Thursday, January 29, 2009

Still not on the wagon?

The media has changed so much in such a short amount of time and it affects all industries, especially the journalism industry. There is the traditional media relations method of press releases and pitching, but that is only one aspect now. Nowadays, with social networking, RSS feeds, and blogs - and just so much information floating around in cyberspace, organizations have to compete even more to get noticed. Because of the advances, journalists' method of finding material to cover has changed.

I recently came across an article via one of my twitter friends, @sallyfalkow, that confirmed my thoughts. She posted a recent report from Bulldog/TEK group reporter's survey on her blog.

It went a little something like this:

More of What Journalists Want

The second annual survey of working journalists across all media generated responses from 2,386 journalists, of which approximately 48% were editors or editorial staff and 34% were reporters or writers. The survey tracks the resources journalists use to search, follow and report news and features material.

There‘s been a significant increase in usage of blogs, social media and RSS feeds to stay on top of the news.

* Almost 75% of journalists read one or more blogs to keep up with the subject matter they cover, compared with only about 70% a year ago.
* 29% of journalists regularly read five or more blogs to keep up with their beat, compared with about 26% last year.

Social media use has seen an even bigger jump

* 75% of journalists use social media to research stories, compared with about 67% last year.
* Almost 38% of journalists now say they visit a social media site at least once a week as part of their reporting, compared with only 28% last year.
* More than 53% now say they visit a social media site at least once a month, up from about 44% last year.

Tracking news with RSS Feeds has increased too:

* 19% of journalists report that they receive five or more RSS feeds of news services, blogs, podcasts or videocasts every week, a gain of about three percentage points over last year
* 47% of online journalists track more than five feeds
* 41% of journalists receive at least one regular RSS feed, a gain of over four percentage points.

Digital Assets – a new PR skill

23% of the journalists polled say they seek audio or video material from corporate websites at least once a month—an increase of about three percentage points over the past year.

Among journalists working in national television, some 10.3% seek audio or video material once a week or more and that number jumps to 46.7% seeking such material at least once every three months.

Among journalists working in local radio, some 38.4% seek audio or video from corporate websites at least once a month.

Online News as a Resource

51% of journalists report that they use Google News and 32% use Yahoo! News services to follow the news. That means they are searching news sites for information and you need to have all your digital assets - press releases, video and images - optimized for search.

Technology - blogs, social media, RSS feeds, SEO - they are all here to stay. Still feeling overwhelmed? It's okay, we are here to help. That's what we are here for. Take a look at our website to see how we can help you. Or better yet, email me at nicole.galletta@sojoinc.com with any questions you might have.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

You can download the full Bulldog Reporter/TEKgroup International, Inc. 2008 Journalist Survey on Media Relations Practices at http://www.tekgroup.com/marketing/mrpracticessurveyresults_dailydog
Ibrey Woodall
TEKgroup International.