Hide Prefs / Forums / Misc Links / WashingtonPost, loudounextra.com and hyperlocal sites / Re: WashingtonPost, loudounextra.com and hyperlocal sites WashingtonPost, loudounextra.com and hyperlocal sites # 172 [post=172 /] michael created Tue Jul 17, 2007 1:52 pm michael updated Tue Jul 17, 2007 1:52 pm Reply
In Push for Local Readers, Post Unleashes LoudounExtra.com
By Frank Ahrens
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, July 16, 2007; D01
The Washington Post Co. today is launching LoudounExtra.com, an aggressive online push into hyperlocal journalism, combining traditional reporters and photographers with bloggers, videographers and extensive databases on schools, businesses and churches.
If the project is successful, The Post Co. plans to build similar sites for the rest of Northern Virginia, Maryland and the District. The project is part of The Washington Post's strategy to dominate local news and advertising and to enhance its relevance as an information provider.
The Web site represents a departure from how The Post and other big metropolitan dailies have covered local communities. Instead of focusing on major events, LoudounExtra will attempt to provide a comprehensive look at local news, from church schedules to high school sporting events to restaurant hours and menus. The effort highlights a problem of major newspapers in the Internet age: the need to balance national reporting with service to Web-savvy local readers.
Like many newspapers, The Post is losing readers and advertisers to the Internet and other media. Average daily circulation of The Post has dropped from its high of 832,232 in 1993 to 663,900 now. First-quarter print advertising revenue at The Post was down 16 percent in 2007 from the comparable period last year. Meanwhile, traffic and ad revenue at Washingtonpost.com have been climbing.
The LoudounExtra is the most recent, and possibly most ambitious, example of a major metro daily newspaper altering century-old game plans and adopting tactics that might, in the past, have seemed more suited to community newspapers.
Several MediaNews Group papers, such as the Denver Post, have rolled out Your Hub, which lets residents of suburban communities post blog entries and photos of local events. Hyperlocal projects of one stripe or another are underway at the Chicago Tribune, the Bakersfield Californian and other papers.
Although MediaNews Group says Your Hub has added significant revenue, other efforts have been less successful. The independent Backfence launched in 2005 as a site allowing residents of local communities, including Bethesda, Arlington and Reston, to post hyperlocal blogs and photos. It shut down this month after it failed to attract audience or advertisers.
Washingtonpost.com publisher Caroline Little said LoudounExtra.com takes a different approach to hyperlocal news. "I think that blogging is great, but blogging alone is not a be-all and end-all to drive traffic," Little said. "Useful information and database information are very important."
Following Others' Leads
Over the past several months, the six-person staff (and one intern) of LoudounExtra has assembled a restaurant guide by asking each of the county's restaurants to answer questions about their operation, contacted more than 130 houses of worship to find service schedules (and offered to upload podcasts of their sermons onto the Loudoun site), asked all county high school principals about their curriculums, shot panoramic photos of each school and collected statistics on each high school football player, among other data-collection tasks.
The information will be searchable and deliverable on a number of platforms, meaning users will be able to download the site's restaurant guide onto their iPods and use their cellphones to find restaurants open late at night.
In addition, the site will be filled with multiple news reports each day from The Post's Loudoun County reporters, who will file stories that may never be published in the newspaper.
The site's staff will make a round of cop calls each morning, listing incidents that happened overnight, even down to the level of "mailboxes being knocked down," said Rob Curley, LoudounExtra co-developer and a self-described "Internet nerd" who was hired by The Post last year after developing hyperlocal sites for the Naples (Fla.) Daily News and Lawrence (Kan.) Journal-World & News.
Curley's revamping of the Lawrence site gained national attention because of the audience it attracted. In 2000 -- before remaking its site -- the Lawrence paper got 14 million page views, said Ralph Gage, chief operating officer of the World Co., which owns the paper. In 2006, that number had grown to 247 million, and the site booked about $2 million in revenue. The population of Lawrence is about 80,000, and the Journal's circulation is 20,000.
Page views at the Naples Web site are up 17 percent in the first six months of this year compared with 2006, when the site was revamped, said editor Phil Lewis, with unique monthly users up 26 percent. The Web site is responsible for more than 10 percent revenue, Lewis said, which is above the industry average.
The question has always been whether a major metropolitan newspaper can successfully run a hyperlocal site like this, and how both local and national advertisers will react.
Little said she thinks ad space on LoudounExtra will be purchased by smaller advertisers in the county, as well as national and regional advertisers that want to reach a particular Zip code within Loudoun County.
The Database Model
Key to the hyperlocal strategy of The Post and many other papers are searchable databases.
Anecdotal evidence indicates that they attract considerable viewers. In December, Gannett Co.'s Asbury Park (N.J.) Press dumped three huge public-record databases onto its Web site: local property sales and ownership, and state employees' salaries. By May, the paper had added searchable databases for local crime, school test scores, state deaths and public school employees.
In December, the paper's Web site recorded 1.5 million page views. By May, the site was averaging more than 5 million page views per month, according to data from a Newspaper Association of America study, with a high of more than 9 million page views in April.
But the LoudounExtra faces substantial competition. There are five weekly newspapers in the county. The Loudoun Times Mirror-- recently launched its first hyperlocal site in anticipation of The Post's site. In addition, the county has numerous subdivision listservs and non-newspaper Web sites, such as SouthRiding, that provide news and information on a granular level, as LoudounExtra will try to do.
"I am impressed the folks at The Post are taking a stab at our trade," said Peter Arundel, president of Times Community Papers. "But in some sense, they are late to the party. This is our turf, our skill set."
The revamped Times Mirror site will be filled with user photos and the filings of unpaid "citizen journalists" who will be vetted by Times Mirror editors, rather than the extensive databases and video found on the LoudounExtra. The Times papers plan to roll out other expanded hyperlocal Web sites across Northern Virginia in coming months.
Little said The Post Co. is in hyperlocal for the long haul. "If Loudoun totally flops, I would not walk away from this based on that," she added. "We need to try doing this in some different areas."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/15/AR2007071500648_pf.html
Newspapering in the 21st Century
Sam Diaz
The Washington Post today launched Loudounextra.com.
My colleague Frank Ahrens wrote about it, quoting washingtonpost.com publisher Caroline Little, who called it part of the Post's online hyperlocal journalism. The site will be a combination of traditional and new-age news reporting, including blogging, video storytelling and extensive databases on community institutions such as schools and churches. LoudounExtra.com is a test run in these new waters - and if it's successful, the Post plans on using the model for other areas in the region. What if it's not successful?
"If Loudoun totally flops, I would not walk away from this based on that," Little said. "We need to try doing this in some different areas."
Here's why I even bother to tackle this subject today. Over the weekend, I read with interest a blog post by Jon Fine on BusinessWeek Online. In that entry, he asks the question: Which American Paper Will Be The First To Kill Its Print Edition? He then goes on to list the three camps on the way of thinking around this question. In the end, his prediction is that a major newspaper company will go all-digital in two years or less. No one here, myself included, has a crystal ball - but I can't imagine that newspapers are that close to selling the printing presses on eBay. Maybe I'm too close to the situation to be impartial. So I turn to you, the readers, for your thoughts. What do you think?
By Sam Diaz | July 16, 2007; 11:38 AM ET | Category: Sam Diaz
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/posttech/2007/07/newspapering_in_the_21st_centu.html
|
Re: WashingtonPost, loudounextra.com and hyperlocal sites # 173 [post=173 /] michael created Tue Jul 17, 2007 8:43 pm michael updated Tue Jul 17, 2007 8:43 pm Reply
This particular claim is misleading:
"In December, the paper's Web site recorded 1.5 million page views. By May, the site was averaging more than 5 million page views per month, according to data from a Newspaper Association of America study, with a high of more than 9 million page views in April."
We operate several database-heavy websites. If those databases are open or hyperlinked in any simplistic way but are not restricted to (free) "registered members only" (much like this site is), then the apparent "hits" will skyrocket as bottomless search engines grab all content, often multiple times. We've seen this again and again; yahoo's engine is particularly voracious.
These machine feedings are obviously not real hits.
Meaningful usage (by real people) can be difficult to calculate, and without any sort of qualification or auditing of hits, anything (and often everything) goes.
|
|
Ads for google, friends, members, country, planet, humanity and truth. Got a site we should list here? Suggest it.
|