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	<title>Todd Mundt &#187; web2.0</title>
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	<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog</link>
	<description>convergence, public media, networks, productivity, public engagement</description>
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		<title>Twitter, Jaiku, Conversations, Value: Add Me!!</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/10/14/twitter-jaiku-conversations-value-add-me/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/10/14/twitter-jaiku-conversations-value-add-me/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Oct 2007 15:47:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[publicengagement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[publicmedia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[attention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blogging]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[massively useful resource]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[trends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/10/14/twitter-jaiku-conversations-value-add-me/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m closing in on a year of using Twitter, seven months with Jaiku&#8230; and I&#8217;ve enjoyed the element of presence these applications afford &#8211; the vicarious enjoyment I get from the snapshots into the lives of my friends, many of whom live across the country. I talk to some of these people regularly on the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m closing in on a year of using Twitter, seven months with Jaiku&#8230; and I&#8217;ve enjoyed the element of presence these applications afford &#8211; the vicarious enjoyment I get from the snapshots into the lives of my friends, many of whom live across the country.</p>
<p>I talk to some of these people regularly on the phone or by email and these are great ways to stay connected when I can&#8217;t see them in person, but Twitter has allowed me to enjoy a small percentage of their daily mundanities &#8211; the little things I used to find out from these friends because I saw them face-to-face all the time; now that we&#8217;re apart, these are the things that get edited out of the more formalized phone conversations or emails &#8211; stuff that&#8217;s too small to care about, but when it comes from people you care about, fills in the spaces of their lives in a way that&#8217;s enjoyable and comforting. It&#8217;s connective tissue.<br />
This <a href="http://www.disambiguity.com/ambient-intimacy/">ambient intimacy</a> is the original reason for Twitter: <em>what are you doing right now?</em> Up until recently, it was my primary use for it.</p>
<p>But if you follow these things, you know that by March of this year, Twitter was not only growing rapidly, but it was evolving in a number of ways, driven by users themselves. A couple are notable. First, people started choosing to bypass the direct messaging capability of Twitter, and began addressing friends publicly: <em>@toddmundt&#8230; </em>This conversation, the equivalent of shouting across a bar to a friend, is like IM but, at least for me, breaks out of the prison of the instant message paradigm: you should be online now, you should be interrupted by the message instantly, you should respond nearly instantaneously. I&#8217;ve used IM for about 12 years, but I&#8217;m far more pleased with Twitter&#8217;s capabilities in this regard, and the way I can control interruptions compared with IM.</p>
<p>The second evolution came very quickly, too, and this is where I&#8217;ve found Twitter and Jaiku to be the most valuable: the information sharing that&#8217;s taking place. I find out about some news stories on Twitter before they reach the front pages of CNN.com and the New York Times. More importantly, as the conversation grows and I add more diverse, interesting and thoughtful people to my network, I&#8217;m finding out about trends earlier, and discovering new ideas &#8211; like this Twitter note from American Public Media&#8217;s <a href="http://twitter.com/jongordon">Jon Gordon</a> that arrived a couple minutes ago:</p>
<p><a href="http://twitter.com/jongordon/statuses/335146682">     		     		  Listener-conducted interviews? Post raw interviews for listeners to edit?</a></p>
<p>So here&#8217;s the deal: do you work in public radio? Do you work in public TV? Do you work at a joint licensee? Are you a consultant to these industries?</p>
<ul>
<li>Do you use Twitter? <a href="http://twitter.com/toddmundt">Add me</a>.</li>
<li>Do you use Jaiku? <a href="http://todd.jaiku.com/">Add me</a>.</li>
<li>By all means, add <a href="http://twitter.com/johnbarth">John Barth</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/timjeby">Tim Eby</a>, and as many of the other public radio and TV folks you care to add.</li>
</ul>
<p>NOT because I&#8217;m so smart and have so much to offer. Add me because <span style="font-style: italic">you&#8217;re smart</span> and <span style="font-style: italic">you have good ideas</span> and I want to know what you&#8217;re talking about. It will make me smarter, and perhaps as more of us in this industry chatter about stuff outside of occasional meetings and conferences, we&#8217;ll share ideas more efficiently and move more quickly.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s something we&#8217;re not known for, if you haven&#8217;t noticed.</p>
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		<title>It&#8217;s the Databases, Stupid</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/07/08/its-the-databases-stupid/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/07/08/its-the-databases-stupid/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Jul 2007 16:33:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[publicengagement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[publicmedia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[journalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/07/08/its-the-databases-stupid/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The closing of Backfence this week has encouraged good discussion about hyperlocal content. Terry Heaton pulls some of the threads together in a post today. He includes comments from Jeff Jarvis and Mike Orren, who point out the value of the content, but also the challenge of getting people to, first, read it, and, second, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The closing of <a href="http://backfence.com/">Backfence</a> this week has encouraged good discussion about hyperlocal content. Terry Heaton pulls some of the threads together in a <a href="http://www.thepomoblog.com/archive/the-important-lessons-of-backfences-closing/">post</a> today.</p>
<p>He includes comments from <a href="http://www.buzzmachine.com/2007/07/06/the-local-challenge/">Jeff Jarvis</a> and <a href="http://www.pegasusnews.com/">Mike Orren</a>, who point out the value of the content, but also the challenge of getting people to, first, read it, and, second, to contribute to it. Oh yeah, and generating revenue from it.</p>
<p>Is it compelling content? Yes, even if it&#8217;s not <em>NEWS</em>. I feel the conflict between <em>NEWS</em> and this other stuff all the time. I can express the journalistic mission of my organization in lofty terms along with the best of them, but I also find myself combing sites trying to find a nearby ethnic grocery or the latest freeway ramp closings.</p>
<p>Gathering the information is hard, but Adrian Holovaty&#8217;s <a href="http://holovaty.com/blog/archive/2007/07/06/0128">announcement</a> this week of a Python library that can scrape the data from a stack of web pages is a step forward. Regardless, it will still take a lot of work. Our newsrooms process tons of information every day, but Holovaty and others make the compelling argument that we waste it.</p>
<p>I came face-to-face with this problem on Friday at a meeting with public TV to discuss an Election &#8217;08 site we&#8217;re building together. Our news team knows, every day, which candidates are in Iowa, where they&#8217;re going, who they&#8217;re speaking to, when they&#8217;re going to do it. Our audience wants to know, too. Can we push it to the web easily? No, the information is scattered; it&#8217;s on Post-Its, in emails from the campaigns, written on calendars. We have a level of organization that allows us to get our job done, just barely. But now our job is expanding. Is one of my future News openings for a database expert? We can&#8217;t easily do all of the work ourselves, so it makes sense to find partners who are in the same business and work together.</p>
<p>What about the revenues? Hell if I know. <img src='http://toddmundt.com/blog/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />   Terry Heaton <a href="http://www.thepomoblog.com/archive/the-important-lessons-of-backfences-closing/">says</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>The question is how do you make money in a disintermediated, distributed media paradigm? Experiments in hyperlocal media don’t fail because of content; they fail, because they can’t deliver the promise of sustainable revenue. [...] This is why I keep harping on organizing the local web and building databases of knowledge at the local level rather than trying to make another content play. [...] How we put advertisers together with users is the key, and “news content” isn’t the only way to do that.</em></p></blockquote>
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		<title>Twitter-licious</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/02/14/twitter-licious/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/02/14/twitter-licious/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Feb 2007 18:59:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[publicmedia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[attention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2007/02/14/twitter-licious/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This blog is supposed to be about deep thoughts involving public media. But frankly, I have only a certain amount of time each day to think the deep thoughts, since most of my job is action-oriented right now. So, here&#8217;s the bigger question on my mind right now: who&#8217;s using Twitter? I love it. It&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This blog is supposed to be about deep thoughts involving public media. But frankly, I have only a certain amount of time each day to think the deep thoughts, since most of my job is action-oriented right now. So, here&#8217;s the bigger question on my mind right now: who&#8217;s using <a href="http://twitter.com/">Twitter</a>?</p>
<p>I love it. It&#8217;s a combination of IM, SMS, blogging, and possibly other things, too. I&#8217;m a recent convert, having given in to the urge to join about two weeks ago. I&#8217;m not using it for much yet, except to send out small note to people who, at this point, couldn&#8217;t care less. But there&#8217;s something about Twitter that&#8217;s infectious, and there&#8217;s some kind of potential here, too. BBC News is delivering headlines using the service and CNN has breaking news available.</p>
<p>An application for public media here? Not sure. But there&#8217;s something interesting going on here around this idea of instantaneous social connection. <a href="http://www.onpointradio.org/">&#8220;On Point&#8221;</a> updates its web site during the program to include interesting quotes from guests and callers. What if I could subscribe to that stream through Twitter? I might not be able to hear the program, but I&#8217;d be able to catch the most compelling points of the discussion, in near real-time&#8230; on the Twitter web site or delivered to my phone or IM client.</p>
<p>Interesting.</p>
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		<title>Conversations Make our Content Real</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/26/conversations-make-our-content-real/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/26/conversations-make-our-content-real/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2006 01:38:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[newrealities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pubradio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/26/conversations-make-our-content-real/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve been thinking about something Nico Flores wrote a few days ago: Content is nothing on its own. It only exists as part of conversations &#8212; understood not in the usual &#8216;blogsphere&#8217; sense of deliberation, but as shared concerns (not my term), concerns that we must partake in to be part of communities. When I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve been thinking about something <a href="http://ondemandmedia.typepad.com/odm/2006/05/it_is_always_gr.html">Nico Flores wrote</a> a few days ago:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>Content is nothing on its own. It only exists as part of conversations &#8212; understood <em>not</em> in the usual &#8216;blogsphere&#8217; sense of deliberation, but as shared concerns (not my term), concerns that we must partake in to be part of communities. When I buy a novel I choose it not just because I think I might enjoy it, but also because it is also being read by other people, because it&#8217;s part of a larger movement that I&#8217;m interested in, or because it is relevant to something else I read. Reading is satisfactory only if I bring with me a certain baggage; and reading will add to my baggage, allowing me to appreciate other works and, crucially, to have more of a shared background with people around me. My point is that content&#8211;or, more precisely, the transaction of consuming content&#8211;is only meaningful as part of a wider conversation that is made up of countless related transactions.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>And here is Terry Heaton, from his latest brilliant essay, <a href="http://www.donatacom.com/papers/pomo57.htm">The On-Demand Trap</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p><em> Doug Rushkoff argues effectively that the web is a social phenomenon, not a media phenomenon or a technological phenomenon. This makes traditional media people uncomfortable, because it demands a response other than the content-provider safe haven. [...]</em></p>
<p><em> Involving yourself with real people in a real online community setting takes a skillset and values that most broadcasters don&#8217;t seem to possess.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><em>  		 If, as the <a href="http://www.cluetrain.com/">Cluetrain</a> crowd asserts, markets are conversations, then the web is the new marketplace and all &#8220;content&#8221; is commoditized to a point where it&#8217;s a conversation starter at best or merely a diversion at worst. Either way, the &#8220;content&#8221; concept is far down the priority list of the marketplace, and interactivity with human beings is number one.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>One of the conclusions is that our content requires context to have value. Not necessarily earth-shattering &#8211; we public broadcasters have long believed that our content needs ears: <em>Think Audience</em>.</p>
<p>We&#8217;re adding a slight twist to the &#8220;tree in the forest&#8221; &#8211; someone needs to hear it and then tell someone else about it. That&#8217;s not entirely new, either. Public radio&#8217;s growth over the last 15 years has happened, in large part, because people listened and then said, <em>&#8220;I heard it on NPR.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>The part that we&#8217;re struggling with now seems to be realizing the full implications of Nico&#8217;s statement: <em>the transaction of consuming content is only meaningful as part of a wider conversation that is made up of countless related transactions.</em> The web can bring the watercooler, the <em>&#8220;I heard it&#8221;</em> to us, and it will bring it right to our web sites, if we let it. This makes many of us nervous; we&#8217;re afraid of what people might say, how they might say it &#8211; how they might contaminate the content we&#8217;ve labored over so lovingly. But if we&#8217;re willing to accept that our listeners have participated with us in making public radio a significant and growing force in American life &#8211; with their attention and their money &#8211; then we&#8217;re going to have to understand and believe that the online manifestation of their participation with us &#8211; this more direct and intimate participation &#8211; will also strengthen us and make us greater still.</p>
<p>There are lots of paths &#8211; from the very basic (comments), to more developed user-generated content (essays, commentaries, blogs), to the complex and fascinating (MPR/APM&#8217;s Public Insight Journalism, and allowing users to create content from our content). This isn&#8217;t about choosing one of them. It&#8217;s about choosing the form(s) of interaction that works for each element of our online presence, experimenting, making <a href="http://harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.harvard.edu/b01/en/common/item_detail.jhtml;jsessionid=EGTWKVOQBL1RCAKRGWDR5VQBKE0YIISW?referral=1933&#038;id=4508&#038;profileId=83355263&#038;_DARGS=/b01/en/includes/product_upsell_display_center.jhtml_A&#038;_DAV=">deliberate mistakes</a>, learning.</p>
<p>Ultimately, it&#8217;s about realizing public media&#8217;s potential as a hub of cultural and intellectual life.</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: Ethan Zuckerman&#8217;s History of the Digital Communities</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/15/beyond-broadcast-notes-ethan-zuckermans-history-of-the-digital-communities/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/15/beyond-broadcast-notes-ethan-zuckermans-history-of-the-digital-communities/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 May 2006 20:16:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[beyondbroadcast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/15/beyond-broadcast-notes-ethan-zuckermans-history-of-the-digital-communities/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ethan&#8217;s seven minute history of the communities on the Internet is a classic. He presented it at the open of the session on social networking that he moderated at last week&#8217;s Beyond Broadcast convening. Read it here.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ethan&#8217;s seven minute history of the communities on the Internet is a classic. He presented it at the open of the session on social networking that he moderated at last week&#8217;s <a href="http://beyondbroadcast.net/">Beyond Broadcast</a> convening. Read it <a href="http://www.ethanzuckerman.com/blog/?p=792">here</a>.</p>
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		<title>New Realities: John Barth Comments</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/new-realities-john-barth-comments/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/new-realities-john-barth-comments/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 13 May 2006 22:44:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[newrealities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pubradio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/new-realities-john-barth-comments/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[John Barth of PRX sent comments on my recent New Realities rant post, and now that I&#8217;ve rescued them and others from WordPress moderation purgatory, I want to bring them to the front page so you don&#8217;t miss them. John writes: My public remarks [at New Realities] were intended to push people beyond their comfort [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John Barth of <a href="http://prx.org/">PRX</a> sent comments on my recent New Realities <strike>rant</strike> post, and now that I&#8217;ve rescued them and others from WordPress moderation purgatory, I want to bring them to the front page so you don&#8217;t miss them.</p>
<p>John writes:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>My public remarks [at New Realities] were intended to push people beyond their comfort zones and to remember the mission&#8212;it is one that demands courage and willingness to do the uncomfortable, to overcommit in order to really make things change for the better.</p>
<p>I admire some of what Rob has noted: at least there was the rhetoric of common purpose and common dreams.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s see if the house remains on fire, in perilous terms, or if the house is on fire with the passion of new ideas, workable strategies and the urgency to get things done.</p>
<p>My fear is that we didn&#8217;t get to the critical items we need to address if we have any chance of success:</p>
<p>* where to find the next generation of passionate producers, creators and managers<br />
* where to find the talented people who can do better than we have<br />
* how to rethink all of our structures and operations so we have faster and more open ways to advance the best ideas<br />
* how do we engage people&#8217;s hearts and passions<br />
* as concepts of trust change (the next generation has different defintions than we do), will be be there? What is our response to the &#8216;Jon Stewarts?&#8217;<br />
* what is our role in regard to preserving, presenting, respecting culture in all its forms?<br />
* can we address real threats from within to our credibility? Should we push for no more university licensees?<br />
* why shouldn&#8217;t NPR, PRI, APM and PRX all merge? Martin Neeb opened that window and it was powerfully provocative. We do all waste a lot of money, resources, time and talent on competition with not much distinction.<br />
* Can we accept a different defintion of public radio and public media..one not defined by the past and from the top down, but defined more by the listeners who now have the capacity to produce and create?<br />
* We should have the courage to name those stations and centers of innovation that &#8216;get it&#8217; and &#8216;do it&#8217; everyday. Hold up models of the best, regardless of offending those who are not on that list. We have to be brutally honest about what works and what we have to do. We need to be courageous.<br />
* We don&#8217;t pay enough attention to our audiences except in terms of what they pledge, what checks they write and the aggregate behavior of ratings. We need to listen to those who are listening.<br />
* How can we make risk taking less frightening? Failure is ok if we learn the right lessons and apply them. Failure is not ok if mediocre performance is an excusable standard.<br />
* Public service &#8212; mission and leadership mixed with humility and openness &#8212; will make public radio and public radio a bedrock of society. Who has the guts to work on that balance every day?</p>
<p>We need to act smartly and quickly.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Some of the smartest people in our industry are working at PRX.</p>
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		<title>Aggregation and Consolidation: A Rationale</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/aggregation-and-consolidation-a-rationale/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/aggregation-and-consolidation-a-rationale/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 13 May 2006 19:33:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[content]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[newrealities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pubradio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[trends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/aggregation-and-consolidation-a-rationale/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Note: this is very much a working document. It&#8217;s a snapshot of a &#8220;living&#8221; line of reasoning and is likely to evolve over time. This began as a collection of my thoughts, but it&#8217;s been improved immeasurably by Mark Fuerst of iMA; I sent this to him and at least a third of this document [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Note: this is very much a working document. It&#8217;s a snapshot of a &#8220;living&#8221; line of reasoning and is likely to evolve over time. This began as a collection of my thoughts, but it&#8217;s been improved immeasurably by Mark Fuerst of iMA; I sent this to him and at least a third of this document is his. I think this collaboration of two can grow to include more thoughts. Please submit yours.</em></p>
<p><strong>Why do we need aggregation and consolidated technologies?</strong></p>
<p>That&#8217;s how Mark Fuerst phrased it in a note to stations following the NPR New Realities event in Washington earlier this month. Someone else put it this way in an iMA web conference call: What is the vision that sets the tone for this?</p>
<p>&#8220;This&#8221; is a loose set of ideas that is broadly transformative of public radio as we know it now. It ranges from a more systematic sharing of online content to a consolidated backend, to ideas for increased social interaction, improved metrics, an alignment of metadata and other infrastructures, to a possible restructuring of the relationship between NPR and the member stations. As many have pointed out, quite rightly, we&#8217;re putting the cart before the horse &#8211; we&#8217;re deciding what we want to do without being able to articulate exactly why we should be doing it. Here&#8217;s a suggestion:</p>
<p><strong>A Vision for Public Radio: Essential to America</strong></p>
<p>The past 40 years has been a progression from a public radio service seen as alternative or interesting, to today&#8217;s important, core news and music streams, served by about 700 stations nationwide and reaching about 30 million listeners a week. We&#8217;ve become important; some of our stations have become market leaders, and we&#8217;ve become very good.</p>
<p>Now the issue is: what lies beyond this. How does an important radio service evolve into an essential communications network?  It wouldn&#8217;t be merely important to 30 million listeners a week; it would be <em>essential to the cultural and political life of all Americans. </em>This might be (should be?) our guiding strategy.</p>
<p>How might we frame what essential means?  I think this requires examining where we are now.</p>
<p>What do we care about?</p>
<p>1. Providing services that our audiences trust and rely upon<br />
2. Executing those services with a profound respect for our audiences<br />
3. Ensuring that our services offer a diverse array of voices and perspectives<br />
4. Creating and distributing national music and news programs that unite our audiences around common experiences and concerns<br />
5. Creating local music and news services that speak to the common experiences of citizens in small towns, cities, counties, states<br />
6. Demonstrating the courage of our own convictions in non-commercial media, in contrast to the current state of commercial broadcasting, which can be characterized as an abandonment of local service and fact-based reporting</p>
<p>What can we do better than anyone else?</p>
<p>1. We have, at our fingertips, a &#8220;newsroom&#8221; that extends from international bureaus and a Washington headquarters to &#8220;bureaus&#8221; in cities and towns all over the country. If we found a way to harness the collective power of our national, regional and local reporting teams, we could create a world-class journalistic enterprise.<br />
2. Our decades-long history of presenting different genres of music, away from the pressures of commercial sponsorship has allowed us to create services where it really is “about the music.” And with the goal of audience service as our primary responsibility, we are uniquely positioned to serve American&#8217;s desire for a diverse array of music, reflecting regional cultures and international influences.<br />
3. Our audience is vast (30 million people!) and heterogeneous, but our listeners share common traits, including an insatiable curiosity about their world and a desire to participate in it. If we utilize our leadership in fact-based journalism and culture, we can create new ways of interacting with our audience, on-air, online, and in-person, that will help to secure public radio&#8217;s position at the center of American cultural and civic life.</p>
<p>Many of you will recognize this model; I&#8217;ve lifted it from Jim Collins&#8217; book &#8220;Good to Great.&#8221; Now, we want to tie this vision to the pursuit of aggregation and consolidated technologies.</p>
<p>Is technology the driver or the bus?</p>
<p>We would be wrong to assume that technological advancements are the sole driver of the changes we propose. Technology is certainly a factor, in that the pace of change has delivered a powerful wake-up call to our industry. But the primary driver will be our vision of public radio&#8217;s place in the lives of the American people &#8211; in other words, <em>it will be an initiative built primarily on our strategy and our content</em>. Technology&#8217;s proper role is as the enabler for both our content and strategic initiatives.</p>
<p>Why aggregation makes sense:</p>
<p>The basic arguments for aggregation come down to three points:<br />
(a) the need to focus on the user-experience rather than the organizational boundaries;<br />
(b) the cost of the investment required;<br />
(c) the need to invest in content development rather than overhead.</p>
<p>Research initiated by the Online Publishers Assocation shows that people already expect media companies to provide service on multiple platforms.  They view these platforms as various faces of the same company, with each platform giving them some advantages (radio signals are more convenient; websites allow for time-shifting and search).</p>
<p>That research suggests the opportunity to “recycle audience” from on-air to online.  Proper exploitation of search functions would seem to offer great opportunities to expand audience, when people find our content online and come back for more.  What are we seeing?  The most comprehensive study we have of listener use of our websites suggests that the “cume online audience” (unique visitor count) is less than 10% of on-air cume at almost every public radio station.</p>
<p>The problem, at least in part, is a fractured user-experience.  Right now, users get a very satisfying experience from our signals: programs sound great; mobile devices (like car radios) pick up the signal very well, require no buffering, and rarely experience drop outs).  Online the user experience is completely different&#8211;highly fractured, incomplete, often frustrating.  For listeners of a station featuring a standard sample of network programs, people can get some things at your station.org site; some at NPR.org; other things, at Echoes.org, Marketplace.org, or ThisAmericanLife.org. This fragmentation does not reflect the user’s sense of what we are (an integrated system).  The end result is low use.</p>
<p>We must continue to satisfy current listener needs and expand to meet needs that are part of the fully-wired world, such as translating news to text and graphics; providing audio on demand; publishing strategically in multiple platforms through multiple partners. We must deliver this content in a way that is focused on the user, and not dictated by the station or the network.  To date, our strategic thinking is dominated by the needs of organizations in our system and not focused (or focused enough) on the needs of our audience. We must install and maintain a delivery platform that is focused on the user—who often does not know or care where the content comes from.</p>
<p>After ten years of effort, only a handful of stations have achieved a strong online franchise that properly complements their on-air service. Most of them are music stations.  Changing this is a very expensive task—if we approach it one station at a time.  Very few organizations in public radio (or TV) are capable of even considering the level investment that might be required to meet state-of-the-art delivery standards.  Yet, over the next decade, media companies will have to develop multi-platform content and marketing services.  It is almost inconceivable that hundreds of public radio and TV stations will be able to achieve this presence without assistance, for two reasons: the costs are too high and the content stations provide comes from so many different sources.  Developing this kind of system requires a type and scale of collaboration as large as any we&#8217;ve made to date. In aggregate, station and network expenditures on infrastructure &#8211; networks, backend technologies, etc &#8211; are considerable.</p>
<p>Development of many discrete systems may give individual stations or networks a sense of independence and control, but the development of multiple infrastructures contributes very little to the actual service experienced by the audience—certainly not in the way that our program services do. (For this reason, I call them non-core services.)  To the extent that there is duplication of non-core services, it is a drain on station and network resources, robbing dollars from content production. While some duplication of non-core services can contribute to innovation (individual stations as test-beds for new concepts), the level of duplication systemwide is unsustainable, and, over time, will leach millions of dollars away from the core mission of producing content.<br />
We face these imperatives:</p>
<ol>
<li>We must diversity our content in a way that we have not been willing or able to do so far, including providing service to minority audiences, and reshape at least some of our content to reach younger audiences whose media expectations will be far different from our own.</li>
<li>We must find ways to gain economies of scale, in services, staffing, and investment, that will allow us to put maximum investment into content creation and user-oriented service, rather than overhead.</li>
<li>We must install a transaction platform capable of processing millions of requests for a content and service in a satisfying and secure way.</li>
</ol>
<p>Therefore, we must assess our non-core infrastructure, and make every effort to restructure those operations to ensure maximum cost-savings while providing a common-sense service to the end-user, and while maintaining the local and national brands that are a source of strength to public broadcasting. This includes potentially a wide range of services, ranging from metadata to a centralized online content depot, the &#8220;consolidated backend,&#8221; etc.</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: Panel IV: Surviving or Thriving: Beta Business Models in the New World</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/beyond-broadcast-notes-panel-iv-surviving-or-thriving-beta-business-models-in-the-new-world/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 13 May 2006 19:07:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Moderator: Patricia Aufderheide. Participants: Mark Cooper, Consumer Federation; Diane Mermigas, The Hollywood Reporter; Dan Nova, Highland Capital Partners. Because of a minor issue (let&#8217;s call it Autosave), these notes are adapted from Jessica Duda&#8217;s excellent summary on the Beyond Broadcast blog. I summarize them here not to pass them off as my own but to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Moderator: Patricia Aufderheide. Participants: Mark Cooper, Consumer Federation; Diane Mermigas, The Hollywood Reporter; Dan Nova, Highland Capital Partners.</p>
<p><em>Because of a minor issue (let&#8217;s call it Autosave), these notes are adapted from Jessica Duda&#8217;s excellent <a href="http://www.beyondbroadcast.net/blog/?p=96">summary</a> on the Beyond Broadcast blog. I summarize them here not to pass them off as my own but to have a record here of the sessions.</em></p>
<p><strong>Diane Mermigas, The Hollywood Reporter</strong></p>
<p>Both commercial and public media need to do the following:</p>
<ul>
<li>change their orientation and embrace interactivity</li>
<li>understand how technology empowers the consumer</li>
<li>redefine the concept of content</li>
<li>deepen advertising and commerce</li>
<li>reinvent business models</li>
<li>view the process with an entrepreneurial spirit</li>
</ul>
<p>Focus on the strength of public media – strong content</p>
<p>Public media needs an organized effort of producing content that is creative, independent, diverse, credible, and in-depth, with links to education and problem-solving. This will ensure public media’s survival and their ability to make money.</p>
<p>Media property rights are in flux. Currently, the web is a deliberate system with most online companies posting content through a filtering system and users consuming only what they specifically seek, which narrows their interests and creates an information vacuum. BBC, MTV are examples of the passive broadcast model of web delivery services; they could be more interactive – and more profitable.</p>
<p>The role of public media is thus to fill the void of the marketplace and monetize these ideas. Public media should learn from these models to create the services and interactivity:</p>
<ul>
<li>TiVo</li>
<li>Ipod</li>
<li>Open TV</li>
<li>Visible World</li>
</ul>
<p>Seek strategic partnerships</p>
<p>There are a variety of partnerships that public media should pursue. Serving as a content provider to other businesses can include providing local content, such as to Google. At the April 2006 National Association of Broadcasters conference, they discussed working with cable operators to obtain local advertisers as these operators have a local connection. Media companies with such partnerships have increased local advertising revenue growth by 30 percent in the past four years – as opposed to the usual three to four percent. Public media should do the same and align with consumer technology companies to expand digital delivery options.</p>
<p>There are also many unknowns, especially as old media financial targets and benchmarks are used to evaluate and set new media goals &#8211; without knowing how consumers will ultimately use the quickly-evolving technologies that will also affect new, unanticipated forms of expression, [such as Second Life.] Thus, making assumptions is challenging and focusing on the consumer is key. Overall, for every challenge, there are at least two opportunities.</p>
<p><strong>Dan Nova, Highland Capital Partners</strong></p>
<p>There is a problem of the “needle in a haystack” of online media companies/services. A new online firm is funded every day and they are all excited about the Web 2.0 world. Audience trends show that new outlets of public participatory media can grow exponentially as early as the first year, such as YouTube growing up to 6.5 million users and Technorati reaching 1.5 million users.</p>
<p>Low costs of participatory media and attractive business models</p>
<p>The old adage of “If you build it, they will come” has changed to “if they build it, they will come.” Participatory media presents many attractive low cost and high value content that in turn affect the criteria investors use to fund new participatory online sites.</p>
<p>Participatory media costs</p>
<ul>
<li>Low costs to attract participatory media</li>
<li>Low customer acquisition costs</li>
<li>Low customer retention costs</li>
<li>Low marketing costs</li>
<li>Low content development costs</li>
<li>Low technology costs (open source)</li>
</ul>
<p>Characteristics of quality content</p>
<ul>
<li>Easy to use</li>
<li>Effective</li>
<li>Entertaining</li>
<li>Participatory</li>
</ul>
<p>Acquisitions are increasing</p>
<p>Traditional media are being squeezed &#8211; being cash rich can be a liability. New media have had financial success, but the business models are moving quickly. Now, old media is competing with new media to buy new-new media.</p>
<p>How to evaluate participatory media websites through three main development stages</p>
<p>New opportunities</p>
<ul>
<li>Focus on the team</li>
<li>Assess how the idea compares to the existing competition</li>
<li>Review the development time and cost</li>
<li>Don’t emphasize the business model specifics – it is premature</li>
<li>Look at a valuation range of 0-5 million upfront</li>
</ul>
<p>Mid-stage value drivers</p>
<p>The mid-stage of participatory media development is a tenuous time and is dangerous for investors as the valuation is based on the initial ‘buzz’ &#8211; not hard numbers of tried and true audiences.</p>
<p>Later stage companies</p>
<p>Assessing later stage companies, look for the same fundamentals as the new opportunities.</p>
<ul>
<li>Focus on the team</li>
<li>Assess the revenue streams and sources</li>
<li>Review the margins</li>
<li>Confirm the financial sustainability</li>
<li>Critically assess the business model &#8211; very important</li>
<li>Assess where the biggest windows exist</li>
</ul>
<p>Other characteristics of the successful later stage companies include: an “insane” customer focus, simple content presentation, huge market, active/missionary leaders, and constant improvement.</p>
<p><strong>Mark Cooper, Consumer Federation</strong></p>
<p>Business models discussed at this conference have largely been based on charity or advertising. In order to for them to be sustainable, public media must have a public purpose. The trends all show the revolution has arrived, especially as the two biggest commercial TV stations are putting their content on the web for free. Once measured by the household (radio, television), media consumption metrics are per the individual (internet, on demand); thus, changing the benchmarks and terms of media.</p>
<p>Changes in the public media audience – new creators</p>
<p>Public media should go to VOD on the internet as attention is the challenge &#8211; distribution is not the problem. Of course monetization is another problem for public media. Media cannot be a one-way company in a two-way world. The old media presented a push approach and treated the audience as mute. Now they can see the explosion of self-expression. The old media cannot ignore the public are creators, users, and speakers. The old media will try to make the public ‘feel’ as though we are interactive which may not be the case. A new way to assess media delivery is that old models are broadcast, cable TV, public TV and the new is “Independent Noncommercial TV” and the “networked individual.”</p>
<p>Much growth still needs to occur within the new media users as the current 40 million bloggers amount to less than one percent of the world population – public media need to reach the other 99 percent. At the same time, the internet, while useful, timely and convenient lacks public trust – to the extent local television ranks higher.</p>
<p>Recommendations for membership-based participatory media</p>
<p>One out of every two Americans are apart of member of a cooperative – namely credit unions which are a trust institutions. Information is also trust issue and we can use this concept of a membership-based, participatory organization to create our own credible content. The public should form and pay dues to media membership organizations to create their own local news so that the people can decide what is newsworthy. They should look for a base in civil society organizations and ask people to pay to join a group that allows them cooperatively provide their own content.</p>
<p>Ironically, civic society groups are pushing back on this idea &#8211; they believe the government should fund such public media. However, “you can’t speak to power on power’s nickel.” Professional journalists are also suspicious of citizen journalists and such membership organizations. Professionally-trained journalists should conduct the investigative work but media organizations should also have a space for citizen journalists to report other types of news and information.</p>
<p>Overall, the old media format is to report, edit, and control responses and have such [limiting] mottos as “All the news that is fit to print.” The media presented at this conference seek to break this top-down approach &#8211; from Google to Wikipedia. All of these models have different functions and are open and closed to varying degrees. If you give participants the chance to be a member and use more functions, the more they will be willing pay dues to have an impact influence beyond their community. We can have a chance to make that revolution.</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: Closing Remarks (day 1)</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/beyond-broadcast-notes-closing-remarks-day-1/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 13 May 2006 18:38:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Charles Nesson, co-founder and faculty director, Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Law School Nesson delivered a brief and powerful address about the rhetorical space of the Internet, the central value of openness and the challenge posed by those who would curtail that openness. He spoke about universities and the mandate to create an [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Charles Nesson, co-founder and faculty director, <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home/">Berkman Center for Internet and Society</a>, Harvard Law School</p>
<p>Nesson delivered a brief and powerful address about the rhetorical space of the Internet, the central value of openness and the challenge posed by those who would curtail that openness. He spoke about universities and the mandate to create an &#8220;open commonwealth of knowledge.&#8221;</p>
<blockquote><p><em>&#8220;Be confident. There is an optimistic future ahead. And the challenge is to be gentle to your enemies.&#8221;</em></p></blockquote>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: My &#8220;Birds of a Feather&#8221; Dinner</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/13/beyond-broadcast-notes-my-birds-of-a-feather-dinner/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 13 May 2006 15:00:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Beyond Broadcast organizers offered the option of several loosely structured &#8220;idea generating/networking&#8221; dinners last night for conference attendees. I &#8220;moderated&#8221; a discussion among six individuals, based generally on the following question: how do we get the best content from our listeners? Participants included Josh Andrews of Chicago Public Radio, Jessica Duda of the Center for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Beyond Broadcast organizers offered the option of several loosely structured &#8220;idea generating/networking&#8221; dinners last night for conference attendees. I &#8220;moderated&#8221; a discussion among six individuals, based generally on the following question: how do we get the best content from our listeners? Participants included Josh Andrews of Chicago Public Radio, Jessica Duda of the Center for Social Media, Todd Broadie of WYMS Milwaukee, and Rhod Sharp of BBC 5 Live. My notes are a bit random &#8211; trying to eat Indian food, converse, pass the naan, and drink one&#8217;s mango lassi can have a detrimental effect on note-taking. So can an interesting group because you spend most of the time thinking, listening and talking.</p>
<p>Josh spoke about Chicago Public Radio&#8217;s plan to launch a second service next year. The service will be targeted to a new, younger demographic that doesn&#8217;t regularly listen to public radio now &#8211; a more web-savvy, non-traditional radio listener. Josh described the radio station as an outgrowth of the web site, rather than the other way around, and their plans to make user-generated content one of the centerpieces of the service &#8211; content modules that might include essays, discussions, and live or recorded music.</p>
<p>Todd Broadie is a part of the upcoming WYMS launch. The station plans to be heavily music-oriented, aimed at a younger demographic that doesn&#8217;t regularly listen to public radio now. Todd described their plans to insert user-generated content into the mix, with short-form news features, as well.</p>
<p>And Rhod Sharp of BBC 5 Live talked about the overnight show he hosts on 5 Live, BBC Radio&#8217;s News/Talk/Sports format; he and the show&#8217;s producers encourage listeners to submit podcasts, and they use portions of those podcasts on the show.</p>
<p>Our group felt that getting the best possible content from our audience will require:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong> Encouraging, training, critiquing and commissioning them.</strong> This is a level of engagement, perhaps, that many of us haven&#8217;t fully factored into our calculations of the monetary and staff costs of such an initiative. But it&#8217;s clearly on the minds of Josh, Todd B., and Rhod, who described plans to offering training on storytelling, gathering natural sound, conducting interviews, and finding good equipment.</li>
<li><strong>Nudging your citizen content producers out of their bedrooms and dens and into the real world.</strong> That&#8217;s how they get to the issues in their community that are important and how they find other voices that can add to their stories.</li>
<li><strong>An extensive filtering system to find, fact-check, and rate all this content.</strong> Josh and his colleagues at Chicago Public Radio will have to mine existing content libraries like PRX, as well as process the stories filed by citizen producers, and the material generated by the station&#8217;s planned outreach into the community (ex. the StoryCorps booth concept). Everyone agreed that this is going to be very important to ensure an expected level of quality, although Rhod brought an interesting counterpoint to the discussion from his BBC perspective: NPR strives for a standard of perfection in audio production that&#8217;s unrealistic in this new kind of audience interaction. For instance, some engineers may reject mp3 audio for broadcast, but those standards will have to be reconsidered.</li>
</ul>
<p>Should we pay them? Everyone rejected the idea of a general payment system, but thought that payment could be a part of commissioning work from citizen journalists. Rhod says the BBC constantly &#8220;trolls&#8221; for content, looking for people writing good blogs or making great podcasts and commissioning content from them.</p>
<p>Josh expressed a concern that others seemed to share: the &#8220;MySpace generation&#8221; doesn&#8217;t see public radio as a creative outlet; they can take their work elsewhere.</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: What is the community dimension of media?</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-what-is-the-community-dimension-of-media/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2006 19:19:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Tom Gerace (Gather.com), Thomas Kriese (Omidyar Network), Brendan Greeley (Radio Open Source), Rhea Mokund (Listenup.org) Moderator: Ethan Zuckerman (Global Voices, Berkman Center) Brendan Greeley explained Radio Open Source&#8217;s approach to community media. The goal was to have the blog be the center, with the show as the outgrowth. Blogs are the new talk radio. Blogs [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tom Gerace <a class="external text" title="http://www.gather.com/" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.gather.com/">(Gather.com)</a>, Thomas Kriese <a class="external text" title="http://www.omidyar.net/" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.omidyar.net/">(Omidyar Network)</a>, Brendan Greeley <a class="external text" title="http://www.radioopensource.org/user/brendan" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.radioopensource.org/user/brendan">(Radio Open Source)</a>, Rhea Mokund <a class="external text" title="http://www.listenup.org/" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.listenup.org/">(Listenup.org)</a>  Moderator: Ethan Zuckerman <a class="external text" title="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home/ethan zuckerman" rel="nofollow" href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home/ethan_zuckerman">(Global Voices, Berkman Center)</a></p>
<p>Brendan Greeley explained Radio Open Source&#8217;s approach to community media. The goal was to have the blog be the center, with the show as the outgrowth. Blogs are the new talk radio. Blogs make decisions &#8211; you decide what you want to talk about. A blog has motion &#8211; quick pace of topic to topic. The webpage is structured with comments posted under articles &#8211; so the listeners who want to comment aren&#8217;t pushed into a comment ghetto. We need to act like blogs &#8211; use permalinks; use Technorati; actually read blogs; act like you mean it; write fewer, more personal emails; don&#8217;t ask for links, ask for opinions; link out.</p>
<p>Tom Gerace of Gather: users create content, tag it, comment on it, etc. How to create value in this? You can transform your audience into a broad source network; apply editorial oversight: content selection and fact chekcing; guide the community engaged discussion around diverse and contemporary topics.</p>
<p>Rhea Mokund of Listenup.org: Listen Up is a network of youth media organizations, also funds them to produce content. This is designed to be a real world space for youth media. Site is largely curated by the young people who use the site.</p>
<p>Thomas Kriese of Omidyar talked about managing the community they&#8217;ve built.</p>
<p>Asked for the one piece of advice he would give to broadcasters, Gerace said, &#8220;Understand that you have to throw out what you know about your audience, and rebuild your understanding based on your audience interacting with each other rather than just with you.&#8221; Mokund&#8217;s advice was one word: &#8220;Intentionality.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: Panel II: What Emerging Participatory Web Media Services are Doing</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-panel-ii-what-emerging-participatory-web-media-services-are-doing/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-panel-ii-what-emerging-participatory-web-media-services-are-doing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2006 16:51:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[beyondbroadcast]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Moderator: Peter Armstrong of oneworld.net; participants Skip Pizzi (Microsoft, and Radio World Magazine), Paul Jones (ibiblio) Armstrong began by arguing, persuasively, that the BBC&#8217;s content initiatives (The Creative Future) is less a dialogue with the audience and more of a continuation of audience interaction that the BBC has offered before. Armstrong says that&#8217;s because the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Moderator: Peter Armstrong of <a href="http://oneworld.net/">oneworld.net</a>; participants <span class="external text" />Skip Pizzi <span class="external text">(Microsoft, and Radio World Magazine)</span>, Paul Jones <a rel="nofollow" title="http://www.ibiblio.org/" class="external text" href="http://www.ibiblio.org/">(ibiblio)</a></p>
<p>Armstrong began by arguing, persuasively, that the BBC&#8217;s content initiatives (The Creative Future) is less a dialogue with the audience and more of a continuation of audience interaction that the BBC has offered before. Armstrong says that&#8217;s because the BBC&#8217;s imperative is to preserve its brand, and so a walled-garden remains.</p>
<p>Can public media use common spaces like YouTube or MySpace for video and other content, rather than creating their own? Would it make more sense, from an aggregation point of view, to pick a small number of platforms and tag to them?</p>
<p>Paul Jones explained ibiblio&#8217;s digital archiving, it&#8217;s multi-language services, as well as a project to improve BitTorrent to make it more friendly to public broadcasters and others who want to post content permanently.</p>
<p>Skip Pizzi noted that the digital revolution makes it easier to produce content but makes it more difficult to retain your audience. &#8220;That dilution is actually a good thing. It can be a true marketplace of ideas.</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: Deborah Scranton</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-deborah-scranton/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-deborah-scranton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2006 15:49:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Filmmaker Deborah Scranton (The War Tapes) collaborated with soldiers in Iraq, who filmed their service. She worked with them over the Internet, rather than going to Iraq herself so she could stay out of the story and not interfere directly in the soldiers&#8217; storytelling. She spoke about working with the soldiers, winning their trust, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Filmmaker Deborah Scranton (<a href="http://thewartapes.com/">The War Tapes</a>) collaborated with soldiers in Iraq, who filmed their service. She worked with them over the Internet, rather than going to Iraq herself so she could stay out of the story and not interfere directly in the soldiers&#8217; storytelling. She spoke about working with the soldiers, winning their trust, and giving her word that she would remain true to their experiences. For 11 months, the soldiers filmed their experiences as they had time and discussed the film with Scranton, using instant messaging to get advice on storytelling. The result was 800 hours of tape. &#8220;This [is a] new model of living narrative.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;The War Tapes&#8221; just won Best Documentary Feature at the Tribeca Film Festival.</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: What the Broadcasters are Doing</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-what-the-broadcasters-are-doing/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-what-the-broadcasters-are-doing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2006 14:51:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Christopher Lydon, moderator; Bill Buzenberg, Minnesota Public Radio; Terry Heaton, Donata Communications; David Liroff, WGBH Bill Buzenberg spoke about Public Insight Journalism: &#8220;for every story, someone in our audience knows more than we do&#8221;, their use of &#8220;idea generators&#8221; like The Future of Small Towns. Those ideas become reports and series on-air, become comments online, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Christopher Lydon, moderator; Bill Buzenberg, Minnesota Public Radio; Terry Heaton, Donata Communications; David Liroff, WGBH</p>
<p>Bill Buzenberg spoke about Public Insight Journalism: &#8220;for every story, someone in our audience knows more than we do&#8221;, their use of &#8220;idea generators&#8221; like <a href="http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/projects/2005/04/smalltowns/">The Future of Small Towns</a>. Those ideas become reports and series on-air, become comments online, become townhall meetings and symposia, and eventually generates more content. American Public Media has created <a href="http://access.minnesota.publicradio.org/press_releases/releases/20060426_cij.php">the Center for Innovation in Journalism</a> to offer Public Insight Journalism to public broadcasters around the country.</p>
<p>Terry Heaton said disruption is an opportunity for growth.</p>
<ul>
<li>Media is unbundled at the point of origin and rebundled at the point of consumption. (media is embracing the first part of this, but not the second.)</li>
<li>Mediated people make their own media.</li>
</ul>
<p>David Liroff spoke about WGBH&#8217;s new media and interactive efforts. &#8220;This is less about technology and more about engagement.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Beyond Broadcast Notes: Keynote Address</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-keynote-address/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/05/12/beyond-broadcast-notes-keynote-address/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 May 2006 14:06:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Keynote: Reinventing the Gatekeeper James Boyle, Center for the Study of the Public Domain, Duke Law School We&#8217;re bad at predicting the future of technology; we have to understand that and the policy implications of it. The inability to see the potential of commons-based media: we are blind to the opportunities this kind of media [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Keynote: Reinventing the Gatekeeper<br />
James Boyle, Center for the Study of the Public Domain, Duke Law School</p>
<p>We&#8217;re bad at predicting the future of technology; we have to understand that and the policy implications of it.</p>
<p>The inability to see the potential of commons-based media: we are blind to the opportunities this kind of media offers at every level; there has to be a balance between proprietary and open source. How open should it be? How closed? These questions apply from user-generated content to internet protocols.</p>
<p>We tend to undervalue the potential of openness.</p>
<p>We undervalue the costs of locking up content with extended copyright.</p>
<p>Why? Our understanding of &#8220;property&#8221; is still based on physical things.</p>
<p>The Internet is the story of an anomaly &#8211; the creation of an open structure when, if it had been created in the conventional sense, would probably never been as open &#8211; more like Mini-tel than the Internet.</p>
<p>Where is the balance of &#8220;open&#8221; and &#8220;control&#8221;? We need to be aware of our cognitive biases and how they shape our decision making.</p>
<p>Boyle: Leave as open as possible, as long as possible, so others can see possibilities that you can&#8217;t and make them real.</p>
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		<title>Public Broadcasting&#8217;s Platforms for Interaction</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/04/23/public-broadcastings-platforms-for-interaction/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/04/23/public-broadcastings-platforms-for-interaction/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Apr 2006 16:48:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[citizen]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/04/23/public-broadcastings-platforms-for-interaction/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve spent some time digging around Gather.com and the Public Interactive Public Action beta and I&#8217;ve come away with somewhat more positive feelings about both. I think the social networking aspect of these and other sites has less potential for public broadcasters &#8211; at least for now, while our main demographic is still late-GenX/Baby Boom. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve spent some time digging around <a href="http://gather.com">Gather.com</a> and the <a href="http://publicinteractive.com">Public Interactive</a> Public Action beta and I&#8217;ve come away with somewhat more positive feelings about both.</p>
<p>I think the social networking aspect of these and other sites has less potential for public broadcasters &#8211; at least for now, while our main demographic is still late-GenX/Baby Boom. This generation discovered the internet as adults and although it&#8217;s changed how they interact, it&#8217;s not been the revolutionary shift that our next generation of listeners is living through now as teens and 20-somethings.</p>
<p>So to my mind, that pushes networking down the list &#8211; and makes interaction the most important concept for us to aim for. And I think it&#8217;s hugely important because interaction goes to the heart of what public broadcasting is about. The kinds of experiences that our &#8220;founding fathers&#8221; envisioned in 1967 &#8211; the multi-way conversation that would entwine broadcasters, listeners, culture-makers and public policy-makers &#8211; are the experiences we&#8217;re actually able to deliver with the Internet. This isn&#8217;t just the logical next step, it&#8217;s core to our mission as public service broadcasters.</p>
<p>So far, the main model for interaction that we&#8217;ve implemented has been comments. It&#8217;s a great first step, but it doesn&#8217;t fulfill the promise because while it&#8217;s a form of interaction, it takes place within a highly-controlled environment &#8211; listeners can comment on what we do. And while comment threads may veer off in other directions, they&#8217;re forced to exist within the rigid structure we&#8217;ve imposed &#8211; the original story that sparked the conversation, the thread&#8217;s title and category and keywords. The infrastructure of comments channels the river, so to speak.</p>
<p>I think the key to living up to our promise is to open the gates wider and invite listeners to be partners with us in generating content. This causes a lot of fear and consternation but it needn&#8217;t. And frankly it shouldn&#8217;t since this kind of interaction is really a part of our mandate.</p>
<p><strong>Gather</strong></p>
<p>Gather doesn&#8217;t have the strongest interface; it&#8217;s cluttered, and despite my efforts at customizing my account, I still don&#8217;t feel like I&#8217;m finding out about stuff on the site that might interest me. I can&#8217;t easily track topic areas with RSS, for instance. I&#8217;m not terribly interested in seeing the latest photos people have posted to the site on the front page, etc.</p>
<p>In talking to some people in pubradio about Gather I&#8217;ve consistently heard two things: it doesn&#8217;t feel like public radio; and a lot of the stuff that users submit isn&#8217;t that good.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s what I think, having spent some time on the site: some of the content isn&#8217;t that great. But some of it is. The writing that people are doing about current events, politics, arts, restaurant, books, etc, and the comments others submit to these pieces are high level stuff.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been trying to figure out what it is that works and what doesn&#8217;t work on Gather, and here&#8217;s my opinion: to the extent that Gather is a place for people to share their thoughts on ANY issue they&#8217;d like to; to the extent that Gather is a place for others to comment on that work; to the extent that Gather is a place where people can find others who share views or ideas or interests and form sub-groups, it&#8217;s great.</p>
<p>It boils down to this, in my view: to the extent that Gather is a public square, it&#8217;s a success.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s where I think it doesn&#8217;t work as well: it also tries to be your blog. When Gather becomes the place for your pictures of your dog, your daily ramblings about going to the grocery store, etc., it falls down. The blog dilutes its effectiveness as a public square.</p>
<p><strong>Public Action</strong></p>
<p>This is hard to talk about because I&#8217;ve seen so little of it, but based on those brief views:</p>
<p>Public Action is trying to be the compromise tool for public broadcasters who feel like they need to have some kind of comment function open and the others who think it might be good, but are afraid of it. It offers a wide range of customization &#8211; you can moderate comments, you can let them go live immediately, you can approve groups, you can let listeners vote on groups, you can let a thousand groups bloom.</p>
<p>Users are encouraged to play the social networking game to a certain extent &#8211; they can create profiles, I think they can upload a picture, they can choose as their &#8220;icon&#8221; a favorite show or their station. It&#8217;s acceptable, not particularly over-the-top on the Friendster scale of networking.</p>
<p>At stations that follow a more open model, listeners should find it easy to comment on stories, form groups, etc. But I think Public Action &#8211; at least as it &#8220;exists&#8221; now &#8211; misses the boat on User Generated Content. The architecture is comments on stories, and not on original content. Yes, someone could write a thoughtful essay on banning smoking in restaurants and bars, and if the station has published a story on that topic, the listener has a place to put it. If there isn&#8217;t a story on that topic, where does it go? How does it ever get noticed or read? Do I have to create a &#8220;Smoking in Restaurants&#8221; group to ever have a chance of seeing that piece? That listener has broken out of the architecture of comments and promptly falls into a black hole.</p>
<p>Comments and groups are the tip of the iceberg of UGC, and it&#8217;s hardly the most important part.</p>
<p>The true value of our capability to generate interaction online isn&#8217;t the &#8220;I agree&#8221; or &#8220;you&#8217;re full of crap&#8221; comment. It&#8217;s allowing our website to be the place where our smart, thoughtful listeners, with their range of experiences and views, can share that intelligence and experience &#8211; a true public square. Some of our listeners will never contribute but will drop by to read what other people are writing. Some people are going to be happy enough leaving a comment. But I think plenty of our listeners are going to feel strongly enough about a topic that they&#8217;ll sit down and write 300-500 words of well-reasoned prose about it; or maybe they&#8217;ll make an audio or video story. We need to be the place where they go to present this kind of stuff; and the place where they can expect to be engaged by others at that same level.</p>
<p>We need to let our listeners be partners with us.</p>
<p>So, what is this architecture of participation? I&#8217;m certainly no expert, but I think it has to include:</p>
<ul>
<li>The ability to comment on anything we do or anything anybody else writes;</li>
<li>The ability for listeners to submit lengthy content &#8211; text, audio or video;</li>
<li>A system that allows open submission but also a level of curatorial responsibility &#8211; someone at the station who reads this stuff, pushes the good stuff to the front of the line;</li>
<li>A process for users to nominate or recommend stuff they see that&#8217;s really good;</li>
<li>A showcase for this great stuff;</li>
<li>A mechanism for the station to not only ask for submissions in general, but in particular. If you&#8217;re working on a series on poverty, its outlines don&#8217;t need to be a secret. You can tell your online users what&#8217;s coming, what the focus of the series is, and ask them to submit their views on poverty. What you end up with is a richer exploration of the issues of poverty &#8211; far richer than you as a station can yourselves create because you&#8217;ve drawn on the expertise of your vast audience. (mind you, I don&#8217;t mean this to be &#8220;tell us how to cover the story&#8221;; certainly, this &#8220;public insight journalism&#8221; component is really good and we should all pursue something like this; but what I want to avoid is always forcing the issue to float around the station; the issue is poverty and its impact on the community, and while some people will express their views to you about how you should cover it in your series, the issue of poverty is bigger than you and your station and its series.);</li>
<li>A mechanism to feed some of the very best of what listeners submit back to the air &#8211; from reading excerpts of essays, to airing portions of audio commentaries;</li>
<li>At the end of the list, a way for users to get to know each other better, discover people with similar interests, discover others&#8217; personal blog sites, etc.</li>
</ul>
<p>I feel all of this is important for a few reasons:</p>
<ul>
<li>As I said earlier, it&#8217;s not a nice thing to do &#8211; it&#8217;s core to our mission.</li>
<li>We must respect our audience enough not treat them as the great unwashed. We are taking their money; we are thinking of ten different ways to have a deeper relationship with them, all of them designed to benefit us. We&#8217;d better make sure it&#8217;s not all one-way. They are our partners.</li>
<li>Haarsager, Hagel and others have talked about serendipitous discovery, and have reminded us that our podcasts can bring us entirely new audiences. So can this content, if it&#8217;s allowed to escape the straitjacket of comments to become a community public square &#8211; the website that your community comes to believe is the first place to check out when they want to know what people think about an issue or a hot topic of local discussion. (does this mean the public square should escape your station&#8217;s website ala Terry Heaton? Maybe.)</li>
</ul>
<p>I believe public service broadcasting should be the hub of all important discussions in the community, the place listeners AND citizens look to for leadership in promoting arts and culture, discussion of public policy issues &#8211; in short, the vitality of the community.</p>
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		<title>@Reading: The Wealth of Networks</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/04/22/reading-the-wealth-of-networks/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/04/22/reading-the-wealth-of-networks/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 22 Apr 2006 23:03:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[via Haarsager: a pdf of the new book &#8220;The Wealth of Networks&#8221; by Yochai Benkler. In his post, Dennis quotes the Amazon &#8220;dust jacket:&#8221; Social production is reshaping markets, while at the same time offering new opportunities to enhance individual freedom, cultural diversity, political discourse, and justice. Thanks, Dennis!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>via <a href="http://technology360.com">Haarsager</a>: a pdf of the new book <a href="http://www.benkler.org/wealth_of_networks/index.php/Main_Page">&#8220;The Wealth of Networks&#8221; by Yochai Benkler</a>. In his <a href="http://technology360.typepad.com/technology360/2006/04/the_wealth_of_n.html">post</a>, Dennis quotes the Amazon &#8220;dust jacket:&#8221;</p>
<blockquote><p>Social production is reshaping markets, while at the same time offering new opportunities to enhance individual freedom, cultural diversity, political discourse, and justice.</p></blockquote>
<p>Thanks, Dennis!</p>
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		<title>BBC Overhauling Web for User-Generated Content</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/04/13/bbc-overhauling-web-for-user-generated-content/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/04/13/bbc-overhauling-web-for-user-generated-content/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Apr 2006 00:02:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[BBC is spending 106 million pounds on an overhaul of its web operations &#8211; from Paid Content. The money quote comes from Ashley Highfield, BBC&#8217;s director of new media and technology: “We want to allow Internet users to go into their own BBC space containing all the content they’re interested in, all the TV shows [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.paidcontent.org/bbc-to-focus-on-user-gen-content-in-overhaul">BBC is spending 106 million pounds on an overhaul of its web operations &#8211; from Paid Content</a>.</p>
<p>The money quote comes from Ashley Highfield, BBC&#8217;s director of new media and technology:</p>
<blockquote><p>“We want to allow Internet users to go into their own BBC space containing all the content they’re interested in, all the TV shows they like and all the things that they’ve played with on the Web,” said Highfield. “We need to come up with a personalised BBC home page that will provide users with a starting place for their journey through BBC content and beyond.”</p></blockquote>
<p>That&#8217;s significant. Obviously, the site will still overflow with BBC content &#8211; news, weather, audio, video, etc &#8211; but the BBC space that I experience will be my creation&#8230; BBC&#8217;s stuff I like, my stuff, perhaps my mashups of BBC content, my network of friends also interacting with BBC content. Behind this is a radical re-visioning of what BBC is.</p>
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		<title>I don&#8217;t get Social Annotation</title>
		<link>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/03/15/i-dont-get-social-annotation/</link>
		<comments>http://toddmundt.com/blog/2006/03/15/i-dont-get-social-annotation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Mar 2006 20:27:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Todd Mundt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web2.0]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://p7.hostingprod.com/@toddmundt.com/blog/2006/03/15/i-dont-get-social-annotation/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well, now I&#8217;ve said it. I&#8217;m not worried that God will smite me down; plenty of people don&#8217;t get it, which is partly why its life as a concept has been so troubled. The concept is straightforward: social interaction has enlivened blogs and birthed chat and wikis; social annotation extends the concept of community, interaction [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well, now I&#8217;ve said it. I&#8217;m not worried that God will smite me down; plenty of people don&#8217;t get it, which is partly why its life as a concept has been so troubled.</p>
<p>The concept is straightforward: social interaction has enlivened blogs and birthed chat and wikis; social annotation extends the concept of community, interaction and sharing to the entire web. Social Annotation tools allow people to visit any website, comment on stories, share thoughts with others, make notes to themselves. Here&#8217;s <a target="_blank" href="http://spaces.msn.com/joyeagle/Blog/cns!BF2AECDCB1720D4E!114.entry">one description</a>: a giant transparency overlaying all web pages, and users have the markers.</p>
<p>The idea has been around for a long time, with companies like Third Voice offering tools for such interactions in the late 1990&#8242;s. I tried a couple of them at the time and while they worked well enough, I couldn&#8217;t figure out why I should care about leaving marks on other pages. I remember scanning through many well-trafficked pages without seeing comments, leaving me wondering if I was the only one using the software. And the comments I did find left by others were stupid, infantile.</p>
<p>As Jeremy Wagstaff writes in his blog, social annotation is back. He&#8217;s <a target="_blank" href="http://www.loosewireblog.com/2006/03/a_directory_of_.html">started a list</a> of the various tools that are on the market. His gut feeling seems to be that this time, social annotation is here to stay,</p>
<blockquote><p><em>but the </em>[programs] <em>which work will be those that allow either everyone, or groups of users to see each other’s comments on web pages, and to leverage tagging and other new things we’ve gotten used to see comparable pages. And some way of filtering out the silliness would be good.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>What nags me about this is the question of identity and utility. Is it comments? Is it bookmarking? Is the sum of the two greater than the parts? Having  a comment function is good but many websites already offer that. The concept is close to social bookmarking, like del.icio.us. Many users of del.icio.us make comments about the pages they visit in the notes section for individual bookmarks. Of course, it&#8217;s not interactive, and it&#8217;s also located on a separate website.</p>
<p>So let&#8217;s look at utility. If a site has a solid comment function with a large number of regular users, why wouldn&#8217;t you leave your comment there, rather than using a closed comment system, seen only by users of that particular software? If you use a social bookmarking tool like del.icio.us or any of its competitors, why would you use this tool?</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not canning the idea, but I&#8217;m trying to figure out whether putting together both the comment and bookmark functions AND removing them from open spaces to spaces walled in by software actually accomplishes anything.</p>
<p>If you have any thoughts, comment away. In the meantime, I&#8217;ll try out a couple of the tools and see what I can see.</p>
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