Welcome to my personal blog.

GM, BreakingNews (msnbc)
Publisher, LostRemote.com
Co-founder, Next Door Media
Board member, Poynter and MCDM

 

“I’m not the IT guy — I write a blog.”  New trailer from “The Newsroom.”

I love this AP photo of an apartment fire in San Francisco earlier this year because it captures how the world of breaking news is changing.  Before our BreakingNews team received this photo via the wire, we had received dozens of photos from eyewitnesses via Twitter and Instagram.

I love this AP photo of an apartment fire in San Francisco earlier this year because it captures how the world of breaking news is changing.  Before our BreakingNews team received this photo via the wire, we had received dozens of photos from eyewitnesses via Twitter and Instagram.

I do not believe that begging for money from foundations, the public, or especially government is the solution to journalism’s problems.

Jeff Jarvis in a great post, which also includes the quote, “The problem is that journalists don’t know shit about business. Culturally, they don’t want to.”  I agree on all counts, and it’s the root cause of journalism’s problems today.

I redesigned LostRemote.com over the weekend.  That’s probably the 15th redesign in the blog’s 12 year history (yes, I’ve been blogging forever.)  If you’re a fan of social TV, give it a look — it’s the first site dedicated to the quickly-emerging space.

I redesigned LostRemote.com over the weekend.  That’s probably the 15th redesign in the blog’s 12 year history (yes, I’ve been blogging forever.)  If you’re a fan of social TV, give it a look — it’s the first site dedicated to the quickly-emerging space.

An executive who worked at both Apple and Microsoft described the differences this way: “Microsoft tries to find pockets of unrealized revenue and then figures out what to make. Apple is just the opposite: It thinks of great products, then sells them. Prototypes and demos always come before spreadsheets.

How ‘economies of proximity’ help fuel hyperlocal

My wife Kate Bergman and I co-founded a network of Seattle neighborhood news sites in late 2007 called Next Door Media.  Today, the 10 sites along with our regional guide bring in 230,000 unduplicated unique users a month with a combined social media following of nearly 40,000 fans and followers — at a much lower cost per audience than the Patch model.

One of our key learnings from creating the network — which I presented at the Online News Association conference last week — is something I call “economies of proximity.”  It’s a different spin on economies of scale.  WalMart is the classic example of scale: as it grew, it was able to negotiate lower per-unit pricing from suppliers and achieve cost efficiencies in distribution. 

For Next Door Media, we’ve noticed cost efficiencies in proximity.  All of our sites are right next door to each other in the North Seattle region, and neighborhoods aren’t mutually-exclusive.  You live in one, shop in another and commute through yet another.  When something big or particularly interesting happens in a nearby neighborhood, you want to hear about it.  Your geographic sphere of interest flexes beyond your neighborhood and your zip code.

So we share coverage, marketing and advertising across the sites in flexible, proximity-driven combinations.  A story that happens on the border of one neighborhood is also posted on other neighborhood site.  A regional story is posted across all ten.  That reduces the cost of coverage by amortizing the effort of creating a story across multiple nearby sites. 

Hence, economies of proximity.

We also share story tips, and nearby editors help each other during breaking news and vacations.  They also retweet each other, and occasionally cross-promote on Facebook (which helps explain why Next Door Media has one of the largest combined social media following for any Seattle media organization.)  All the sites prominently cross-link each other across the top in order of proximity — as well as cross-link the most interesting stories — which consistently drives more network traffic than Google or even our relationship with the Seattle Times.

The economies of proximity continue on the sales front.  Many of our advertisers buy more than one site at a time, reducing the cost of sales.  After all, businesses attract customers at varying levels of geographic reach.  A neighborhood coffee hangout may have a half-mile reach, but a furniture store may attract customers five miles away.  Our advertising clients can buy custom geographies by buying different combinations of sites, targeting their customers exactly where they live and work.  And larger, citywide advertisers are increasingly attracted to our network because of its overall reach.

At the end of the day, proximity reduces costs and opens the door to larger sales opportunities.  If the network were to grow to a new geography — another “cluster” of next door sites with a regional guide site — we’d also begin to experience economies of scale, especially in product development.  But that’s another discussion for another time.

With few exceptions, the only instances in which mainstream firms have successfully established a timely position in a disruptive technology were those in which the firms’ managers set up an autonomous organization charged with building a new and independent business.

Clayton Christensen in the Innovator’s Dilemma, quoted in this Slate story on why the Netflix-Qwikster split may make sense.

Remembering 9/11: I spent a month at Ground Zero  covering the aftermath of the attacks.  I arrived from Seattle on the  night of September 13th — called up by NBC News to help reinforce  coverage in New York — so I missed the peak of the tragedy.  Day after  day, night after night, I watched from my live shot position (above) as  crews worked tirelessly among the rubble, hoping above hope to find life  inside the twisted metal.  The rubble smoldered for weeks, permeating  the air with a metallic-smelling, dusty smoke that I’ll never forget.
One memory sticks with me the most: late one night, a few dozen  workers marched proudly toward Ground Zero, holding the American flag up  high.  Out of reach of our cameras on a darkened street, they were  headed toward another grueling 12 hour shift, some singing patriotic  songs as they walked.  They were among the many heroes of 9/11, not only  on that tragic day, but during the weeks and months that followed.

Remembering 9/11: I spent a month at Ground Zero covering the aftermath of the attacks.  I arrived from Seattle on the night of September 13th — called up by NBC News to help reinforce coverage in New York — so I missed the peak of the tragedy.  Day after day, night after night, I watched from my live shot position (above) as crews worked tirelessly among the rubble, hoping above hope to find life inside the twisted metal.  The rubble smoldered for weeks, permeating the air with a metallic-smelling, dusty smoke that I’ll never forget.

One memory sticks with me the most: late one night, a few dozen workers marched proudly toward Ground Zero, holding the American flag up high.  Out of reach of our cameras on a darkened street, they were headed toward another grueling 12 hour shift, some singing patriotic songs as they walked.  They were among the many heroes of 9/11, not only on that tragic day, but during the weeks and months that followed.

Never dismiss or underestimate a competitor. And revere product over image.

Former MySpace president Jason Hirschhorn in a tweet.