
During a recent ice storm,
The Oklahoman, where I work, updated readers
about a concert by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Assistant entertainment editor George Lang first
reported that the concert's status was questionable. Then organizers said it was on. Then, eventually, word
came that it had been cancelled.
Chatter blew up on the newspaper's Web site, NewsOK.com. More than 200 readers
commented about the concert. But they weren't posting responses to a news story. Instead, the readers who were following and responding to Lang's updates were doing so on the newspaper's daily blog, "Notes from the Newsroom."
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RELATED RESOURCES
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"The Blog Backlog" -- Walker tells about a brown-bag session she and other newsroom leaders held with The Oklahoman's staff two months after launching the blog.
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"Notes from the
Newsroom" is run by a collection of bloggers from every editorial department --
from metro reporters to business writers, copy editors to columnists. There are
no stars here. Anyone who wants to blog is welcome to do so.
The blog is not separated into categories. In a sense, it's
like a big A-section. Bloggers post the best and most interesting
items -- interesting to them, at least. There is a lot of subjectivity here, and that is
encouraged. And although we allow bloggers to write in first-person, ethics and
fairness of reporting is required.
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The Oklahoman
During a recent ice storm, The Oklahoman ran concert updates from the newsroom blog on the front page of the paper. |
Staffers usually stick to local events, often writing from a
personal point of view. For example, that ice storm prompted a flurry (pun intended) of blog entries, ranging from personal stories of dealing with
the weather, to updates on closings and cancellations, to cautionary tales of
danger on the ice.
Reporters sometimes tell readers how they worked on a story.
We solicit feedback from readers via the blog. And as we entered 2007, some of our reporters blogged about the most memorable stories they had worked on over the last year.
By teaching staffers an easy-to-learn, Web-based program, we
have given our newsroom the tools to be more accessible, more human. And that
is part of the appeal.
Here's why some reporters say they enjoy blogging:
- "Often
when writing a story, there's a great quote or a fun detail that just
doesn't make it into a news story. Blogging allows for that extra little
part of the story to be told. It also gives me an outlet to add a personal
insight or some humor." -- Tricia
Pemberton, staff writer
- "It's a
place to write with a little more heart. In Sunday's newspaper, I wrote a
notable obituary about a long-time police volunteer whom I
knew for seven years. My reflections on him would've been completely out
of place in that obituary, but I was able to use the blog to express my
memories of him and what made him so noteworthy." --
Ken Raymond, staff writer
- "I love
the immediacy of blogging and the creativity I can have to post things in
a more conversational style. I also love the challenge of posting
photographs, graphics and links and making them look the way I want and giving
readers places to explore." -- Jim Stafford, business writer
As a bonus, the blog is providing daily content for the
newspaper. The Oklahoman is no stranger to reverse publishing. But it's now happening on a daily basis, with lots of material going into the A-section. That is unusual.
Page 2A is the home for all this blog content, and even the
name of the page is nontraditional: "News, too: The other side of Page 1."
The majority of the page is composed of a feature called "From
the newsroom 2U: Highlights from The Oklahoman's blog."
Seven days a week we publish a variety of blog entries,
reader feedback based on questions posted online, the daily NewsOK.com poll results
and "What you're reading," a top-10 list of stories that got the most hits
online in the previous 24-hour period. Also on the page are the staff box, lottery
numbers and corrections.
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The Oklahoman
The Oklahoman publishes items from its newsroom blog daily on the second page of the paper, a section dubbed "news, too: The other side of Page 1." |
"News, too" is the brainchild of news editor Steve Byerly,
who championed the idea that the blog's contents would be good for the paper.
"It's helped build a sense of community among the online readers,
print readers and staff," Byerly said. "It's a place where the staff can
speak directly to the readers without using their 'news voice' -- and where
readers can speak back. It brings together citizen journalism, reader feedback
and behind-the-scenes details on how we do our jobs."
How is it making a difference? It's a fascinating bridge to
the community that our staff crosses daily. It is transparency on a global
newsroom level -- with the blog acting as a kind of ombudsman, giving readers a
peep into the minds of journalists.
"Many newspapers talk about [using] multimedia but they have
really only scratched the surface of where we all need to be," said executive editor Sue Hale. "Our newsroom is dropping beneath the surface to
[involve] multimedia every day from start to finish, and the blog is quickly
becoming the transition for this evolution."
Like many newspapers, The Oklahoman has focused resources on
NewsOK.com in an effort to draw more readers to its
award-winning journalism, unique content and brand recognition. Blogs, including "Notes from the Newsroom" and others that focus on entertainment and fashion,
are an important part of that unique content.
The blog builds upon The Oklahoman and NewsOK.com's rising
print/online penetration, which is in the top 20 among American newspapers, according to The Media Audit.
We began "Notes from the Newsroom" with little fanfare in
Nov. 2006, but the staff has embraced it, and traffic is
growing.
NewsOK.com managing editor Alan Herzberger sees the
blog as a success -- and not just because it's getting a lot of hits.
"To me, the success of the blog is not in the traffic -- it's in the fact that the writers, editors, designers and leadership
can participate in an ongoing, informal dialogue with readers and users of our
products. That's another key step into the future of [the] news industry."