Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Social Media Tracker

Three news forums.  Two sites.  One week.

I examined the L.A. Times, CNN and LA Observed on Facebook and Twitter.  How did they use social media to share and gather information?  Read on to find out.

1. L.A. Times City Desk

With upwards of 20 Facebook posts per day, the L.A. Times City Desk covered a wide range of topics: local government, weather, health, education, entertainment, upcoming events (from memorial services to political rallies), sports, features, profiles, columnist pieces, midterm election politics, crime and the courts, celebrities, the economy and international, community and strange news.  Even though the coverage was extensive and included links to interesting photos, the same stories that were posted on Facebook were also tweeted verbatim on Twitter.  I would have liked to see more variation between the sites, perhaps overlapping on important stories while providing diversity in terms of feature, profile and columnist pieces.

The L.A. Times used these social media forums to try to tap into sources for their developing stories.  Here's one example: "Did any of you know Conor Lynch or see the accident? If so and you'd be willing to talk to a reporter, let me know. Thanks."  Another got 11 comments in response: "Do you surf off the SoCal coast? If so, how does news of today's shark attack make you feel? Do you see sharks often? Do you worry?"

Twitter was used for the same purpose, as exemplified when the site manager wrote someone, "Could a reporter call you? Or email? She's not on Twitter. Follow me and I can DM (Direct Message) you info."

I appreciated the honesty of the L.A. Times sites in keeping their audiences updated with their progress on reporting breaking stories: "There's been a shark attack reported in Santa Barbara County today.  We're trying to get info." Another - "LAFD is reporting a 3-vehicle crash involving a school bus in East LA. 1 person dead, as many as 50 injured. More soon" - also serves to prompt the audience to stay tuned.

I also enjoyed the personal touches like "Sorry for the bad editing on my last post. I need coffee." This post received 14 comments and 17 "likes" on Facebook, revealing that other readers agreed.

New media is a great resource for traditional print journalists (i.e., most L.A. Times reporters) to attract readers in new and exciting ways and enabling them to provide feedback.  There wasn't a story post that went by without getting "liked."

On Friday, stories were linked from Facebook to latimes.com.  This approach ended before the day was up, as these links received less responses.  The site returned to having one to two short sentence story descriptions with links to the full articles online.  Many of the posts and tweets were enticingly written, effectively designed to get readers (like me) to click on the story links to read more.

The news posts through L.A. Times social media outlets was new and different, informative and entertaining.

2. CNN

CNN's iReport Facebook page has one to five story posts per day, focusing on features and upcoming events.  I liked the daily iReport challenge, "Be a Hero for..." and the travel photo of the day.  Despite these unique elements, CNN needs to engage its audience more to obtain comments on its posts and not just "likes."  Adding more coverage from distant places, as it does sporadically with posts like "iReporters on the ground in Haiti: Treating cholera outbreak," would help the site form its niche in the expanse of online journalism, build a larger following and gain momentum.

There was too much random news coverage ("Chris Stevens, of New Richmond, WI, broke the world record with a 1810.5 pound monster pumpkin. Check out the goods" and "Monster spiders invade Seattle!!" are just two examples).  I would like to see strange news limited to one story per day and made into more of a site feature. 

CNN did a better job with its Twitter page by providing coverage of about 10 political, national and international news updates with links to the full stories on its website.  The posting of "Today's Most Intriguing People" sets CNN apart from many other news organizations with social media pages.

CNN's Twitter also covers what special guests are set to appear on tonight's Larry King Live, what's currently happening on its televised news channel, where CNN is sending its reporters and what topics will be discussed on upcoming shows as well as when those shows will air.  Here's an example: "CNN's @sanjayguptacnn & @daniellecnn are heading to Haiti to report on the cholera outbreak."

Some of its journalists' posts and stories from CNN's specialized pages are retweeted (designated by RT) on its main page: "RT @AndersonCooper: Video: Yoko Ono recounts meeting John Lenon" and "RE @CNNMoney: Be smart about buying a smartphone."

What's good about this site is that it also asks for direct feedback, as the following tweet demonstrates: "What topic should @richardquest &@alivelshi debate this Thursday on Q&A? Tweet your suggestions with #CNNQandA."

3. LA Observed

First of all, this site doesn't have a Facebook page.  Time to get on that Kevin Roderick and it wouldn't hurt your fan base to make your Facebook profile public too. 

LA Observed should provide links on a Facebook page to its original web content and breaking news updates about the journalism industry.

Thank goodness LA Observed hasn't been missing out on the social media phenomenon entirely! It provides about 10 to 20 tweets during weekdays on its Twitter page with useful information spanning topics from the newspaper industry to job opportunities, travel, weather, traffic, politics, local news from patch.com and more.

To expand its viewership, posts should also be tweeted on the weekends.  The news never stops, so neither should LA Observed.

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About Me

I'm a junior studying print journalism and political science at USC. I have worked as a freelance reporter for the up-and-coming hyperlocal news site Patch.com, covering education, municipal government and city events in Beverly Hills and West Hollywood. I enjoy reading news on the go with the handy Los Angeles Times and Associated Press applications on my iPhone, but nothing compares to reading the paper. I like watching CNN to catch up on political happenings and I look to the New York Times for its international coverage. I keep up with friends on Facebook, but detest Twitter. While growing up using a PC, I have become a fond user of Mac. Technology has intimidated me, though I have learned the basic art of Photoshop, Soundslides and Audacity by pursuing my passion for photography. In three years, I plan to be attending law school. I hope to have careers as an investigative reporter and as an attorney advocating for those who cannot afford legal representation. I love being creative and crafty! I have worked as arts and crafts director at a summer camp and I started a monthly craft program for special needs children at a downtown Los Angeles elementary school.