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May 24th, 2011 by Wadds

Podcast: Interview with JesmondLocal founder Ian Wylie

I caught up with Ian Wylie by phone last week to talk about hyperlocal media and the future of journalism.

He’s the founder and editor of JesmondLocal, a hyperlocal project targeted at the Jesmond area of Newcastle.

Recent stories covered live by the site include a political hustings event and a web chat with the cast of GeordieShore, much of which was filmed on JesmondLocal’s doorstep.

We talked about the role of local media within a community, generating an income from hyperlocal media, and the future of the journalism.

You can listen to the interview by clicking on the player or you can download a MP3 file of the interview by left clicking on this link with you mouse and selecting ‘save as’.

Ian spent 15 years as a staffer at The Guardian and now writes for The Financial Times, Monacle, and Management Today, and teaches at both Newcastle and Sunderland universities.

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April 26th, 2011 by Wadds

Hyperlocal twicket match demonstrates media future; highlights rural broadband need

The future potential of hyperlocal media was demonstrated in a Lancashire village this weekend. Twicket was a project conceived by social media consultant John Popham (@johnpopham) to raise awareness of the issue of fast rural broadband.

The premise was simple: live stream a village cricket match on Bank Holiday Monday. That wouldn’t be possible in most rural locations but it is in Popham’s village, Wray, where the University of Lancashire has supplied a 30Mbps symmetrical (upload and download) internet connection.

Compare that with my Internet connection in rural Northumberland at 3Mbps download and 250kbps upload. I struggle to maintain a decent video Skype connection.

In a video on his personal web site Popham said:

“[We aimed to make the point] about the need for rural broadband and fast upload connection so that we can all create content and leave the age of passive consumption. We can all create media, but we need good connections and fast uploads.”

There’s no question that he achieved his objective. Twicket became a media event in its own right with pick-up in social and mainstream media in the UK and US, and backing from organisations including the Country Land Owners & Business Association.

Twicket, which saw a team from Wray play a rest of the world team, was streamed online on Bambuser and reached a peak audience of more than 2,700 people. Radio Youthology also broadcast live audio from the event.

Fittingly Wray won.

Popham said that he was inspired to create the project following tweets from from Dan Slee (@danslee) expressing his hopes for keeping up with a local village cricket team via twitter, and Chris Conder (@cyberdoyle) as she tested the village’s new high speed internet connection.

The typical format of hyperlocal media is a text and image based web site serving a local community. Video if used is almost always pre-recorded but Popham and his team in Wray has shown the potential to incorporate live  streams with good production techniques - providing you have a robust high speed internet connection.

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April 13th, 2010 by Wadds

Local newspaper engages with audience via social network: from Flickr to print

Newspapers have largely ignored social networks as a means to engage with their audience, seeking instead to force readers onto their web sites. But this example bucks the trend.

Remember the sunset shot that I took of the Cheviots in Northumberland a couple of weeks ago? Probably not but stick with me.

I posted the image to the Your Place Northumberland Flickr group that’s curated by the hyperlocal team at the Newcastle Journal. It made the Your Place hyperlocal web site. And now the Northumberland Journal Extra local newspaper.

I think that its an important step because it shows traditional media engaging with its audience and sourcing content via a social network.

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March 2nd, 2010 by Wadds

Readers as contributors

My local NCJ Media hyperlocal web site has run the Cheviot sunset image that I snapped on Monday after I posted it to its Flickr group.

Your Place is a series of 22 local websites bringing localised news to every town and village in Northumberland.

January 24th, 2010 by Wadds

Can you make money from hyperlocal journalism?

Shields Bialasik has been critical of Adam Westbrook’s book Newsgathering for Hyperlocal Websites on his blog hyperlocal101. Bilasik says that Westbrook ignores the issue of how to generate an income from a hyperlocal blog. It would be a useful addition to future editions.

In its current guise hyperlocal journalism is either an experiment by the large regional publishers such as Trinity Mirror’s Your Place network in the North East, or is the pursuit of freelancers as part of a portfolio career.

Sources of funding are limited. Online readers almost certainly won’t pay for local news and Google’s adword network is not sufficiently granular to stretch to a post code area and is overly complex.

It’s why I think Addiply’s hyperlocal ad network is compelling. It makes advertising as simple as posting an ad in a newsagent. And that’s important for local businesses with limited technical expertise.

The Addiply team has a two-fold strategy: it is brokering deals with regional media groups and individuals that run hyperlocal blogs at the same time as pre-loading its ad network by pulling in national advertisers seeking to roll our regional campaigns.

At the point that Addiply reaches near nationwide coverage and is able to offer hyperlocal bloggers a startup package of guaranteed inventory to run on their sites from launch, it will have created a compelling business model for hyperlocal sites.

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January 23rd, 2010 by Wadds

Book reviews: Advice for Multimedia Journalists and Newsgathering for Hyperlocal Websites

I’ve discovered two e-books this week that should be a must read for any PR that is keen to understand how the remit of a journalist is changing and to gain an insight into the future of regional media.

Both books are written by London-based journalist Adam Westbrook, a City University graduate that has worked in Ghana, Iraq and the UK.

In Advice for Multimedia Journalists (free PDF download) an ebook created from a series of original blog posts, Westbrook spells out the opportunity for journalists created by the upheaval in publishing and distribution.

In the digital age journalists need to be brands in their own right. There is little room for humility. Westbrook says that journalists must overcome the discomfort of blowing their own trumpet quoting SEO specialist Brian Clark, “if people think you’re important, so will Google.”

Diversification is the key combining skills such as copyrighting, photography, video production and web design with journalism to create a portfolio career. Westbrook provides insights into each area as a means of generating an income.

In Newsgathering for Hyperlocal Websites (£7.99 PDF download) Westbrook tackles the rising genre of hyperlocal blogs and describes how to set up a hyperlocal blog, create a newsroom and describes the process of newsgathering and reporting.

The basic skills of a journalist have changed little despite the upheaval in the media. Much of the craft such as maintaining a news diary, digging out news from local sources and on-diary versus-off diary that Westbrook shares would have traditionally been taught on a NUJ training course.

Westbrook spells out the technical skills needed to set up a hyperlocal site, signposting sources of further information and sharing tips for automating much of the news gathering process. His sections on web mining for stories and Freedom of Information requests would provide a near constant news stream for any hyperlocal site.

Westbrook makes clear his attitude to PRs that fail to understand the remit of hyperlocal media and pitch inappropriate stories. But then regional media has long been poorly served by the largely London-based PR industry. PRs need to work out how they can best embrace the emerging segment that is hyperlocal media.

Westbrook is clearly a talented journalist with an entrepreneurial flair that has a bright future whatever the future of journalism.

January 6th, 2010 by Wadds

Hyperlocal meetup: Addiply provides income stream for hyperlocal media properties

Last night at the Duke of York off London’s Charlotte Street I got an interesting insight into the future of local media in the UK. Addiply’s Rick Waghorn invited me to a small meetup of regional media properties and contributors.

Rick and his business partner Matt Waring are the team behind the Addiply local ad network that is brokering deals with regional media groups such as Trinity Mirror in the North East for its Your place network and independent hyperlocal sites such as Josh Halliday’s Sunderland’s SR2 Blog and Philip John’s Litchfield blog.

Addiply’s contention is that existing ad platforms are too complex to setup for local advertisers and aren’t sufficiently granular to work on a hyperlocal basis.

Addiply makes advertising as simple as posting an ad in a newsagent. And that’s important for small businesses and site owners alike. Costs are intentionally low to buy an ad on a hyperlocal blog (typically £10 per week) with 90 per cent of the fees returned to the publisher.

Rick’s goal is to sign-up more hyperlocal publishers nationwide and then package deals for brands and the public sector that are seeking to reach regional markets on a local basis. He’s got several deals with regional publishers in the works so watch this space.

September 24th, 2009 by Wadds

“Unhyperlocal”

Russell Davies has spotted the flaw in using a network of local bloggers as a cost-effective model for developing local content. I blogged about this issue last month.

Here’s what Russell has to say.

[…] writing about my neighbourhood worries me deeply. Because the people and shops and cafes are going to notice that you’re writing about them, and if you’re in any way critical they’ll know and glare at you, and you’re going to feel really bad.[…] There’s a difference between slagging off a restaurant you don’t intend to go back to and walking past the same place every day.

I’ve tried it and its not comfortable. There is no doubt hyper local media is viable and that local bloggers are able to provide the content and reach of a regional newspaper but the issues of personal anonymity and legal protection need be tackled.

Russell again.

[…] if hyperlocalism is going to work in the UK maybe it needs to be aggregated rather than authored (somehow, I’m not really sure what I mean by that) or it needs some imprimatur of professionalism that says “I’m just doing my job”.

The twin issues of personal exposure and the backup of a publisher need to be resolved if hyperlocal media is going to work.

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