Future Media series
Future Media series
Broadcast News: date and panelists to be announced
Tuesday June 12 [was 13], 2007: Products, services and interaction, with Bill Moggridge, co-founder, IDEO. Other participants to be confirmed.
Event reported, and future events previewed, in Design Week (UK). See ‘Moggridge to lead interaction design forum’ Design Week, 07 March 2007 [free to access for week of publication]
Weblogs linked to the event page (using Technorati).
Tuesday 20 February 2007
Business Lounge, Bush House, Strand (entrance in Aldwych), London WC2B 4PH Multimap
2007 is the year of the online newspaper in the UK. The Times Online, Telegraph and Mirror have all re-launched, the Daily Mail has created a new platform, and the Guardian and the FT are being re-developed. The scale and scope of the impact represented by the Internet have been felt across newspapers: in reporting and editing; debate and reader created material; the rise of meta publications and story syndication; alienated young audiences and general distrust; increasing costs and decreasing revenues. The newspaper industry is looking like a victim of its self-reported fears about the impact of the Internet. What can we learn from best practice in research, design, technology, journalism, editorial and business strategy about how to address these major developments and deliver the best on- and offline newspapers for real people.
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These notes are not to be cited as the opinion of the panellists, or as quotations. While we believe them to be accurate, they should only be read as a general discussion around the subject of the Forum.
Focus on solid human traits. We are seeing disaggregation but avoid jumping on the bandwagon. We still need the Metro newspaper in some contexts of use. Consider people’s ‘dead time’. Ask: ‘how do we consume news?’. With the re-aggregation of news look at the role of community. [Discusses the Polycentricity (check) appliance and the idea of roaming in the home.] Trend towards splintering and dividing attention. Increasing importance of word of mouth: after the London bombings (7/7) word got out more slowly via the traditional news media. Importance of navigating news. Tell me something honest. Comes down to content.
Most publishers are still not happy with what they are doing. People want good content. Can publishers be a kite mark for good content? Which is the master: print or online? Instead think about linking print to Web. For instance, move data to someone’s phone so they can read on the move. See Associated Newspapers’s eReader [i]: more than an adjunct to the paper. Delivers better quality of experience. Ad models are moving towards tailored and contextual ads. Publishers are becoming retail intermediaries, with affiliate deals. See the Bild.de site of the German newspaper Bild, which has a prominent shopping basket, is an example of best practice in this area. Need to move from users searching to publishers sending information. See the example of The Filter in Bath, which aim to learning from what you are listening to. The ‘agile’ development model is preferable to the waterfall model: focuses less specification and more on improving delivery with frequent product rollouts, and clear leadership. One element is the ‘product backlog’ workshops. Have used this model with the Financial Times, which has developed interactive search [see FT Search demo], which includes sliders for setting date ranges.
Avoid hypothesising about users. Context not content is key: no one uses Internet for everything. They move domains. Their lives are messy. Get out from offices, into people’s lives! Go into their environment. Move to find vs pushing content atpeople. Different models of using the Web: shallow and broad vs narrow and deep (eg: football stats vs researching holidays): in the first model, often find content getting in the way. People scan text/links/first paragraph, they don’t read: flowery text doesn”t work. Copy and paste of text loses context of use, trigger words [clarify]. Web 2.0? People jut care about the basics. People want facts first then opinion: if they get opinion first they don’t trust it. Serendipity needs to be delivered at the right point. Will digital paper work on the Tube? Have to go out and see what people are doing. [Paul’s presentation is included in a post on his site.]
Changes are taking place in the nature of paper and news. There is still a need for trust. Huge changes for journalists: once were hostile to Web, now see it as an attractive option as competition for space in the paper increases. However, danger of over-whelming them with work. Quality of news higher, as passes by sub-editors and lawyers, and, in the case of the Guardian, a Readers’ Editor. People talk about payment for music downloads. What about payment for news downloads? Difficulty of predicting the future: SMS not predicted, while fibre to the home predicted for decades. Value of e-paper, such as the Sony Reader. The Blogosphere needs an editor. How about a Daily Blogosphere publication? Consider mobile phones as a possible interface to the Web from paper. The Guardian has placed an each way bet on print (where trust is key), and on the Web. [See recent opinion piece by Victor Keegan on these themes in Guardian Technology (linked via Ma.gnolia).]
The NYTimes.com no longer refers to itself as the New York Times ‘on the Web’ – significant change. Adding functionality. Credit to the folks on the paper side: no longer see the Web as giving away content. News experience today is more of a conversation. We are always testing designs, though could do more contextual enquiry. We want to make NYTimes.com a community destination. Tom Bodkin [design director and an assistant managing editor] runs 120 person art department. We have lunch every three weeks. Discuss how to handle editors: Bodkin comes from a world where you can debate with business folks about advertising placement, etc. and believes that the Web lacked early design input, so we have interaction models today that don’t contribute to the long-term relationships between editors and readers.
Chair: what have you learned from experience?
Paul: move from being reactive to pro-active. Danger of self-referential design. If you have great content and you need to present it in right place.
Khoi: we have followed user-centred to the letter, but need to adhere more closely to the spirit. There is a danger of doing ‘executive testing’ with people who sign your pay cheques and have agendas at odds with users’.
Mike: editorial vs ergonomic design. The design and development of the back end is always under-estimated as the focus is on front end. For instance, tagging not well supported by content management systems.
Tom: our clients are 35+ and tasked with launching something online, and the young are seen as savvy. Try and be an online news source, not a newspaper online. Takes Web 2.0 discussion to wake people up.
Victor: being too geeky when Guardian Online editor. Don’t take your readers’ knowledge too much for granted, eg: Wall Street Journal spells out that the PSBR is whenever it mentions it. Problem of comment spam, lead to a sadness about people.
Surprised to learn that quality of content is key differentiator. Delivery, manipulation, response more important.
Chair: Is quality less important, or the other aspects more important?
Do people want considered opinion online? Or pleasure of Ain’t It Cool News, which is poorly presented?
Wary of deference to users. As a writer, I want to create my own audience. Importance of asserting editorial perspective.
The discussion of user focus is aimed at the designers
Victor: [Recounts story of Wired co-founder Louis Rosetto: if someone can handle reading the whole of Wired on the Web they can have it for free!] Writers want to hear from readers. Inability to classify content. Sentiment classification.
Paul: more about tools than content. People do scan online.
Tom: ability to pursue things further. Covenant of trust. People will be reviewing other articles related to yours. Doesn’t necessarily affect the content but allows you to dive in.
Victor: see NowPublic and ‘mojos’ [mobile journalists]
Tom: 8-70 year olds becoming sophisticated readers of content. [Unrelated] Challenge of summarising a story for an RSS feed.
Khoi: A 2005 survey cited that each online reader represents considerably less revenue than traditional print readers. We cannot just be a platform for news: need to offer the best possible news experience, and ancillary tools.
Chair: what are the most significant failures in online news, and how would you fix their cause?
I am an ex-journalist. I have given up RSS [as not manageable].
How much information is too much? Many online newspapers trying to present too much. It is overwhelming.
We are actually doing OK. How to identify with groups of people. Pay for [better] information? [On moving between media] How hard is it to Google something!
Not information overload but poor media literacy. Onus on media literacy. Still at the stage of cinema where people would run out of a cinema when a train came towards them. Or the 1890s Mercedes Benz stage where cars had a horse bar at the front [just in case].
I don’t like newspaper home pages covered with ads. Or newspaper sites where there is an immediate logon screen, eg: NYT
We should value journalists’ opinions. Local news tends to be inward looking when with the Web we could be global.
No mention of Slashdot and Digg. I use other people [as filters] for my news, eg: John Gruber. What about serendipitous discovery?
Tom: Digg is just a pyramid, not creating news.
Victor: I never go further with sites that require logins.
Chair: Guardian Unlimited has privileged position of being owned by a not-for-profit trust, and has been able to follow a strategy of maximising online presence in anticipation of future advertising moving online.
Tom: people more intelligent, not more sophisticated. Complexity shouldn’t lead to dumbing down.
Mike: pay per use? Logins. Business model: Financial Times believes one reader offline = 100 online. Technology will provides solutions for future of newspapers, as will sophistication and greater business savvy.
Khoi: we love Digg. Have a link to ‘seed’ it. Added ‘permalinks’ to stories that allow links from blogs to be accessible for longer [than stories accessed directly from the site]. We won’t be like Digg, eg: thumbs up/down. But may have ‘most blogged’ and ‘most Dugg’ stories.
Paul: getting people to more pages. But be careful how you use these things. [Clarify] Serving related ads. But understanding advertising industry insufficient at present.
Khoi: no [total] advertising model, other than making it look like the content [i.e.: advertorial]. We need to remember that advertising sales pay the bills.
[i] See the discussion and images at blogs.conchango.com. Uses Windows Presentation Foundation, part of Microsoft Windows Vista. See the related Microsoft Times Reader, developed in conjunction with the New York Times [Microsoft press release]. Includes ability to annotate and clip documents
Khoi Vinh is the Design Director for NYTimes.com, where he leads the in-house design team in user experience innovation. He is also the author of the popular design weblog Subtraction.com, where he writes extensively on design, technology and user experience matters of all kinds. Previously, Khoi was the co-founder of the award-winning New York design studio Behavior, LLC. He studied communication design at Otis School of Art and Design in Los Angeles, and practiced branding and graphic design in print for several years in Washington, D.C., before moving to New York.
Victor Keegan has spent most of his working life at the the Guardian as reporter, financial correspondent, deputy financial editor, economics editor, business editor, duty editor, Chief Leader Writer, Assistant Editor and Online Editor. For 11 years he was a member of the Scott Trust, owner of the Guardian, and Observer. He now writes a weekly column on the Internet and personal technology for the paper and writes for Guardian Unlimited’s Web site. With his colleague, Neil McIntosh, he introduced the Guardian’s first blogs (Technology and Games), and in 2001 started the first text message poetry competition. His latest book is Big Bang Poems by Victor Keegan (Shakespearesmonkey, 2001) ISBN 0-9540762-1-4, and his most recent initiative is opening a SLart gallery in Second Life. [See Victor’s profile on Comment is Free Guardian]
Paul Adams is a user experience Consultant with research and design consultancy Flow Interactive. He has worked in user-centred design roles since the late 1990s. Paul has consulted for clients including the Guardian, BBC, Vodafone, London Underground, Standard Life, and the UK Government. Prior to Flow, Paul was a product designer with Dyson and Faurecia. He has a MSc in Interactive Media and a BDes in Industrial Design. Paul writes the Re-Frame Customer Experience blog.
Mike co-founded Conchango, the privately held British business, technology and digital design consultancy, in 1991. His passion for technology was borne from his love affair with publishing media and entertainment. Mike was fascinated by how technology could be used to change media consumption – the way consumers behave, what they buy and what they want. Mike’s vision has placed him at the forefront of the current debate on the current shifts in the technology landscape and the future of the consumer’s behaviour online.
Tom Savigar has a long history of tracking consumer and market trends having worked his way through M&S, WGSN and Nike. As co-founder and director of Sense Worldwide, Tom worked with organisation including IDEO, the BBC, MTV and VH1, Hewlett Packard, Diageo and S C Johnson. Tom joined The Future Laboratory in 2005 as Trends Director, and currently undertakes insight and brand strategy work for the likes of Stolichnaya Red Vodka, Investec Private Bank, Gap, AmEx, Nokia, Tesco, The New Yorker, Morgan Stanley and Tilda.
Nico Macdonald has been consulting with publishers since the late 1980s, around digital production and, since the mid-1990s, models for online publishing and design. He has advised publishers including Euromoney Publications, the Guardian newspaper, Haymarket Publishing, and IAC/InterActiveCorp. He also writes about design and technology.
In preparation for the event, you may be interested to read:
‘Comment is Free,’ but designing communities is hard Nico Macdonald, Online Journalism Review, 17 August 2006. The Guardian’s attempt to build an engaging group blog further illustrates the cultural differences between running a newspaper and an online conversation.
Not your father’s media Nico Macdonald, Wordrobe, Issue .1, August 2006. If media incumbents are to survive and prosper they will need to cultivate more imagination, be bolder and take more risks.
Publishing by Design: Time to Make Human Factors a Concern Nico Macdonald, Online Journalism Review, 20 May 2004. Digital communicators allow fallacies about convergence and pre-digital models to dominate their thinking. Insights from the maturing field of human-computer interaction (HCI) may feel like a cold shower, but are in reality rays of sunshine.
The future of Weblogging Nico Macdonald, The Register, 18 April 2004. There is much to celebrate in the development of Weblogging, but the discussion of the phenomenon is often uncritical and un-ambitious. If Weblogging is the answer, what was the question?
See also articles in the Future Media group on Ma.gnolia:
If you have queries about the event please email Nico Macdonald
The Innovation Forum is intended to facilitate progress by bringing together researchers and academics, technologists and designers, business people and marketers, policy makers and administrators to share knowledge about their skills and current insights and projects. It supports the free exchange of ideas towards the end of improving people’s lives at home, at work and in society.