By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
YourHub.com
may be coming to a Web site near you.
More
than a dozen newspapers, ranging from The Knoxville (Tenn.) News-Sentinel to
those operated by the Los Angeles Newspaper Group, have signed up to begin
offering the Web-to-print grassroots journalism platform since the Denver
Newspaper Agency began syndicating the concept earlier this year.

The
success of YourHub.com has prompted the Denver Newspaper Agency to syndicate the
citizen journalism initiative. Above, one of 15 zoned weekly editions published
for Denver residents.
Photo: Denver Newspaper Agency
The
initiative, introduced last May, is produced by the (Denver) Rocky Mountain News
and is promoted and printed by the DNA, which also publishes The Denver Post. In
Denver, YourHub.com spans 42 Web sites and 15 zoned weekly print sections that
cover specific communities in the Mile High City’s metropolitan area (see
Newspapers & Technology, June 2005).
Jack
Lail, managing editor for multimedia at The News-Sentinel, said YourHub.com has
yielded positive results since the newspaper launched the service last year
prior to DNA’s syndication.
“We
have had 2,715 stories posted, 1,305 events posted and 112 blog entries, he
said, adding that the newspaper (Monday-Friday, 115,123; Saturday, 128,441;
Sunday, 150,416) has more than 1,000 registered users and averages more than
60,000 page views each month.
The
News-Sentinel is printing three zoned sections for home delivery and produces 21
Web sites covering specific Knoxville neighborhoods.
The
paper’s YourHub.com staff consists of one editor, four reporters and an online
producer. Their job is to help supplement the Web site by covering specific
YourHub.com communities.
In
addition to The News-Sentinel and LANG, other papers set to launch YourHub.com
include Scripps Treasure Coast Newspaper Group in Florida, Alameda Newspaper
Group in northern California, the Ventura County (Calif.) Star, the Anderson
(S.C.) Independent-Mail, Wichita Falls (Texas) Times Record News, Corpus Christi
(Texas) Caller-Times and the Commercial Appeal in Memphis, Tenn.
Spiraling
interest
Fran
Wills, DNA’s vice president of interactive and product development, said that
the agency opted to syndicate YourHub.Com after receiving inquiries from other
newspapers that were interested in the Rocky Mountain News’ initiative.
Key
features in the YourHub.com syndication launch kit include content publishing
and hosting software as well as strategies for marketing, editorial and sales,
Wills said.
Optional
features, such as converting the Web content to print format, and online
classified ad posting, are also available. The software was developed by DNA in
conjunction with Denver-based Indigo Group Inc. DNA charges newspapers that
syndicate YourHub.com a one-time setup fee of between $2,000 and $10,000 and a
recurring monthly license fee of between $250 and $5,000, depending upon market
size.
Although
DNA provides the software and print interfaces, each newspaper is responsible
for managing its own content and marketing.
Since
its Denver launch last year, YourHub.com reported an average of 309,000 page
views and more than 45,000 unique visitors per month, according to John Temple,
editor, publisher and president of the News.
Moreover,
the site generated more than $5 million in annual revenues for DNA, with 40
percent to 50 percent of advertisers representing new business for the agency.
The
print sections are produced every Thursday by the News and delivered by the DNA
to both News and Post subscribers.
“We
receive more than 800 stories a week from parents, grandparents, professionals,
public information officers, churches, town officials, business owners and
others,” said Temple, about YourHub.com’s success. More than 400 events are
posted on the offering’s various Web sites each week.
“We
have done extensive outreach to the community and it has paid off,” he said.
Temple
said that one of the lessons he and the staff at YourHub.com learned from the
concept’s launch is that it takes time for newspapers to encourage community
participation.
“It
is more important to have a good relationship with the community than to have
‘bells and whistles’ on your site,” he said. “It is important that the
community knows you really are local and that there are faces behind the Web
site.”
At
the same time, Temple said he has learned that citizen journalism can be a bit
messy at times and that the concept has to be continually tweaked as it goes
along.
To
that end, Temple said YourHub.com has added blogging, personal profiles,
comments and a mechanism through which users can rate stories. A yellow pages
directory has also been added.
“The
community is defining YourHub.com and what it looks like today may not be what
it looks like next year,” he said. “As more people begin to understand the
concept, there will be a bigger demand for sites such as ours,” he said.
Temple
said YourHub.com thus far has successfully avoided the pitfalls that afflicted
such comparable efforts as the Los Angeles Times’ wikitorial project that was
launched and subsequently pulled because of obscene postings.
“We
have 26 eyes on the Web page, a profanity filter and communities who self-police
the sites,” Temple said. “We have an objectionable content button that
notifies staff. We haven’t had a problem with objectionable postings.”
| Citizen
journalism pubs
rolling
off the presses
It’s
becoming more commonplace for newspapers to produce special sections from
citizen-generated online content.
Case
in point, the Daily Herald In suburban Chicago, which in February launched Beep,
a Web site geared to 21-to-34-year-old readers, according to editor Kurt Gessler.
A print counterpart to Beep will debut later this spring.
“To
do this, we’re creating a Web-to-print product focusing on news, entertainment
and features, with a special emphasis on interactive elements like blogs, polls
and a message board system,” he said. “Plus, our users can directly take
part in the reporting process, from eating/drinking with us for reviews to
serving as sources and even reporters on stories.”
Unlike
some other online-to-print entities, Gessler said that the Herald will not zone
Beep into special sections.
“For
our users, we want to bring the scattered burbs together, not split them,” he
said. “People constantly say they are bored, many of whom don’t realize all
the things available within five miles of where they live.”
Gessler
said that there is no downside to actively engaging readers to produce content
for the community.
“This
generation (of readers) has grown up not only participating on message boards
but also running sites, defining what news is, what it means,” he said. “The biggest challenge I see is if, in this era of media
specialization, a publication like Beep is focused enough.”
Beep
is one of a growing number of so-called citizen journalism Web/print efforts.
Among them:
*Northwest
Voice: A free community publication published by The Bakersfield Californian
that is delivered to more than 24,000 homes in northwest Bakersfield every other
Thursday.
*Neighbors:
A weekly, user-created neighborhood-oriented publication distributed by The
Dallas Morning News.
*Bluffton
Today: A free daily newspaper in Bluffton, S.C., which sports a mix of articles
from news staff and online contributors (see related story, page 64).
|