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101 ways to improve your news site

By Jonathan Dube

Here are 101 ways to improve your news site. How many does your site do?

Take a look and then add your own great ideas to the list...

  1. Post a form at the end of a breaking news story asking witnesses to send in details of what they saw -- and then add the information you can verify to the story.
  2. Invite anyone in your community to write Weblogs for your news site
  3. Take the best content from Weblogs on your news site (now that you've got so many) and publish them in your newspaper.
  4. Integrate headlines from your competition into your Web site
  5. Create deals with other newspapers in your state to share content at no cost. Then stop paying for The Associated Press and hire new newsroom staffers with the savings.
  6. Create games around the news for wireless devices
  7. Get the people behind the glass doors to require that at least 10% of all deals print/TV-side ad sales folks make include online components -- or else they don't get their bonuses.
  8. Give everyone in your company one day off a month to work on whatever project they want or simply just brainstorm new ideas
  9. Build a real estate database and section so detailed and useful it becomes the MLS for your community. (realestate.nytimes.com)
  10. Create a staff development plan so that everyone in your company gets pertinent online news training within the next 12 months.
  11. Design your registration system so that you have an easy way to get updated information when people move, so your data stays more valuable to advertisers
  12. Give people who register for your site incentive to keep giving you updated information.
  13. Ask readers their interests when they register and only serve them ads related to them when they visit your site.
  14. Offer a subscription where people can view the entire site ad-free for an extra charge.
  15. Double the size of all photos on your site for a week. See how readers react. Wanna bet you decide to keep at least some of them larger permanently?
  16. Don't just add "Discuss story" links to stories -- include the comments at the bottom or on the right rail of the page and make them part of the visible story
  17. Create two different home pages -- one with dayparting and one without -- and deliver each to half your users randomly, and compare
  18. Put only local news and content on your home page
  19. Let every reader create their own "reader home pages" where they can pick what stories to lead with -- and let them be public and make it easy for other reader to bookmark them.
  20. Promote something online that will be in the next day's paper or on the next newscast -- and then don't post that story online
  21. Set up a service so that readers can get alerts any time a story they've already read gets updated -- or corrected
  22. Create RSS feeds focused on niche topics your site covers.
  23. Design an algorithm to automatically hotlink the names of any major newsmakers in your community to bio pages and recent stories about them
  24. Build dedicated pages for every neighborhood in your circulation area with useful local information, links and related headlines from your site automatically pulled in
  25. Create online memorial pages for every obituary -- not just those of celebrities -- so friends and relatives can post their memories.
  26. Create an army of citizen reporters to help cover hyper-local news your organization has abandoned, like community meetings or Little League games.
  27. Have every reporter on staff spend a day only writing and producing for the Web.
  28. Offer readers inning-by-inning or quarter-by-quarter SMS game updates for major local teams.
  29. Create a local crime database searchable by zip code and street address -- and integrate it into your online real estate section.
  30. Create a local school quality database searchable by zip code and street address -- and integrate it into your online real estate section.
  31. Put your city or state's restaurant inspection database online -- and integrate it into your restaurant review section.
  32. Ban all forms of intrusive advertising from your site for good
  33. Let your readers post certain classifieds for free.
  34. Critique your Web site -- along with your newspaper or newscast -- at the beginning of every budget meeting
  35. Use your Web site to avoid censoring content -- i.e. put any gruesome war photos online behind a disclaimer, rather than not publishing at all
  36. Package all your best travel material into a special site aimed just at tourists for your community
  37. Spend an entire week only getting news from your web site (no newspaper, no TV, no other sites). Write a list of things you felt you missed out on, and then figure out a way to get that on your site.
  38. Buy a TiVo for your newsroom so reporters can pause and rewind anytime there's breaking news on TV -- or a live press briefing -- and get exact quotes.
  39. Create a daily morning e-mail aimed at teens and 20-year-olds that summarizes the news in a hip and lively way
  40. Build a feature into your site enabling readers to add notes to any stories on your site, like Amazon's new A9.com site does.
  41. Offer free access to all your archives to newspaper subscribers -- but only to subscribers.
  42. Offer readers access to real estate ads a day or two earlier online (or send via e-mail) and charge extra for this access or limit to print subscribers
  43. Develop a database of e-mail addresses and phone numbers of readers who you can tap for quotes when writing stories on deadline
  44. Offer an online coupon section
  45. Click-and-buy prints option on all online photos
  46. Have readers send in photos and make slide shows from them
  47. Pick the best posts on your message boards and highlight them in separate features -- or on your home page -- so readers don't have to dig through
  48. Create timely special packages from archived content and sell them to sponsors
  49. Set up online town hall meetings (i.e. chats) with local political candidates
  50. Create Web-based publishing tool so classified advertisers can enter their information themselves, saving you work (should still be proof-read)
  51. Find another media company in town to partner with... Find a media company from out of town to partner with
  52. Create a downloadable MP3 section and let local bands upload their tunes for readers to download
  53. Create multimedia obituaries online and charge extra for them. Then
  54. Create multimedia wedding announcements online and charge extra for them
  55. Use the Weblog format to cover a breaking news event
  56. Figure out which writers or TV reporters always write too long for air or the paper and offer them an online column
  57. Have popular columnists supplement their regular column with an e-mail extra... Only let newspaper subscribers get it
  58. Let readers vote on their favorite local school sports player and give winners a symbolic award
  59. Have newspaper or station top editor send e-mails to all e-mail subscribers occasionally to let them know how the newspaper or TV station is improving
  60. Hold short story contests and print winners online
  61. Tell stories through online games created in Flash or other tools (i.e. let readers try balancing the budget)
  62. Tell an entire story that would normally be written in plain text entirely through a slide show
  63. Instead of linking bylines to e-mail addresses, link them to staff bios with photos and e-mail info so readers get to know you
  64. Sell prints of your front pages online, plus current and back issues
  65. Make online display ads interactive -- games, quizzes, etc -- to grab readers attention (and of course charge extra for these!)
  66. Offer special fan e-mail newsletters for local sports teams
  67. Give all reporters digital audio recorders and digital cameras to take out on stories to get material for posting on Web
  68. Wire all newsroom telephones to a recording system so reporters can easily record phone interviews (after asking sources' permission) and put online
  69. Send readers news alerts through instant messenger tools
  70. Allow advertisers to put photos online with classified ads and signal to newspaper readers to go online to see them
  71. Create special news alerts for whatever topics are hot among local readers
  72. Create topic-specific photo galleries on random, fun topics (dog slide show; smiling people slide show; etc.)
  73. Use the Web to ask readers for fresh ideas. Actually read them. Choose at least one and actually do it.
  74. Rotate content on your home page based on dayparting usage.
  75. Get someone to audiotape big local high school sports games and post the sound online
  76. Have sports writers blog live from local school sports games they're covering
  77. Have everyone in your organization trade jobs with someone else in a different department at some point
  78. If you're the boss, work the worst shift/job on your team for a whole week. Watch your employees respect leap, and your knowledge of your newsroom grow.
  79. Develop an online corrections policy (or reassess and improve one if you actually have one).
  80. Add online elements to your company-wide ethics policy (or create a company-wide ethics policy that covers the web if no policy exists)
  81. Make sure all ads are clearly labeled. For real.
  82. Create a reader-appreciation week and have no pop-ups or animated ads all week.
  83. Offer readers an ad-free version of your site for an extra cost
  84. Give local politicians or newsmakers or experts Weblogs on your site.
  85. Link datelines on all stories to pages with maps and information about the location (perhaps on a partner encyclopedia site)
  86. Create a whole special section online for younger readers. Find local student journalists to help write for it
  87. Create a special section on your Web site for readers who speak a different language (that has a large population in your area); translate some stories and write special features for them
  88. Create a site-wide disaster coverage plan
  89. Make training a priority and figure out a way to give everyone on the staff some sort of training within the next year
  90. When local big shots die, set up online memorials on your site or via legacy.com
  91. When print or TV journalists contribute something impressive to the Web site, applaud them in front of the whole company -- maybe post their work for all to see -- to encourage others to do so
  92. Create internal companywide awards for good online work
  93. Launch a public service project online, tied to some ongoing issue or project in the community; invite readers to submit their ideas online and pass them on to the local government
  94. Create a template in Flash or another tool for a breaking news multimedia package so that when big news happens, you can slap it in and publish before the traffic spike has passed
  95. Cut the number of links on your home page in half. See if your traffic and page views change at all.
  96. Offer readers a way to save articles they like on your site for later reading and create a personal page for them with all of those stories
  97. Interview your reporters on major stories and post the audio or video online
  98. Have reporters answer reader questions online (live or not) about a big story and then post the answers
  99. Let readers vote on their favorite stories and photos and post those lists online
  100. Each afternoon post something on your home page telling readers something special that will be in the next day's newspaper or on that evening's newscast. Don't post that online.
  101. Do at least one thing on this list.

(Updated from last year's list of 60)

Got more ideas? Post them below...

Jun 04, 2004 | E-MAIL | SAVE | PRINT | PERMALINK | DISCUSS(10)



Discussion

10 comments about '101 ways to improve your news site'

some excellent ideas.

Posted by ted rowfast at June 7, 2004 12:17 PM

Implement trackback on your site so that people know who's linking to stories.

Posted by Barry Parr at June 7, 2004 4:58 PM

Make your geographic location obvious on every story or feature.
Local stories are very often picked up by sites like news.google.com -- the reader may be from a very different area or even a different country and not know where your particular "Springfield" might be.

Posted by Jim O'Connell at June 8, 2004 2:06 AM

I suggest that you replace #83 with "Audit your site to ensure that elements are not being duplicated unnecessarily. (See #14 for details.)"

Posted by Waldo Jaquith at June 8, 2004 3:00 PM

What about news sites adding a health section to their site so that users can find information that is personally relevant and not just late breaking? The site's sales team would then be able to offer sponsorship opportunities to local hospitals and medical centers. I work for a company that creates and licenses health content so my suggestion may be a little self serving… doesn’t mean it isn’t a good idea though right?

Posted by Rafael Cosentino at June 10, 2004 12:47 PM

WOW, what a great list!!! I have learned alot:-) Please keep up the good work, I will check back again soon.

Thanks, Tim

Posted by Tim Lee at June 13, 2004 2:18 PM

Excellent ideas! I bought a very good domain name recently and I'd like to have a news site set up there. Your ideas came in handy.
Larry, web designer

Posted by Larry, web designer at December 20, 2004 5:15 AM

go to http://www.maxpages.com/swisschris87 and http://maxpages.com/vote.cgi

Posted by chris at January 9, 2006 5:46 PM

Make your geographic location obvious on every story or feature.
Local stories are very often picked up by sites like news.google.com -- the reader may be from a very different area or even a different country and not know where your particular "Springfield" might be.
hikaye
hikayeler
ßarkı sözĂŒ
ßarkı sözleri

Posted by highsound at July 4, 2007 4:00 AM

What about news sites adding a health section to their site so that users can find information that is personally relevant and not just late breaking? The site's sales team would then be able to offer sponsorship opportunities to local hospitals and medical centers. I work for a company that creates and licenses health content so my suggestion may be a little self serving? doesn?t mean it isn?t a good idea though right?

gazeteler
gazete
oyun
oyunlar

Posted by highsound at July 4, 2007 4:01 AM



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16 Weblogs reference '101 ways to improve your news site'

what I'm reading...
Trackback excerpt:   ...when I should be wrapping up finals: I'm not sure about the legitimacy of the source, but this article making the rounds is pretty intense: Bush's Erratic Behavior Worries White House Aides: In interviews with... [Read More]

Posted on Strangechord at June 7, 2004 8:31 PM

http://www.confusedkid.com/pathways/archives/003206.html
Trackback excerpt:   101 ways to improve your news site... [Read More]

Posted on Pathways at June 7, 2004 9:03 PM

1 not great idea for online news
Trackback excerpt:   Steve Outing praises the "101 ways to improve your news site" post by Jonathan Dube of Cyberjournalist.net. One of the "fresh ideas" that Outing specifically mentions is this: Buy a TiVo for your newsroom so reporters can pause and rewind... [Read More]

Posted on Arguing with signposts... at June 8, 2004 4:32 PM

101 ways to improve your news site
Trackback excerpt:   101 ways to improve your news site (see also: Ideas for Online Publications: Lessons From Blogs, Other Signposts; Highlights from the International Symposium on Online Journalism)... [Read More]

Posted on macdaraconroy.com linklog at June 9, 2004 10:54 AM

Why can't a newspaper be more like a blog? Part II: Comments
Trackback excerpt:   Every year, newspapers hold conferences about online news and they invite the people who run Slashdot, Kuro5hin, and other geeky community sites to speak to them. They listen raptly to tales of how to build community online. And then... [Read More]

Posted on MediaSavvy at June 10, 2004 10:28 AM

Why can't a newspaper be more like a blog? Part V: Community and karma
Trackback excerpt:   Every blog is part of multiple communities. MediaSavvy is part of the online publishing, news, telecom, and Web theory communities. You can tell by looking at the list of blogs (the blogroll) on my nav bar. I link to those... [Read More]

Posted on MediaSavvy at June 10, 2004 7:42 PM

Cleaning out the bookmarks
Trackback excerpt:   Bundles of links I've been collecting... [Read More]

Posted on clock -- watching time, the only true currency at July 14, 2004 10:37 PM

what I'm reading...
Trackback excerpt:   ...when I should be wrapping up finals: I'm not sure about the legitimacy of the source, but this article making the rounds is pretty intense: Bush's Erratic Behavior Worries White House Aides: In interviews with a number of White House... [Read More]

Posted on Strangechord at October 23, 2004 2:14 AM

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