Online Journalism News
Economist 'builds buzz' by tipping off bloggers about unpublished content
The Economist Group is using the power of the blogosphere to build 'buzz' for its political stories before they are published.Having identified a group of influential US political bloggers, the media company gives content to these individuals in order to begin circulation, Mike Seery, chief information officer of The Economist Group, told delegates at an AOP forum, in London yesterday.
Seery's comments came in a discussion with Dr Dietmar Schantin, director of IFRA's Newsplex project, about how to increase page views online.
Schantin, who advised the Telegraph Group on its move to a fully integrated newsroom, said he was aware of the importance of blogs in driving up viewing figures.
He said blogs and aggregation sites have become the main source for links to newspaper sites as this is where most of their content comes from.
"What we've found to be very successful for getting views is to actually engage with bloggers," said Seery.
"In the US we identified the 100 most important political bloggers and we effectively give them content before it's published in print, so that it builds a buzz around the thing before it's there.
"It takes work and it's not the exclusives you might get in a national daily here [in the UK], but it's the sort of thing that create a big buzz and brings lots of traffic the next day," he added.
Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
blogging
|
economist
|
mike seery
|
aop forum
|
Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.
Got a story? Call our news team on +44 (0)1273 384290 or email them.
Other recent news
News feed- Thomson Reuters launches Formula One website
- French pro-am news website Rue89 gets million euro investment
- NetDoctor to launch online TV service
- ITN to run contextual ads with video content on Bebo
- Cosmopolitan.co.uk traffic doubles after relaunch
- >> more news
Most commented on
- Greenslade leaves NUJ because of new media debate
- Birmingham Post goes 'web-first' with site relaunch
- Journalism.co.uk exposes the ease of accessing private information on social networks
- Live: first ever online broadcast of a UK newspaper's editorial conference
- Future of NUJ's The Journalist magazine 'under review'
Related news
- UK journalists leading the way with blogs and video, says European study
- Liveblogging has digital recruitment potential, says RBI user content specialist
- Sky News bloggers to support new awards for young journalists
- Lancashire Evening Post goes live for feature on UK pub industry
- Live: first ever online broadcast of a UK newspaper's editorial conference
Features
Features feed- Interview: Alex Ballantyne, MD of Hearst Digital 'Why rush? We're building properties for the medium to long term, not short-term gain'
- James Du Bern, Current UK: "nobody delivers news in a way that’s adapted to how young people consume media"
- Telegraph.co.uk breaking news strategy - key staff as 'story owners'
- Freelancers see the value in trawling web for copyrighted content
- Accessibility 2.0: How user-friendly is the Daily Mail to the blind and visually impaired?
- >> more features
JOB OF THE WEEK
News editor
Do you have unrivalled contacts within the motorcycle industry and an encyclopaedic knowledge of bikes? ...more
Freelancers for hire
...see allDISPLAY ADVERTISING
Target our journalism community of 15,500 subscribers and 75k+ visitors monthly. Call Ellie on 01273 384291


Comments
No comments
You must be registered in order to post a comment. Click here to register or login below if you are already registered:
Forgotten your password? Please click here