TEXTING THE NEWS
A video interview is one thing. A Q&A is another. Neither feels as personal, or as fresh, as this BuzzFeed newsletter in which editor-in-chief Ben Smith interviews presidential candidate Tim Ryan via text message. Sure, it doesn’t take a ton of effort to do, but I dig the format. It seems like you get a better sense for who Ryan is and what he’s like just from the way he texts. This idea — and the elevated version as seen in Time’s 2017 piece “Baby Heln’s First Year” from Aryn Baker, Lynsey Addario and Francesca Trianni — is a good one to borrow and employ to help audiences better understand a person.
WRITING FOR SEARCH
Search engine optimization is dead. Or it is at least as you knew it from the two-thousand-and-lates, when you were advised to cram keywords into a headline like a clown car dictionary. The key to grabbing traffic from Google and, um, Google these days is semantic search. In plain English, that means that people search like they talk. Instead of “Poynter digital tools newsletter subscribe,” folks are searching for “How can I subscribe to Poynter’s digital tools newsletter?” A lot of this is driven by the rise of voice search, like Alexa, Siri and “OK, Google.”
FREE PASSWORDS
When it comes to all things passwords, LastPass has been my tool of choice for half a decade. It creates, stores and manages passwords for me, so I don’t end up writing easy-to-crack ones or recycling them across multiple sites — both big security risks. If you’re in the market for something similar, but are turned off by LastPass’ cost or corporate ownership (it’s been part of LogMeIn’s “GoToMeeting” empire since 2015), BitWarden might be a better fit for you. Stavros Rougas, co-founder of Expertise Finder and a friend of the newsletter, recommends it as an open-source alternative.
EDIT O’CLOCK
Just a few years ago, creating and editing videos was unfathomable for most people. Equipment costs were high, software was difficult to learn and then, even if you managed to overcome those barriers, what did you do with your videos? Submit them to Cannes and hope for a laurel wreath? Cheaper digital cameras and Apple’s iMovie changed but didn’t quite revolutionize the industry. Then came cell phones with high definition cameras. And then Vine. And Tik Tok. And now, Tik Tok isn’t just democratizing video editing, it’s reshaping the media world.
NEWSLETTER BETTER
It’s been almost a year and a half since I last wrote about Substack, a minimalist newsletter provider and subscription service. The site’s popularity has exploded since then, with more than 50,000 paid subscribers, a recent and significant round of funding and the migration of seemingly every other newsletter to which I subscribe to its platform. In the wake of the
Gannett/GateHouse merger announcement, Substack co-founder Hamish McKenzie wonders what it might look like for local news organizations to build a new business model with his newsletter tool. It’s thought-provoking, but I’m not sold that Substack is up to the challenge just yet. I use the tool to publish a small personal newsletter and find that the analytics are still a little too barebones. But just like this Hadean media climate, I’m sure that’ll change.
UNDER THE RADAR
If you’ve been using your browser’s incognito mode to avoid the prying eyes of the tech giants, it’s time to think again. The feature essentially works by keeping your online history from being saved to your computer. The sites that you visit can still see everything that you do. Instead, you should compartmentalize your browsers. Use one browser for all the sites you log in to, another to browse the web, etc. Then use a variety of plugins to keep your information safe. It’s kind of a lot of work, but reclaiming your privacy once it’s gone is even harder.
NWS IN BRF
Buffer, the social media management tool, now allows users to save and manage hashtags for Instagram. #yasss #glowup #isincerelydontknowwhatimdoing
Wavve, a tool for transforming audio into more social-friendly video, now offers podcast homepages. They’re great for users and much easier to set up than other similar sites.
You’ve almost certainly seen this by now, but the on-again, off-again relationship between Facebook and the news media is back on. The tech giant will pay news outlets “millions” to license content that will live on Facebook’s servers. Hmm. To quote my friend and Tampa Bay Times editor Ernest Hooper, “That’s all I’m saying.”
Thanks for being a subscriber. I appreciate you!
Ren LaForme
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