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Denver Post offers buyouts

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by SEeditor, Jun 4, 2015.

  1. MileHigh

    MileHigh Moderator Staff Member

    Well, that should have happened several years ago when the consolidation of beats at other DFM papers across the country happened. But as I was told more than a few times, "The Post plays by their own rules when it comes to that."

    Same thing happened on the news side during the 2013 floods in Boulder/Longmont. The Post did stories the Boulder and Longmont papers did one or two days earlier. "It was their move to win a Pulitzer," I was told.
     
  2. Matt Stephens

    Matt Stephens Well-Known Member

    I don't know what the plan is with CU, but Terry Frei covered CSU football. Kensler became their general college basketball reporter after football season was over.
     
  3. MileHigh

    MileHigh Moderator Staff Member

    Reboot No. 4 at 101 W. Colfax:

    From editor Greg Moore:

    Colleagues:

    When we announced the buyout, I mentioned there would be changes to the print product, our work processes and new assignments. I also said that there would be dialogue about some of these changes. We will start some public meetings to share ideas the week of July 13.
    In the meantime, here is where we are so far.

    Beginning July 6, you’ll notice the Monday and Tuesday newspapers are smaller. These days were our weakest in terms of circulation and revenue. Denver and The West will start on page A2 Monday through Saturday. It will remain a stand-alone section on Sunday. On Monday, we will go to a two-section newspaper. The A section will have DTW, Nation/World, and editorials and weather on one page. The B section will have Sports, comics, puzzles and a single page of TechKnow. We are eliminating the $mart pages.

    Tuesday’s newspaper will be similarly slimmed down. It is already a two-section newspaper. We will keep Fitness to one page on the back of the Sports section. The editorial page and weather will remain where they are.

    These “quick read” newspapers will require much tighter editing of stories and virtual elimination of jumps. We imagine fewer jumps off Page One and Sports with maximum lengths of about 20-25 inches on stories. The space savings are significant but these changes also allow us to realign people and processes. We are beginning to think about that./CONTINUES

    As part of the public meetings starting later in July, think about what The Post should cover, how should we be organized, what beats would you start and which would you eliminate. We have had some of these conversations before. But we are looking at everything. We need to more sharply focus our news gathering resources, add staffing for digital and become even more efficient at producing the newspaper.

    We do know we want to create an Audience team that will sit (figuratively) between Digital and the content departments. This will include an expanded social media team that will also dig into our analytics in real time. Our social media strategy has proven effective, and we’ve been growing that audience month after month. It’s time to add more people to that effort. We will search internally for a leader of that team and add three or four current staffers to it.

    The Audience team will identify what’s working and why, and will help reporters, photographers and editors optimize our content for a variety of platforms. In addition, the team will identify topics and stories of interest to our readers and ensure that we are addressing them. Analytics won’t drive all of our content, but it’s time we harness the powerful data available to serve our community.

    We are going to reassign reporters to a reconstituted Breaking News team. Breaking news is one of our strengths, but it’s clear that we need to focus more resources here, especially in generating content for our mobile audience. Most days, more than 50 percent of our readers come to us on a mobile device. In breaking news, that number is higher. We must develop content with the assumption that it will be mostly consumed on a mobile device. We’ve been talking about this for a while.

    To be clear, it remains everyone’s responsibility to post breaking news from their beats. But this team will think mobile first. Metro will continue to oversee breaking news and work closely with the Audience team.

    We plan to add a producer and developer to our mobile team. We have to think deeper about how we deliver and optimize content for our mobile audience. We will reassign for these duties and provide training. It’s clear that our audience is migrating to mobile, following trends around the globe. We want to improve our mobile experience now so we are in a better spot when a new CMS is ready in about six months.

    Finally, we need the entire staff more in tune with producing digital content during the work shift. There is no reason that every reporter and photographer can’t contribute daily to our digital effort. The key is time management. And we need to settle on what is a reasonable level of production.

    We have had a number of people ask for as many specifics as possible about what things might look like after the buyout. We are being as clear as we can be, while acknowledging we don’t have all the answers yet.

    But some things are coming into focus. For instance, no one should assume he or she will be doing in the future what they do now. We are going to have to reassign some people after the buyout is completed. We likely will have a central desk for all editorial assistants. Their work process will be re-engineered, but it may mean that others may have to get their own mail, answer the main phone line sometimes, or we employ automation of some tasks, such as calendar listings. We will probably have a universal desk for assistant editors, where final editing for print and digital, headline writing and proofing will occur. Everyone will be in the weekend reporting rotation (except those whose beats already occur on the weekend).

    I know the uncertainty is difficult. I also recognize the change we have accomplished is significant.

    Our newsroom has embraced digital journalism. For more than six years, we have been learning, growing, evolving and refining our work.

    In our Breaking News Pulitzer award, our digital effort was lauded in the citation. Craig Walker’s photography that won him his second Pulitzer was published only online. Our journalism has been recognized in numerous national digital contests and our video storytelling is among the best in the country. We get digital.

    Now, we must apply our skills to the next-generation digital newsroom. It’s time for Denver Post 4.0!

    That is the challenge ahead of us.

    Greg
     
  4. BDC99

    BDC99 Well-Known Member

    Yeesh. That sounds rough. And tighter editing and elimination of jumps ALWAYS goes well. :rolleyes:

    And I'm guessing this was not a typo? :)
     
  5. Baron Scicluna

    Baron Scicluna Well-Known Member

    "Finally, we need the entire staff more in tune with producing digital content during the work shift. There is no reason that every reporter and photographer can’t contribute daily to our digital effort. The key is time management. And we need to settle on what is a reasonable level of production."

    AKA: Do more with less.

    Maybe the editor should write a little tighter.
     
  6. boundforboston

    boundforboston Well-Known Member

    The "we need to settle on what is a reasonable level of production" is interesting.
     
  7. LanceyHoward

    LanceyHoward Well-Known Member

    I was recently in Denver and if I think the Monday and Tuesday papers were 38 pages. I wonder how much smaller it can get?
     
    Last edited: Jul 3, 2015
  8. Roscablo

    Roscablo Well-Known Member

    I've brought up before in talking about newspapers and the Post in general or something how I get the Kindle edition. I can get through that sucker fairly thoroughly in about five minutes some days. I can't imagine anyone actually paying full price for that product any more. I mean, they have to actually offer something in terms of content. Don't they? Apparently they thought they did and now need to make it less.
     
  9. LanceyHoward

    LanceyHoward Well-Known Member

    When I counted the pages from the Post it was Memorial Day. I counted approximatley 10 pages of ads including paid items like obituaries. There were approximaltey 28 pages of news and I think seven of those were devoted to sports.

    Which got me to thinking? Does anyone know what percentage of the readership for a big sports story such as the gamer for a local professional sports team comes from on-line and print. I know that is a very broad question but are there any general answers?

    This is another way of asking how much is the print sports section still being read? Does it really matter if the number if print pages in sports are cut at the Post or anywhere else? I realize that sports is a huge driver of on-line traffic.
     
    Last edited: Jul 3, 2015
  10. BTExpress

    BTExpress Well-Known Member

    Sports sure doesn't drive advertising. It's not uncommon at all for there to be 2 ads in our sports section: A "men's health" (aka E.D.) ad and a 1x1 massage ad.
     
  11. BDC99

    BDC99 Well-Known Member

    The key is time management ...

    Meanwhile, I would bet this guy spends 80 percent of his time shooting the shit and in meetings. But WE should work harder and manage our time more wisely.
     
  12. MileHigh

    MileHigh Moderator Staff Member

    This was a memo straight out of 2007.
     
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