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June Newsletter

From the convention: News executives hammer home need to reinvent June 24, 2010

SALT LAKE CITY — Newspapers must innovate and experiment to survive, a group of news executives told the first general session of APSE’s convention Thursday.

Whether the experiment involves website pay walls, sharing content, adding video features, increasing commentary and analysis, or inviting fans to meet a writer at a sports bar, the industry needs to try new things, the panel said during the “State of the Union” discussion.

“We need a new vision of who we are,” said David Shribman, editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. “The word I’m using is utility – to have utility and be a utility.”

Newspapers, he said, need to envision themselves as essential as an electric utility and figure out ways to provide information that will make them necessary to their communities.

In a wide-ranging discussion that swung from the industry’s financial struggles to the lingering quality of its standards, the panelists kept returning to the theme of reinvention.

Marty Kaiser, editor of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, described how one savvy social-networking beat writer arranged a meeting with his readers at a bar. Sixty to 100 fans showed up.

“We’ve got to figure out what we can do best, then rely on our expertise,” he said, a strategy that will protect newspapers from ESPN and other upstarts. “We’ve got to engage with our fans. Everybody in the newsroom has got to take responsibility for the future.”

Ted Power, president and publisher of the Reno Gazette-Journal, asked his staff to take that kind of responsibility during a relaunch of the Sunday paper.
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“I asked every employee in the building, ‘What are you going to do about Sunday?’ What are you going to do to make Sunday better and better and better?”

Rick Edmonds, media business analyst at the Poynter Institute, said small newspapers may have the most advantageous competitive position because they don’t face the same breadth of competition that large papers do.

He sees overall newspaper revenues heading up at the end of this year after years of decline.

Tim Franklin of the National Sports Journalism Center at Indiana University served as the moderator of the session.
Brad Lehman is the Texas Sports Editor of the Houston Chronicle and can be reached at 713-362-7886 or at bradley.lehman@chron.com.

Officers

Michael Anastasi

Michael Anastasi

President
Salt Lake Tribune

Gerry Ahern

Gerry Ahern

First Vice President
USA Today

Tim Stephens

Tim Stephens

Second Vice President
Orlando Sentinel

BenBrigandi

Ben Brigandi

Third Vice President
Williamsport (Pa.)
Sun-Gazette

Jack Berninger

Jack Berninger

Executive Director
Richmond Times-Dispatch (retired)

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