http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/05/business/media/05yahoo.html?_r=1&ref=media

At Yahoo, Using Searches to Steer News Coverage
By JEREMY W. PETERS
Published: July 4, 2010

Welcome to the era of the algorithm as editor.

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J. Emilio Flores for The New York Times
James A. Pitaro of Yahoo in the newsroom area at the company's headquarters.

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For as long as hot lead has been used to make metal type, the model
for generating news has been top-down: editors determined what
information was important and then shared it with the masses.

But with the advent of technology that allows media companies to
identify what kind of content readers want, that model is becoming
inverted.

The latest and perhaps broadest effort yet in democratizing the news
is under way at Yahoo, which on Tuesday will introduce a news blog
that will rely on search queries to help guide its reporting and
writing on national affairs, politics and the media.

Search-generated content has been growing on the Internet, linked to
the success of companies like Associated Content, which Yahoo recently
bought, and Demand Media, which has used freelance writers to create
an online library of more than a million instructional articles.

But the use of search data has been limited more to the realm of “how
to” topics like “How do I teach my dog sign language?” than questions
about the news of the day like “Where does Elena Kagan stand on
corporate campaign donations?”

Yahoo software continuously tracks common words, phrases and topics
that are popular among users across its vast online network. To help
create content for the blog, called The Upshot, a team of people will
analyze those patterns and pass along their findings to Yahoo’s news
staff of two editors and six bloggers.

The news staff will then use that search data to create articles that
— if the process works as intended — will allow them to focus more
precisely on readers.

“We feel like the differentiator here; what separates us from a lot of
our competitors is our ability to aggregate all this data,” said James
A. Pitaro, vice president of Yahoo Media. “This idea of creating
content in response to audience insight and audience needs is one
component of the strategy, but it’s a big component.”

In strictly economic terms, the power of technology that identifies
reader trends is incredibly potent as a draw for advertisers. Yahoo
paid more than $100 million this year for Associated Content, which
pays writers small sums to write articles based on queries like “How
do I tile a floor?” or “How do I make French toast?”

“They have a tremendous potential power to wring higher value
advertisers out of targeted content,” said Ken Doctor, a media analyst
and author of “Newsonomics: Twelve New Trends That Will Shape the News
You Get.”

To demonstrate the power of search technology as editor, Mr. Pitaro is
fond of telling a story about one of the most popular articles to
appear on Yahoo’s sports news site during the 2008 Summer Olympics.

Yahoo had been monitoring search traffic patterns and noticed that its
users kept trying to find out why divers would shower after they got
out of the water. So Yahoo sports writers looked into the question and
posted an item titled “The mystery of the showering divers.” (It turns
out the warm water from the showers keeps divers’ muscles limber.
Their muscles contract when they emerge from the warm water into the
cool air.)

“So while our competition was covering a lot of the bigger, broader
topics, we were covering topics that were a little bit more behind the
scenes,” Mr. Pitaro said.

This niche approach to the news, filling in gaps in the coverage where
other media outlets are not providing content, is the best way Mr.
Pitaro feels The Upshot (at news.yahoo.com/upshot) can gain traction
in a crowded media landscape.

“If you’re a news start-up, focusing on breadth would be the wrong way
to go,” he said. “What we’re seeing is the market getting increasingly
fragmented. And because of that you can survive by owning a niche
category.”

The Yahoo model, which flies in the face of a centuries-old approach
to disseminating the news, is certain to be viewed suspiciously by
journalism purists.

“There’s obviously an embedded negative view toward using any type of
outside information to influence coverage,” said Robertson Barrett,
chief strategy officer of Perfect Market Inc., a company that helps
news organizations make their content more detectable to search engine
algorithms.

Mr. Barrett, a former publisher for the Web site of The Los Angeles
Times, said many mainstream media outlets would start to come around
to the idea if they did not feel pressured to let it affect their
coverage.

“There’s a middle ground here in which publishers and news
organizations can learn a lot about their audiences and what they want
in real time and take that into account generally,” he said. “But that
does not need to affect the specific story assignments.”

Yahoo news editors say they intend to be selective in using the data.
The tricky question for Yahoo becomes how much it will insulate its
editorial decision making from the very businesslike thinking that has
made Associated Content and Demand Media successful.

“Essentially those in charge of analytics-driven content say, ‘These
journalists, they only got it half right. Why produce all this stuff
that doesn’t make money. Just produce the stuff that sells,’ ” Mr.
Doctor said.

Asked whether he was concerned that signing up with Yahoo had rendered
his career as an editor obsolete, The Upshot’s editor, Andrew Golis,
laughed.

“I certainly don’t hope that,” Mr. Golis said, adding that he and
Yahoo’s other journalists would use the search data as a supplemental
tool. “The information is valuable because editors can integrate it
into their decision making. It’s an asset. It’s a totally amazing and
useful tool that we have at Yahoo. But it does not lead Yahoo
editorial content.”

A version of this article appeared in print on July 5, 2010, on page
B1 of the New York edition.


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