section of Wall Street Journal articles. Based on the things I read there, I believe our current levels of discord and misinformation could be significantly reduced if people felt their experiences were more accurately reflected in the journalism they are consuming.

Maybe that’s a pipe dream, but I don’t think so. Here’s why: At its core, journalism is a service, a product. Products depend on users to thrive. Having users believe in a product requires evolving two-way communication into a community that directly influences a product’s development.

Community is a tentpole of service journalism. Even if an editorial product shifts, it should still serve the needs of its corresponding community. In fact, newsrooms should lean on community members (subscribers, readers, followers, etc.) to help guide them where they go next. Similar to tech companies, newsroom community managers should consistently facilitate two-way communication between external stakeholders and internal members of the newsroom to turn feedback into action.

We did this with WSJ Noted., a digital magazine targeting 18- to 34-year-olds that launched in July. With the support of a fellow audience interaction producer, Taylor Nakagawa, I led the rebranding of a LinkedIn group that had previously been the “WSJ Young Professionals” group. It is now called The WSJ Noted. Adviser Network. This virtual meeting place for college students and young professionals is supported by a 200-person adviser network. These advisers were invited to help influence Journal coverage.

The majority of the advisers’ coverage ideas have been born from questions they and their peers want answered. For example, they questioned how to navigate sexual contact and sexual health on campus amidst Covid-19. This question became a two-part story in Noted’s back-to-school issue. Deborah Acosta reported on the lack of guidance colleges were giving students and produced an accompanying guide on “How to Have Safe Sex During the Covid-19 Pandemic.”

Since July, the LinkedIn group has grown to more than 47,000 members and the adviser network has helped influence Noted.’s decision to pivot to career and management focused guides.

My job, and the job of any community manager, is to facilitate the creation of content that solves a problem our readers have, not just reports on it. The strength of a good community manager lies in being part of the community, not just governing it.

That brings me to one last question: If tech products can consistently serve their users this way, why can’t journalism? The answer is simple enough. Newsrooms should commit to having community managers who can close the feedback loop between a community’s needs and the corresponding service journalism.

Nico Gendron is an audience interaction producer for The Wall Street Journal.

John Garrett   A surprisingly good year

Logan Jaffe   History as a reporting tool

Sam Ford   We’ll find better ways to archive our work

Richard Tofel   Less on politics, more on how government works (or doesn’t)

Mike Caulfield   2021’s misinformation will look a lot like 2020’s (and 2019’s, and…)

Nonny de la Pena   News reaches the third dimension

Gonzalo del Peon   Collaborations expand from newsrooms to the business side

Tshepo Tshabalala   Go niche

Gabe Schneider   Another year of empty promises on diversity

Ariane Bernard   Going solo is still only a path for the few

Marie Shanahan   Journalism schools stop perpetuating the status quo

Meredith D. Clark   The year journalism starts paying reparations

María Sánchez Díez   Traffic will plummet — and it’ll be ok

Danielle C. Belton   A decimated media rededicates itself to truth

Imaeyen Ibanga   Journalism gets unmasked

Joshua P. Darr   Legislatures will tackle the local news crisis

Julia B. Chan and Kim Bui   Millennials are ready to run things

Andrew Donohue   The rise of the democracy beat

José Zamora   Walking the talk on diversity

Steve Henn   Has independent podcasting peaked?

Zainab Khan   From understanding to feeling

Kristen Muller   Engaged journalism scales

Kevin D. Grant   Parachute journalism goes away for good

John Ketchum   More journalists of color become newsroom founders

Kate Myers   My son will join every Zoom call in our industry

Francesca Tripodi   Don’t expect breaking up Google and Facebook to solve our information woes

Samantha Ragland   The year of journalists taking initiative

Mark S. Luckie   Newsrooms and streaming services get cozy

Eric Nuzum   Podcasting dodged a bullet in 2020, but 2021 will be harder

Joanne McNeil   Newsrooms push back against Ivy League cronyism

Renée Kaplan   Falling in love with your subscription

Megan McCarthy   Readers embrace a low-information diet

Catalina Albeanu   Publish less, listen more

Cory Bergman   The year after a thousand earthquakes

Robert Hernandez   Data and shame

Doris Truong   Indigenous issues get long-overdue mainstream coverage

John Saroff   Covid sparks the growth of independent local news sites

Brandy Zadrozny   Misinformation fatigue sets in

Tanya Cordrey   Declining trust forces publishers to claim (or disclaim) values

Rachel Schallom   The rise of nonprofit journalism continues

Tonya Mosley   True equity means ownership

Kawandeep Virdee   Goodbye, doomscroll

Ben Collins   We need to learn how to talk to (and about) accidental conspiracists

Marissa Evans   Putting community trauma into context

Masuma Ahuja   We’ll remember how interconnected our world is

AX Mina   2020 isn’t a black swan — it’s a yellow canary

Sonali Prasad   Making disaster journalism that cuts through the noise

Basile Simon   Graphics, unite

M. Scott Havens   Traditional pay TV will embrace the disruption

Sarah Stonbely   Videoconferencing brings more geographic diversity

Patrick Butler   Covid-19 reporting has prepared us for cross-border collaboration

Beena Raghavendran   Journalism gets fused with art

Alfred Hermida and Oscar Westlund   The virus ups data journalism’s game

Edward Roussel   Tech companies get aggressive in local

Jer Thorp   Fewer pixels, more cardboard

Victor Pickard   The commercial era for local journalism is over

Chicas Poderosas   More voices mean better information

David Skok   A pandemic-prompted wave of consolidation

Rachel Glickhouse   Journalists will be kinder to each other — and to themselves

Rodney Gibbs   Zooming beyond talking heads

Hossein Derakhshan   Mass personalization of truth

Nik Usher   Don’t expect an antitrust dividend for the media

Tim Carmody   Spotify will make big waves in video

Anna Nirmala   Local news orgs grasp the urgency of community roots

Ashton Lattimore   Remote work helps level the playing field in an insular industry

Pablo Boczkowski   Audiences have revolted. Will newsrooms adapt?

Anthony Nadler   Journalism struggles to find a new model of legitimacy

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen   Stop pretending publishers are a united front

Garance Franke-Ruta   Rebundling content, rebuilding connections

Jim Friedlich   A newspaper renaissance reached by stopping the presses

Sumi Aggarwal   News literacy programs aren’t child’s play

Sara M. Watson   Return of the RSS reader

Marcus Mabry   News orgs adapt to a post-Trump world (with Trump still in it)

Ståle Grut   Network analysis enters the journalism toolbox

Janet Haven and Sam Hinds   Is this an AI newsroom?

Colleen Shalby   The definition of good journalism shifts

Michael W. Wagner   Fractured democracy, fractured journalism

Jennifer Choi   What have we done for you lately?

Alyssa Zeisler   Holistic medicine for journalism

Heidi Tworek   A year of news mocktails

Ray Soto   The news gets spatial

Brian Moritz   The year sports journalism changes for good

Matt Skibinski   Misinformation won’t stop unless we stop it

A.J. Bauer   The year of MAGAcal thinking

Delia Cai   Subscriptions start working for the middle

Burt Herman   Journalists build post-Facebook digital communities

Kerri Hoffman   Protecting podcasting’s open ecosystem

Cindy Royal   J-school grads maintain their optimism and adaptability

Bo Hee Kim   Newsrooms create an intentional and collaborative culture

Aaron Foley   Diversity gains haven’t shown up in local news

Ben Werdmuller   The web blooms again

Juleyka Lantigua   The download, podcasting’s metric king, gets dethroned

Ariel Zirulnick   Local newsrooms question their paywalls

Tauhid Chappell and Mike Rispoli   Defund the crime beat

David Chavern   Local video finally gets momentum

Mike Ananny   Toward better tech journalism

Laura E. Davis   The focus turns to newsroom leaders for lasting change

Francesco Zaffarano   The year we ask the audience what it needs

Bill Adair   The future of fact-checking is all about structured data

Matt DeRienzo   Citizen truth brigades steer us back toward reality

Sue Cross   A global consensus around the kind of news we need to save

Annie Rudd   Newsrooms grow less comfortable with the “view from above”

John Davidow   Reflect and repent

J. Siguru Wahutu   Journalists still wrongly think the U.S. is different

Parker Molloy   The press will risk elevating a Shadow President Trump

Tamar Charney   Public radio has a midlife crisis

Rick Berke   Virtual events are here to stay

Nico Gendron   Ask your readers to help build your products

Nisha Chittal   The year we stop pivoting

Gordon Crovitz   Common law will finally apply to the Internet

Errin Haines   Let’s normalize women’s leadership

Natalie Meade   Journalism enters rehab

Jennifer Brandel   A sneak peak at power mapping, 2073’s top innovation

Jessica Clark   News becomes plural

Christoph Mergerson   Black Americans will demand more from journalism

Astead W. Herndon   The Trump-sized window of the media caring about race closes again

Loretta Chao   Open up the profession

Julia Angwin   Show your (computational) work

Pia Frey   Building growth through tastemakers and their communities

Alicia Bell and Simon Galperin   Media reparations now

Nabiha Syed   Newsrooms quit their toxic relationships

Mark Stenberg   The rise of the journalist-influencer

Mandy Jenkins   You build trust by helping your readers

Jody Brannon   People won’t renew

Jesse Holcomb   Genre erosion in nonprofit journalism

Charo Henríquez   A new path to leadership

Rishad Patel   From direct-to-consumer to direct-to-believers

Ryan Kellett   The bundle gets bundled

Stefanie Murray and Anthony Advincula   Expect to see more translations and non-English content

Ernie Smith   Entrepreneurship on rails

Jeremy Gilbert   Human-centered journalism

Hadjar Benmiloud   Get representative, or die trying

Chase Davis   The year we look beyond The Story

Taylor Lorenz   Journalists will learn influencing isn’t easy

Zizi Papacharissi   The year we rebuild the infrastructure of truth

Celeste Headlee   The rise of radical newsroom transparency

Moreno Cruz Osório   In Brazil, a push for pluralism

Amara Aguilar   Journalism schools emphasize listening

Don Day   Business first, journalism second

Mariano Blejman   It’s time to challenge autocompleted journalism

C.W. Anderson   Journalism changed under Trump — will it keep changing under Biden?

Joni Deutsch   Local arts and music make journalism more joyous

Benjamin Toff   Beltway reporting gets normal again, for better and for worse

Raney Aronson-Rath   To get past information divides, we need to understand them first

Shaydanay Urbani and Nancy Watzman   Local collaboration is key to slowing misinformation

Sarah Marshall   The year audiences need extra cheer

Cherian George   Enter the lamb warriors

Nicholas Jackson   Blogging is back, but better

Jonas Kaiser   Toward a wehrhafte journalism

Whitney Phillips   Facts are an insufficient response to falsehoods

Talmon Joseph Smith   The media rejects deficit hawkery

Candis Callison   Calling it a crisis isn’t enough (if it ever was)

Jean Friedman-Rudovsky and Cassie Haynes   A shift from conversation to action

Linda Solomon Wood   Canada steps up for journalism

Cory Haik   Be essential

Andrew Ramsammy   Stop being polite and start getting real

Jacqué Palmer   The rise of the plain-text email newsletter