The Center for Cooperative Media at Montclair State
University has produced a whitepaper called
“Health and wealth in local news,” in which the center “sought to answer
the question: what do successful online local news sites look like today,”
Poynter reports.
Researchers interviewed 43 online local news
publishers who represent outlets across the U.S. that produce substantive,
independent, multi-sourced local journalism. Almost all are of the outlets are
digital-native, and all are for-profit commercial enterprises, according to the
center and Poynter.
For this project, researchers zeroed in on
what it takes for an outlet to survive financially. The factors focused on were
background of the publisher, experimentation with different revenue streams,
and the wealth of the surrounding community.
Thirty-three 33 of publishers (77 percent)
listed advertising as their primary source of revenue, with 87 percent of those
who met the success criteria saying so and 65 percent of struggling publishers
saying so as well.
Researchers also found that being in and/or
serving a community that has at least a moderate level of affluence was key to
success; 96 percent of thriving outlets were located in a community with
middle, high, or mixed-income (meaning the population included both low- and
high-income people).
Only one news site that the publisher
identified as serving a low-income community met researchers’ criteria for
success.
News and Tech
No comments:
Post a Comment
For now, we're opening this blog to Anonymous comments. This will continue as long as civility rules. Disagree as you may, just keep it clean and stay on topic. No profanity, and no name calling. We reserve the right to moderate such comments, though the person who made it may come back and reword their message in a more civil way.