By David Beard 
http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=171011#

The following is an edited version of a speech I gave recently at
Allegheny College in Meadville, Pa.

So much gloom and doom, most of it warranted. You could almost predict
this future-of-journalism talk. But let's play contrarian. Let's focus
on great reasons to pay attention to -- or participate in -- creating,
gathering and distributing news and information. Here are 10 hopeful
points about the future of journalism.

1. Anybody can play

A clever, useful idea can work without barriers to entry. No printing
press or reporters are required. Take "A Football Report," for example.
This international soccer site has been around since mid-July and
already has partnerships with English and Spanish companies. It has a
Twitter page, YouTube channels and thousands of Facebook fans. And the
creators? They're teenagers.

I'd like to tell you about another person. Steve Smith, a guy from
Watertown, N.Y., told me he read news sites voraciously and submitted
ideas almost every day to a media blogger. Then one day he thought: Why
not blog himself, put the interesting stories up and add local stories
as well? The result? www.newzjunky.com. It's a great site that
aggregates news from northern New York state, New York City and New
England.

2. You can make a difference

A woman in Newton, Mass., created a popular site called Tehran Bureau.
>From the living room of her parents' home, Kelly Golnoush Niknejad
collected e-mails, photos and posts from her native Iran and put them up
on her site. Her news alerts and Twitter feeds became go-to resources
for mainstream media in the post-election tumult this summer in Iran.

3. Neighbors can help

The News-Press in Fort Myers, Fla. asked its readers to e-mail their
water usage and billing information. It revealed vast discrepancies in
charges that forced major changes by a utility. Crowd-sourcing works.
Ask users to weigh in on what they think of x and y.

4. Be your own paperboy/girl

Paperboys/girls just aren't around much anymore. Bookmarking a site's
home page feels kind of 1999-ish as well. So it's up to you to find the
reader who would want your content. You must get the word out about your
work through sites such as Twitter, Facebook, Digg, Fark, Reddit and
StumbleUpon. Use specific sites for specific niches.

Use your digital nativity. Eric Kuhn just turned 23. While still at
Hamilton College, he helped the NBA reach out to female fans and Katie
Couric link up with moms. He had a Huffington Post column, and got a job
in July on CNN. He has leveraged Facebook, Twitter, Digg and StumbleUpon
to work with established media to find new markets. And so can you.

5. Love your town and the topic you're covering

Parenting, the environment, movies, pets. If you're going to cover one
of these topics, make sure you've got the personal interest -- or the
economic interest -- to sustain it. Pursue your passion and share it
with others.

6. Better curated sites will bring better readership and ad dollars

Aim for strong writing and irresistible headlines. Get big guest stars
to blog for you. Pepper your entries with links that add more
credibility to your work -- documents, audio interviews, transcripts,
articles from respected sources. The more transparent your information,
the more authoritative you can be.

7. Ad dollars aren't the only way to go

Look into affiliate memberships, event promotion and the PayPal
voluntary contribution approach. In the yearlong blog project that
inspired the movie "Julie & Julia," fans helped buy Julie Powell's food
while she tried to make 524 Julia Child recipes in a year.

This summer, we created an affiliate membership on Amazon. At the same
time, we asked readers to rate the 100 best New England books. This
feature didn't have an ad sponsor, but we created a "click to buy"
feature and made 15 percent from every book that readers were inspired
to buy.

8.  Ideally, the ''essentials'' remain from print

As newspapers shrink, the better ones are thinking deeply about who
remains. The city hall reporter. The police reporter. The education
reporter. The local gossip columnist, the obit writer and sports
reporters.

The staff may be smaller, but hopefully most of the news will remain.
Newspapers, such as the Globe, also are working creatively with
freelancers and nearby university programs to cover news that might not
get reported as well. Some foundation-sponsored outfits, such as
ProPublica, aim to fill the void of investigative reporting.

9. Recruit, recruit, recruit

If you are interested in becoming an "infopreneur," then search for
knowledgeable and articulate sources, find interesting people to blog
for you, take photos and present videos and animation. Give them the
keys and let them drive.

10. Embrace technology

I've given this short shrift here, but new ways to display news and
information -- from maps, to mobile applications, to highlighted
information, to very Web 1.0 things such as photo slideshows and news
galleries -- are integral to the future of online platforms.

Let's find the reader again by creating Flickr accounts and Facebook
pages and not make the reader find us.

David Beard is editor of Boston.com, the Web site of The Boston Globe.
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