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The News Media Alliance today filed comments opposing the Department of Labor's (DOL's) and the Department of Homeland Security's proposals to eliminate the requirement that employers notify U.S. workers of available positions through printed advertisements in Sunday newspapers "in the area of intended employment," and replace them with website ads. The Departments' proposals would essentially eliminate a proven medium consumed by more than 130 million adults each week — the print newspaper — that is the only means for some workers to access job information.
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TCN is the web-based IVR, call center management system, automated dialing and emailing tool that hundreds of newspapers and call centers use to save money and boost productivity.
With the TCN solution, you can consolidate multiple systems to accomplish many audience services for just pennies per interaction. Contact us for a
free trial.
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The News Media Alliance 2019 adXchange conference will be held at Bally's Hotel in Las Vegas on February 27-28, immediately following Mega-Conference. This event offers a cost-and-time-saving opportunity for members to have private one-on-one meetings with advertisers and agencies. Alliance members will receive complimentary registration. You must register to attend. Click here to register now. Member login required.
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Job listings are a big business, with online job sites such as Indeed, ZipRecruiter and Glassdoor serving as a common way for employees to search for their next opportunity. Programmatic is still catching on in the recruitment field; however, with Recruitology's programmatic job distribution platform, MaxRecruit, news publishers can get ahead of the competition and secure a piece of the recruitment advertising pie.
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Pictures move. Ads talk. Deeper content. Live shopping. Our augmented reality platform turns newspapers into revenue machines. We are building newspapers of the future. MORE
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Evvnt has found the solution to automating the millions of event listings in print and online, and news publishers can start using it immediately to provide local event marketers and their communities with a valuable service — and open up a new revenue stream. One of two winners this month of the Alliance's New(s) Ideas contest, Evvnt has developed an automated event marketing calendar. The web-based tool helps publishers manage events, automating what was before a time-consuming, complex task, and funneling revenue from event marketers straight to publishers.
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Ever wondered what to get the journalist in your life? It's no easy feat, since journalists live on coffee and Election Night pizza and crave little more than truth, justice and the occasional deadline extension. But if you feel up to the task of giving the news professional in your life a holiday gift, we've rounded up some options that even the most jaded journalist will love almost as much as they love breaking news and scooping the competition — maybe more!
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Learn more about how ppi Media is optimizing the efficiency of your publishing workflows.
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Growing reader revenue takes more than just building a paywall or launching a membership program. Turning readers into subscribers requires understanding audience needs, improving our websites and changing how we talk to and with our communities. It also requires structural, technological and cultural changes in our newsrooms. During a Tuesday afternoon breakout session at the Mega-Conference, set for Feb. 25-27 in Las Vegas, Damon Kiesow, Knight Chair in Digital Editing and Production at the Missouri School of Journalism, will lead a panel discussion on "Changing the Newsroom Culture to Maximize Reader Revenue."
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The news industry has been in a state of flux for quite some time. In an attempt to quantify and understand the change, Senior Research Fellow at the Reuters Institute of Journalism at the University of Oxford Julie Posetti recently investigated how innovation in the industry has been impacted by the relentless pace of technological and audience change. Her study, "Time to step away from the 'bright, shiny things'? Towards a sustainable model of journalism innovation in an era of perpetual change," raises a warning call to organizations that are focusing on constant evolution rather than identifying and committing to their own strengths, stating that "relentless, high-speed pursuit of technology-driven innovation could be almost as dangerous as stagnation."
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Have you introduced a new product, service or go-to-market approach that is substantially changing your current or future business model? Grown your digital revenue to be a critical portion of your revenue mix? Tapped into new audiences with a new approach to publishing? Diversified your revenue to be less dependent on traditional newspaper advertising? Created a culture of innovation for your employees? If you answered "yes" to any or all of these questions, then you could be a recipient of this year's Mega-Conference Innovation Award! This award will be presented at the 2019 Key Executives Mega-Conference. Ensure that your company is recognized for the innovative steps it is taking by submitting a nomination for this prestigious award! The deadline for entries is January 15, 2019. Click here to access a Word document entry form (Online entry form coming soon).
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Digiday
There's less money than ever to go around at digital publishers — and more unions popping up to fight to make sure employees get a fair share.
This past week alone, employees at Ziff Davis and New York Magazine both voted to unionize; Slate staffers voted almost unanimously to authorize a strike over management's refusal to remove a right-to-work clause from a contract currently being negotiated; and in meeting rooms across town, representatives for Gizmodo Media Group, Vice and the Dodo are all busy negotiating either their first or second union contracts with management.
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Nieman Lab
2019 will see continued, if not increased interest in understanding the local journalism landscape from a bird's-eye view. Though a relatively new subfield, news ecosystem mapping projects have proliferated, and will continue to do so, as they also become more sophisticated in their methodology and presentation.
The major disruptions to journalism have affected newsrooms at all geographic levels — local, national and international.
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International Journalists' Network
Paywalls, live events, special print editions, paid newsletters, the list goes on. From new editorial products to exclusive experiences, news organizations of all types and sizes are looking for new revenue streams.
To find a sustainable way to make the ends meet and regain the trust of the audience in the process, newsrooms can find in membership schemes a promising way forward, a way to restore a broken system.
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Media Post
Tech companies that depend on advertising as their primary source of revenue like to describe themselves as mere platforms to share content, but their similarity to publishers grows every year.
Google, Facebook, Twitter and Snap have made editorial interventions to scrub themselves of objectionable content, fake news and divisive political propaganda. They're not completely blind to the content they distribute.
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TechCrunch
It's an ad duopoly battle. Facebook is starting to test search ads in its search results and Marketplace, directly competing with Google's AdWords. Facebook first tried Sponsored Results back in 2012 but eventually shut down the product in 2013. Now it's going to let a small set of automotive, retail and e-commerce industry advertisers show users ads on the search results page on mobile in the U.S. and Canada.
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Adweek
If you thought social was a fast-moving space before 2018, the turbocharged changes we've been experiencing this year may have left you at the very least confused and, at worst, lying in a dark corner in the fetal position. I know I've had my moments.
Cambridge Analytica, GDPR, executives in front of Senate committees, fake news, irrelevant content: all these have shaken social media to its core and created something I've come to refer to as "social skepticism."
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INMA
Based on a year-long study of media subscription strategies all over the world, INMA's Researcher-in-Residence Grzegorz Piechota of Oxford University collected the best practices in news subscriber marketing. From this research, he developed practical frameworks for publishers to plan their value nurturing efforts.
In an exclusive INMA webinar, participants gained a better understanding of customer value nurturing and ready-to-use ideas to grow their business by turning visitors into customers, and customers into advocates, referrers and contributors.
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Wired
For many women, especially journalists, politicians and other public figures, Twitter is something to endure. Many have accounts out of professional necessity, but the cost of their participation in Twitter discourse is often attacks, threats and harassment. Women learn to block, mute, report and ignore their mentions. Some tweet directly at Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, frustrated that he seems never to take the problem of abuse against women on the site seriously.
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The Single Subject News Project via Medium
Hi there! My name is Will, and I'm a software engineer at the Shorenstein Center. I've been working with Hong, Emily, Elizabeth, and the Single Subject News cohort for almost a year now as the primary developer of our Email Benchmarking Tool (open source on Github). The tech team at the Shorenstein Center focuses on studying and building technology that helps newsrooms work toward sustainable business models.
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