Washington Post vs. Patch.com and Examiner.com
The Patch neighborhood news network—the screenshot’s from a New Jersey site—is coming soon to some Virginia and Maryland suburbs. Yet another sign that the Washington Post needs to get more serious about hyperlocal? And how about the growth of another hyperlocal network, Examiner.com? Or the latest book on the Post, which, although a “valentine” on the whole, also portrays some disturbing vulnerabilities?
Among the first Virginia suburbs to be Patched in are Annandale, Burke, Reston and Woodbridge. In Maryland the initial targets are College Park, Hyattsville and Riverdale Park-University Park.
Should the Post be worried, especially with AOL as a Patch investor? Page views per Patch visitor have shot up in recent months, according to Alexa.com statistics, and the company is aiming for kudzu-fast growth. But the sites tend to be bland, and the network’s traffic is still a speck of that for Washingtonpost.com, even with all of Patch included from eight states. In the place of the Post, I’d worry more about the TBD.com local news startup and the Examiner.com network.
TBD and its blogging network can leverage its connections with its corporate parent, Allbritton Communications, the owners of NewsChannel 8, while Examiner.com is controlled by Philip Anschutz, the same billionaire behind the dead-tree Washington Examiner. He has yet to tap all the possible synergies. Although most of the writing on Examiner.com doesn’t awe me, the network is drawing some nice numbers and uses a formula similar to the one planned for TBD—a mix of geography and an appeal to readers’ passion for sports or hobbies. The chart is apples and oranges since it pits the entire network against the Washingtonpost.com and doesn’t factor in the Post site’s advantages as a prestigious setting for ads, but keep in mind that most of the Post’s Web visitors are from outside the D.C. area anyway.
In a related vein, I’ll soon be publishing my ideas on how established newspapers and broadcast operations can use the hyperlocal approach to grow closer to their hometown readers, both directly and through their offshoots. Making the topic all the timelier is Morning Miracle, Dave Kindred’s insidery new book on the Post. Washington Post Company CEO Donald Graham in the past has noted the importance of local readers to the Post’s sustainability. At one point, says Kindred, a former Post sports columnist, Graham observed that two thirds of the Post’s ad revenue came from the approximately 15 percent of its readers who were local. So what happens if hyperlocal networks start draining off some potential revenue? Not the best news for L Street.
If the Post’s coverage keeps dissing Alexandria, VA, and nearby areas, I myself will drastically cut back the time I spend at Washingtonpost.com and probably make up for it by way of the sites of local and hyperlocal rivals. And for me to keep up with the world beyond Washington, there’s always the New York Times.
While the Post has closed domestic bureaus, the Times just keeps chugging along with national and international coverage that is more thorough and better organized than the Morning Miracle’s. Maybe the Alexa.com comparison with the Times won’t be so disappointing after a Web-site makeover, perhaps aided by the NYT’s forthcoming pay wall, a surefire way to drive off readers. But for now, national and international are much iffier than local for the Post, given such strong competition. Beware of the Madonna Effect, the tendency of the stars to crowd out the rest. I’d like to see the Post regroup locally and use the revenue to be more competitive at all levels. Donald Graham and others at the top have made it clear they’ll use only so much money from the profitable Kaplan division to prop up the Post.
The Post is still very, very repairable if the will exists; L Street just needs to get more serious about local coverage, among other things. That means good journalism daily (as opposed to the flashy but oft-problematic contest kind), not merely revenue growth. I want actionable information on local and hyperlocal issues such as taxes and zoning. I won’t buy the argument that the Post is around just to cover Metro-area highlights. Technology and skillful crowd-sourcing can take care of that. Besides, Kindred notes that in 2009 the Post’s “shrunken newsroom…still had two hundred more people than in the Watergate years.”
If the Post can’t improve locally, perhaps the Washington Post Company may want to consider selling off the first two words in its name. Keep in mind the investment preferences of Post Company board member Warren Buffett for companies with moats (PDF). Could the Post build a new-style moat in the D.C. area to deal with the TBDs and Patches? I believe so, just as I can also think of strategies that competitors could use against the Post. The Post shouldn’t wave good-bye to national and international coverage. But hasn’t the company already backed off somewhat by shutting down the domestic bureaus? A mixed message? Why is coverage of Alexandria so skimpy despite this supposed change in priorities, complete with a reminder from Executive Editor Marcus Brauchli that “we are not the national news organization of record serving a general audience”?
For a somewhat cheerier assessment of the Post than mine, check out Peter Osnos’s thoughts, at TheAtlantic.com, on both the newspaper and the Kindred book. An ex-Post reporter who became a book publisher, he notes that the Post is reconfiguring its Web site, has reduced the newspaper’s financial losses and just published the Top Secret America series. I hope he is right. But tell me, Peter, isn’t there something wrong when on certain days the front page of the Post metro section doesn’t mention the word “Virginia,” or at least not in a newsstand edition I picked up in my hometown of Alexandria? Donald Graham, check out “DC MD VA M2” (Metro section identifier) in the paper edition for July 21. The only “VA” I see is in the identifier. By contrast, NewsChannel 8 always runs prominent home page links to Virginia stories, and I haven’t the slight doubt that Allbritton Communications will be as conscientious when the cable channel rebrands itself as TBD and uses a new format to boost its now-anemic numbers. Will the Post be up to the challenge if TBD catches on?
I even wonder about the Post’s Coffeehouse Newsroom experiment, which has its place but which is no substitute for stories that arise more naturally; because the newspeople should already be representative of the geo and demographical communities covered.
But what to do, in more detail, to grow closer to readers? My forthcoming commentary will offer some ideas for both newspapers and broadcast operations. This growing-closer issue is no small matter. I wrote The Solomon Scandals, my D.C. newspaper novel, to tell a story rather than preach. But along the way, Scandals is about disconnects, not just within a fictitious newspaper but between it and the rest of the planet, especially at the neighborhood level. Hyperlocal journalism, done well, could be at least a partial cure, and as a reader I want both the Post and rivals to succeed with it.
Related: Rim Rieder’s review of Morning Miracle in the Post.
You might also enjoy:- Solomon Scandals hyperlocal series so far: A list for latecomers
- Washington Post vs. Allbritton’s TBD Web startup plans: BOTH sides could do better
- TBD’s hyperlocal judo is smart and ethical: How should rivals at the Washington Post and elsewhere respond to all the linking ahead?
- Wash. Post killing off domestic news bureaus: D.C. ‘prism’ better than the full story?
- Coming: How the Washington Post and New York Times could cope with TBD and other hyperlocal networks
TBD, meet NYC’s Westside Independent: Role model for SOME neighborhood blog affiliates?
You already know if you’ve been following the Solomon Scandals blog.
My name is David, I’m a newsaholic, and I’m cheering for the TBD news startup to thrive here in the Washington area.
But will topics like sports and food elbow aside civic matters at times because of the personal passions of TBD’s affiliate bloggers? Here’s to balance!
So what’s a well-rounded neighborhood blog like? TBD, meet the Westside Independent in New York City. Good local and hyperlocal blogs exist in the D.C. area, but the Independent is still a great potential role model, with a stellar mix of grassroots coverage and professionalism. So it seems at least, from some 250 miles away.
Click on the Independent link above. The orange navigation strip at the top will speed you to coverage of subjects ranging from “Food” to “Business,” “Development” and “Education.” On the home page itself, you’ll see a gem: Proof that the New York Times is More Popular than the Wall Street Journal—Among Thieves, with the lowdown coming straight from the Starbucks at 73rd Street and Columbus Avenue. Now that’s a full-service neighborhood blog. Hobbyist blogs, too, can be worthwhile for both readers and creators, as I’ll make clear later on. I’m just pointing out the differences.
In the strictest sense, the Independent is a site rather than a blog; it even includes a subblog. Still, we’re not talking big bucks for serious site operators with a touch of Web savvy. The Independent runs on the omnipresent and free WordPress just like the Solomon Scandals blog, except that the owners have added a Revolutionary Magazine theme ($95?) to jazz it up.
Not all TBD affiliates can or should strive to be the Upper Westside Independent. But ideally TBD will encourage interested bloggers to aim for the Independent’s mix of comprehensiveness, liveliness and professional polish. Only 22 or so of the 82 blogs in the TBD network seem to be general neighborhood blogs or are civic-oriented in other ways, if you assume that TBC has mentioned them all on its site. Perhaps the Independent can inspire TBD-network bloggers, allowing, certainly, for limits of time, resources and experience.
Granted, the Independent could be more interactive and serve up multimedia, and in the interest of sustainability, more advertising wouldn’t hurt. Still, Editor Avi Salzman (“a native New Yorker living on the Upper West Side with my wife and our Labrador/Shiba Inu mix”) shows us the breadth of coverage that even small neighborhood sites can strive for.
Within the TBD blog network (just part of the operation from Allbritton Communications) I’d especially like to see more one-city or one-neighborhood sites with a civic focus like TBD affiliate Rockville Central’s. If enough balanced neighborhood blogs don’t happen on their own, then perhaps TBD can use some extra financial incentives, as well as expand the planned size of the approximately 50-person staff to fill in the gap.
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Brad Rouke (left photo), a blog network and public affairs veteran who publishes and founded Rockville Central, says his association with TBD already will be worth it for him; and Cindy Cotte Griffiths, the editor, is likewise enthusiastic about the network. “TBD.com,” he writes, intends to promote “individual articles throughout their site, based on geocoding.” It is “explicitly saying that bloggers’ content remains on their blogs. Someone plunks in 20850 as their ZIP Code, and they’ll see a bunch of Rockville Central articles—and the links will come back to us. I anticipate an upswing in traffic.” He prefers the shared ad model to pay-per post and notes there is “no cap to the upside.”
- TBD’s Washington area news startup: Niche blogs wooed—but no signs YET of a hyperlocal nirvana
- Smile! You’re on TBD TV—at least if you’re an affiliated blogger with Skype and the news gods beckon
- Solomon Scandals hyperlocal series so far: A list for latecomers
- How TBD Web news startup in the D.C. area will work with affiliate bloggers
- Washington Post vs. Allbritton’s TBD Web startup plans: BOTH sides could do better
TBD’s Washington area news startup: Niche blogs wooed—but no signs YET of a hyperlocal nirvana
Update, July 2: Here, including further comments from TBD. Thanks for listening. – D.R.
The TBD Web startup for local news in the D.C. area has added Allergy Life in Loudoun, U Street Girl, Rockville Central and other blogs, pushing the number of network affiliates past 70.
But I’m still not yet seeing enough commitment to a strong hyperlocal approach for the formal launch expected later this summer. Jim Brady (photo below), the Washington Post alum overseeing TBD, might be all too right when he says in effect that he doesn’t envision his operation as single-handedly dominating area news.
I won’t blame the affiliate bloggers, most of whom are probably toiling for themselves part-time out of the sheer love of it. But why not aim for more coverage of education, crime and civic matters on these sites and just a little less about the sports, restaurant and retail scenes?
The big formula for many TBD-network bloggers—as well it should be, because they didn’t start up their sites with Jim Brady in mind—currently seems to be this. Take a certain geographical area and filter it through the bloggers’ passion for sports, cooking, nightlife or whatever. Great! “Local” by itself isn’t enough, and newspapers are in trouble partly because they have not recognized this. But as a citizen and ex-daily newspaper reporter, I also want in-depth school, real estate and zoning coverage and other grubby basics, not just the wooing of big spenders, Skins fanatics and other niche targets.
No, I’m not counting out the evolving TBD, which appropriately stands for “To Be Determined”; and, in fact, as a news junky, I very much want it to succeed. A positive is that Brady and crew are promoting themselves to the D.C. community in person, and TBD has even hired “community engagement staffers.” The staff is at around 25 people and will be almost twice as large when the launch happens. To TBD’s credit, it will hold blogger workshops. So maybe with luck, some of the narrowly focused blogger-hobbyists can evolve into steady providers of comprehensive neighborhood coverage.
But for that to occur, Jim Brady will have to directly or indirectly reward his bloggers enough to sustain their interest in meeting TBD’s needs. Quasi-volunteerism, long term, can a pretty dicey way to go. While passion can make a gardening blog bloom, the challenge becomes a little more formidable if you’re truly meeting a wide variety of community needs. And 50 editors, reporters and engagement staffers covering the entire metro area will get Brady only so far, even building on Allbritton’s existing resources.
One nice wrinkle would be for Jim Brady’s bloggers to team up with restaurants or hotels near them and run videos of interview with newsmakers—residents and visiting celebrities—the way blogger Carol Joynt talks to local and national figures through her Q&A Café, not part of the TBD network. Shown above is her video interview with Oliver Stone, the Hollywood director-producer-writer. if TBD bloggers did one-on-ones in the Joynt vein, the very best of the interviews could end up on News Channel 8, owned by Allbritton—creator of the popular Politico site—which actually sees Jim Brady’s startup as more than just a Web effort alone. Who knows, perhaps Q&As with local and hyperlocal newsmakers are already in TBD’s plans. Meanwhile TBD should immediately buy video cams to its affiliate bloggers for all kinds of purposes and teach video techniques, if it isn’t doing this already.
I also wonder about another possibility within the café realm. Why not follow the example of a New Jersey newspaper and make it possible for local residents to meet the bloggers in person, get quick coaching if need be, then post online? This would be one way to generate a steady stream of local content and use staffers and affiliate bloggers as enablers rather than their doing the job entirely themselves.
Finally, I’d suggest that TBC spiffy up the bland looks of its prelaunch lab site, ASAP, and try some multimedia even now.
Hey, Jim and Editor Erik Wemple—let your people show that TBD can be compelling. How about some interviews with your affiliate bloggers about their blogs and their neighborhoods and personal passions? Ideally the three topics will overlap heavily. Good luck!
Another friendly suggestion: How about a book blogger or even, gasp, a book section? Granted, the Redskins are a bigger draw to the zillionth degree, but don’t at least a few people in the D.C. area read? As others have said and as I’ve discovered first-hand—no claims of objectivity here—the Washington Post is abysmally deficient in coverage of local writers and their works. Perhaps Brady could team up with local bookstores and libraries and create a book forum with a mix of grassroots and professional content. If L Street wants to beat TBD to this, that’s fine by me. Just—someone do it, please. An aside: I hereby disqualify myself for consideration as the proposed book blogger.
Update: OK, it’s official. Lisa Rowan ( @Lisatella ) of TBD says the company is now looking for a book blogger (presumably in the D.C. area). Any takers? She also tweets that TBD plans to do some other things I propose. Thanks, Lisa!
Update #2: Tiffany Bridge wrote a thoughtful reply to my post, where she noted that “local bloggers do this for fun.” Exactly. And that’s terrific! But maybe some local bloggers will want to be paid in return for more comprehensive coverage with more of a civic focus. If not enough do, then TBD may want to hire more staff. My concern is that even with 50 or so people after launch, TBD won’t be able to do justice to coverage of so many neighborhoods—despite the super-talented and well-intentioned people associated with the company. I’m rooting for Jim Brady to get the budget he needs.
You might also enjoy:- Smile! You’re on TBD TV—at least if you’re an affiliated blogger with Skype and the news gods beckon
- Washington Post vs. Allbritton’s TBD Web startup plans: BOTH sides could do better
- TBD D.C.-area news site not a steady riser in early Alexa stats. But let’s wait for the full story
- How TBD Web news startup in the D.C. area will work with affiliate bloggers
- Crisp, lively Web pages from promising new TBD hyperlocal site—but D.C.-oriented lead story is a BIG yawner here in Alexandria, VA