Media News - Thursday, February 11, 2010
BBC tells news staff to embrace social media
BBC news journalists have been told to use social media as a primary
source of information by Peter Horrocks, the new director of BBC Global
News who took over last week. He said it was important for editorial
staff to make better use of social media and become more collaborative
in producing stories. "This isn't just a kind of fad from someone who's an enthusiast of
technology. I'm afraid you're not doing your job if you can't do those
things. It's not discretionary", he is quoted as saying in the BBC
in-house weekly Ariel. Horrocks said that technology was changing journalism, adding that it
was important for the BBC to leave a programme-based mindset behind and
adapt to new technologies. Internationally, news organisations already have professionalised their
approach towards user content and social media. For CNN the deep
integration of social media marked an important step in improving their
reporting and get closer to their sources – as seen recently with the
coverage of the Haiti earthquake. For BBC news editors, Twitter and RSS readers are to become essential
tools, says Horrocks. Aggregating and curating content with attribution
should become part of a BBC journalist's assignment; and BBC's
journalists have to integrate and listen to feedback for a better
understanding of how the audience is relating to the BBC brand. Following the creation of a social media editor post in October, this
marks another fundamental change in the Beep's attitude towards social
media. (The Guardian)
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