tenacious_g
Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2005
- Messages
- 97
I'm part of a Web redesign team at my paper that includes much more than just design. A question was posed in a blogging discussion today that I wanted to post here and get some thoughts.
The hits on a sports blog we have shot through the roof (relative to that blog's normal traffic) one day this past week when linked to a fan site. That didn't surprise me. Traffic jumps on stories or blogs are often from getting linked to some outside site.
The question posed: Why then don't we link more of our stories to fan/outside sites?
Initial reaction was pretty much along the lines of NO. Some said it isn't right some said it is too self serving. But if the point is to get the story to readers, why not? Fan sites or message boards like this don't shy away from linking stories, but is it different if it is the paper itself that does it?
I think its fair to say most good beat writers probably do some judicious monitoring of fan sites already. If a topic they wrote about shows up, and the writer identifies himself properly, is posting a story on another site OK?
Thoughts?
The hits on a sports blog we have shot through the roof (relative to that blog's normal traffic) one day this past week when linked to a fan site. That didn't surprise me. Traffic jumps on stories or blogs are often from getting linked to some outside site.
The question posed: Why then don't we link more of our stories to fan/outside sites?
Initial reaction was pretty much along the lines of NO. Some said it isn't right some said it is too self serving. But if the point is to get the story to readers, why not? Fan sites or message boards like this don't shy away from linking stories, but is it different if it is the paper itself that does it?
I think its fair to say most good beat writers probably do some judicious monitoring of fan sites already. If a topic they wrote about shows up, and the writer identifies himself properly, is posting a story on another site OK?
Thoughts?