1 / 21

First Years of Your Journalism Career

First Years of Your Journalism Career. Quick Tips. Do what you love as high up as you can Take chances, ask for forgiveness Need a boss that is invested in your goals and your future, not just what you can do for them. Size of Workplace. Bigger markets: bigger audience and readership

heidi-sosa
Télécharger la présentation

First Years of Your Journalism Career

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. First Years of Your Journalism Career

  2. Quick Tips • Do what you love as high up as you can • Take chances, ask for forgiveness • Need a boss that is invested in your goals and your future, not just what you can do for them

  3. Size of Workplace • Bigger markets: bigger audience and readership • Smaller markets: can try different types of jobs and will give you a sense of community

  4. Grad School • Not for everyone • Undergraduate journalism degree is fine • Experience is most important • Important to be out working on your skills • Digital tools are the equalizer

  5. Skills • Interesting angles/ideas • Headline writing (helps to sell it on social media) • Excel and math for data journalism: Data reporters will get hired • Be in love with storytelling and people • Curiosity

  6. Transitioning to Job World • Fend for yourself: Nobody controls every part of your job • Negotiation: salary, expenses, vacation • Job is not your entire life, need a balance

  7. Moving Jobs • Know your endgame, make sure everything you do is a step on the way • But, your endgame can change • Be flexible and open to opportunities • Need to progress in both your career and your life • Support you and your family

  8. Getting What You Want • Get a boss who cares • Prove that what you want to do works • But, understand the business side

  9. Viral Content

  10. Facebook • Shorten posts: • Headline has a 100 character limit • Use a link shortener • Description should keep suspense • Can tell the audience to do something (Like and Share if...) • Image should be human or curiosity-inducing

  11. Twitter • Include pictures • Breaks up monotonous text • #Hashtags • 1 or 2: Using more does not bring more people • Put at end of tweet (with links and other things) • Never in copy: awkward and choppy

  12. Engage with Followers • Questions: Do not use if it is not engaging • Use emotions to connect to people • Be human

  13. Garnering Attention • Insert most interesting part in post • But, leave suspense • Make sure you are up-to-date on pop culture

  14. Garnering Attention • Introduce controlled chaos • Words you would not commonly find • Word things in an interesting way • Pictures • Anything to break up monotony of scrolling • ALL CAPS for WATCH:, VIDEO:, PHOTOS:

  15. Garnering Attention • Timing: Use analytics or an app (such as Crowdbooster) to post at best time • Think inside the head of your readers • Short pieces in morning • Long pieces at night

  16. Tiny Team Visual Journalism

  17. Always Be Visualizing • Think of how visuals will add to/tell story • Effective/simple is better than fancy • Work in teams • Avoid ambitious projects with impossible deadlines

  18. Insource When Possible • Train your newsroom • Resources: • Charting: Data Wrapper, Spreadsheets, High Charts, Charts.js • Survey: Google Forms, Google Monkey • Mapping: CartoDB, Mapbox, Mapbox.js, Leaflet.js, D3/D3 Datamaps • Art department/web developers at the organization • Share skills

  19. Reusability • Dont do same work again • Use open-source tools • Mother Jones: newsquiz, CYOA, simple vector mapper • NPR: Pym.js, App Template, Copytext.py • Can crowd source data

  20. Think Mobile First • Have users in mind • Goal: make info easy to get • Start small (mobile) to make sure it works • But, desktop-first works if it is simple

  21. Projects to Build Skills • Start super simple: quiz or map • Think about what stories need, learn how to do one thing at a time

More Related