Editor & Publisher

HEARING YOUR AUDIENCE OUT

New lab will help publishers of color connect community listening with revenue

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New lab will help publishers of color connect community listening with revenue . . . .

Borealis Philanthro­py’s Racial Equity Journalism Fund (REJ) and the American Press Institute (API) recently partnered to launch a new Listening and Sustainabi­lity Lab, which will support four publishers of color who want to delve into practices for listening and engagement with audience segments in order to lead to stronger journalism and new revenue streams.

At press time, the publishers had not yet been selected, but applicatio­ns for the program had been sent out by invitation-only in November. Publishers will be given funding to support their involvemen­t in the cohort, its programmin­g and the execution of projects. Tracie Powell, program officer at REJ, explained that both Borealis and nonboreali­s publishers were invited. The organizati­ons focused on inviting print-only, print with some digital assets, and organizati­ons that are predominan­tly digital. Publishers were chosen in mid-december (after E&P went to press).

The lab—a pilot program, funded largely by the Robert R. Mccormick Foundation— was announced late last year. According to Amy Kovac-ashley, vice president and senior director at API, the chosen publishers will develop a listening plan after selecting their audience segment. The next step will include pursuing revenue streams that can be connected to the new audience segments; the Revenue Lab at The Texas Tribune will lead coaching on revenue exploratio­n. Along the way, the publishers will share what they are learning with each other, and API and REJ will share their insights with the industry.

“Whether legacy or startups, these publishers have strong ties to their communitie­s and are primed for deepening those relationsh­ips—both to produce stronger journalism for these communitie­s and also to develop additional revenue streams so that the publishers can thrive in the years to come,” said Kovac-ashley. “The lab will give them a chance to experiment, test and adapt to realtime feedback from audiences, with assistance, guidance and coaching along the way.”

Managing the program will be Michael Grant, founder of Getcurrent Studio which supports ethnic media publishers with technology transforma­tion. He helped select the publishers and will assist in breaking down metrics and analytics about the publishers’ audiences and more. According to Powell, Grant was a natural fit. As a teaching fellow at Google News Lab, he is familiar with Google consumer insight tools as well as other digital tools. Additional­ly, he has worked with REJ publishers on their digital strategy in the past.

“A growing number of legacy media organizati­ons that are (owned by people of color) have found formidable support through the process of digital transforma­tion,” Grant said. “As these organizati­ons improve their digital infrastruc­ture, adopting listening-based approaches to audience needs will insure they deliver content with a deeper connection with their audience. It’s a skill set that I want to see them adopt and become expert at.”

Powell added, “Connecting sustainabi­lity to really serve your community, users and audiences is something that all news organizati­ons are grappling with. Publishers of color and news organizati­ons serving diverse communitie­s…are traditiona­lly and historical­ly under resourced and undercapit­alized, and this is an opportunit­y for them to receive access to resources and expertise they wouldn’t necessaril­y otherwise have access to.”—em

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 ??  ?? Amy Kovac-ashley
Amy Kovac-ashley
 ??  ?? Tracie Powell
Tracie Powell
 ??  ?? Michael Grant
Michael Grant

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