By Jason Gillikin, on February 21st, 2010%
The Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism’s “2009 State of News Media” report contains an interesting section on citizen journalism. The report concedes that there has been a growing number of citizen-media sites, but that “citizen news sites provided much less reporting (57%), as well as opinion and special content like calendar items” on the day . . . → Read More: Citizen Journalism: A Primer
By Jason Gillikin, on October 30th, 2009%
Paul Keep, the newly installed editor of The Grand Rapids Press, spoke Wednesday on the future of newspapers, in prepared remarks delivered to the Press Club of Grand Rapids.
Keep’s thesis is straightforward: The Internet and the global recession have proved to be a double-whammy, slashing at advertising revenue and forcing newspapers to make sacrifices such as reporter layoffs and reduced . . . → Read More: Journalism’s Future
By Jason Gillikin, on September 6th, 2009%
In a perfect world, a potential client will beg for your product or service, showing up at your office with large bags filled with unmarked currency and offering to loan his first-born child to you as free office help.
Of course, the world is hardly perfect. These days, clients actually want something of value in exchange for . . . → Read More: Understanding ROI
By Jason Gillikin, on July 7th, 2009%
There is some discussion among business experts that today’s anemic economy will (and should) push more and more citizens into moonlighting on the side. Some laid-off white-collar folks may well freelance out of necessity and never return to the 9-to-5 corporate world.
Whether this is true or not is irrelevant. What is important is that no matter . . . → Read More: Time to Freelance?
By Jason Gillikin, on June 2nd, 2009%
So far, 2009 has not been kind to the newspaper industry. High-profile publications including the Seattle Post-Intelligencer are folding after a century or more of continuous operation. Layoffs are proceeding apace, and subscriber rates are plummeting.
There have been plenty of post-mortems about this, ranging from the spread of the New Media to cutbacks in traditional newspaper . . . → Read More: … And the Press Goes Silent
By Jason Gillikin, on May 28th, 2009%
The market is soft … businesses are laying off employees or closing their doors … credit is tight … major projects are being canceled left and right.
A bad time to strike out as a business consultant, right?
Well, maybe no – if you are trying to sell a prospect on something that might have made sense a year . . . → Read More: Good Time for Consulting?
By Jason Gillikin, on April 25th, 2009%
The trend grows, and it grows wearisome.
Blogging — an excellent tool for mass communication — is turning into a vanity production of epic proportions among those whose ego ought to remain shrouded by their press passes.
It’s one thing for Joe Sixpack to keep an online diary. It’s quite another for seasoned veterans of the news media . . . → Read More: Blogging for Fun and Profit
By Jason Gillikin, on March 29th, 2009%
Nothing on the Web is private.
I am a member of an online politics discussion forum that spans several Yahoo! Groups. From the outset, some of the groups had message archives that were open to the public, and some were closed.
Recently, it was debated internally whether to open some of those closed groups — in essence, to . . . → Read More: Beware the Omnipotent Search Engine
By Jason Gillikin, on February 23rd, 2009%
One of the joys of being an independent writer and communication consultant is the privilege of helping new and aspiring writers to find their voice. Yesterday, I enjoyed a wonderful meal and extended conversation with the first editor to give me a chance; he has been out of the industry since leaving his job with a . . . → Read More: The Business of Writing
Recent Comments