Trends in Newsroom 2010 is now released and participants at the Hamburg's Annual Editors Forum will receive a free copy during the event, on Octobre 6. Let's guess TIN will once again feed the debate on the hot topics, like social medias, tablets of all kind which are supposed to deeply transform the industry, the readership crisis, the new apps...
As always, TIN is an annual review from the World Editors Forum of best practices
in major newspapers around the world , on topics like print and online
integration, newsroom design, newsroom management, online strategies,
newspaper design and many other issues. Trends in Newsrooms 2010 is
based on the best postings from the Editors Weblog
(www.editorsweblog.org), a publication of WEF that tracks the daily
innovations in newspapers around the world.
More about this year issue...

By
many accounts, the newspaper industry faces the biggest crisis in its
history. The myriad of alternative media outlets competing for consumer
eyes and advertising dollars has pulled the rug out from under
newspaper publishers' bottom line. The once liberal flow of money to
newsgathering operations, the core of any newspaper, has been
drastically reduced. Fortunately, newsrooms around the world
are adapting to this gloomy picture in ways never before imagined and
with little financial investment. Cost-concious editors are finding
innovative ways to streamline the news process, saving time and
resources while increasing editorial quality. Journalists are adopting
free new media tools to dig up information more quickly and discover
more exciting stories. Cheap consumer technologies are helping
newsrooms to invent multimedia storytelling techniques that appeal to
ever-changing audience desires.
Trends
in Newsrooms 2009 is your complete guide to the best of these new
journalism practices. From restructuring floor plans to managing
stories across platforms, taking advantage of Twitter to bumping up
your Google rankings, this definitive annual media survey from the
World Editors Forum will teach you all the strategies you need to know
and inspire you to reenergize and educate your newsroom to succeed in
the new media revolution.
Each of the report's eight
chapters includes an introduction summarizing the steps newspapers need
to take in adapting to the changing media landscape, including a list
of key developments that editors should share with their staff. These
developments, as well as a wealth of information including interviews
with top media executives, detailed descriptions of innovations at the
world's most recognized papers, and studies of paradigm-shifting
Internet companies, are investigated in-depth within the text of each
chapter.
Chapter 1: Integrated Newsrooms: evolutions and revolutions
Chapter 2: Newspapers in Crisis - how newsrooms wheel through hard times
Chapter 3: Journalists of the digital age: the newsroom's new positions
Chapter 4: Use visual journalism for new narrative forms
Chapter 5: Pure players and personalized news: the end of mass media?
Chapter 6: From user-generated content to participatory journalism
Chapter 7: Digital delivery platforms of the future
Chapter 8: Top print and web designs
Topic-
specific boxes dig even further into prevalent issues and offer expert
advice. Conclusions to chapters include debates between top industry
movers and shakers as well as case studies of exemplary papers from
which all can learn. For example:
- Debate: The world's top
editors discuss the advantages and disadvantages of integrating print
and digital operations within newspaper newsrooms
- Opinion: Can
newspapers do more with less? Newspaper expert and consultant Phil
Stone of Follow the Media argues that to survive in the digital age,
newspapers must charge for digital content not only to bring in much
needed revenues, but to protect their invaluable content.
-
How-To: What are the best ways to implement video in newspaper
newsrooms? New media expert and CEO of VisualEditors Robb Montgomery
takes readers through some of the world's best online video experiments
and gives editors practical advice about how video is best used on the
Web.
- Case-study: An in-depth look at the UK's Trinity Mirror
Regionals merger of three newspapers into one, fully-converged
multimedia newsroom.
Trends in Newsrooms 2009 is based on the best postings from the Editors Weblog
(www.editorsweblog.org), a publication of WEF that tracks the daily
innovations in newspapers around the world. The report's articles not
only include a history of best practices and analysis, but also
suggestions for editors grappling with new media.

We
hope the report informs and motivates you and your staff to transform
your newsroom into a genuine multiplatform newspaper to face down the
newspaper crisis. Please send us your thoughts, comments and
suggestions so that we can improve the report in future years.
Emma Heald,
Editors Weblog
Editor-in-
Chief
Bertrand
Pecquerie, World
Editors Forum
Director