News, opinion and resources for the North West media industry Subscribe to our RSS feed
Front Page | Jobs | News | How-Do TV | Features | Comment | Rumours | How do they do | How did they do | Blogs | About | Ad Rates | Login | MarketPlace
NEWS BY SECTOR | Publishing | Broadcasting | Marketing Services | Digital Media | Other Media | The Wrap | Polls | How-Do Awards | How-Do Events

BBC über blogger has designs on the region | Print |  Email to a friend
By Rob Baker   
Monday, 25 June 2007
Image
The BBC's Robin Hamman believes media organisations have to develop relationships with content suppliers to be more effective and that its Manchester blog is heading the way with a new approach to sourcing engaging community based content.

He believes a lot more can be achieved editorially than it is presently and at less cost and risk.

Hamman is a senior broadcast journalist/producer at the BBC in London and is responsible for the BBC Blogs Trial…as well as maintaining his own successful blog.

An American from Illinois, he has worked in online roles at the BBC and Granada in Manchester but has now been based in London for a couple of years now. He heads up an initiative to build online communities and teach new media skills. His qualifications for the role include an MPhil in communications studies from Liverpool University and a bit before that he ran his first online bulletin board as a 12 year old in 1985.

The subject of his post grad work, should you really need to ask, was “online community development.”

The project 

But to the project. Together with BBC Radio Manchester’s Richard fair, he is helping to promote the Manchester BBC blog. Its aims are to become a credible part of the blogging and wider online community in the North West, developing and publishing interesting content and sourcing note worthy material for other BBC channels.  Education, through online media workshops, also features strongly in his brief and beliefs.

Behind the aims there is something fascinating taking place. He argues that the current models being used by major media outlets to solicit and gather contributions from the audience can be impractical. The models he cites are the online community model and the send to us model.  Not scientific terms but quite recognisable to all of us as he explains the characteristics of each one.

The first encourages readers to submit comments.  It sounds fine until he points out the costs in providing moderation.  The policing of a site such as the BBC’s with more than a million comments a month is huge.  There are legal considerations if moderators miss anything and also technical risks.

The second model encourages the citizen journalist to submit images and news.  It’s a good way to build a relationship on the surface but an unmanageable flood of information makes it impractical at times.  He cites the example of the Buncefield fire, which generated 40,000 submissions in four hours. Unable to use all but a tiny fraction of the material sent in, risks alienating the sender and can create a superficial relationship with the channel’s audience.

BBC venturing into unchartered waters 

So what is different about the new BBC blog model?  The discussion is not managed.  

He explains, “The BBC Manchester Blog team form partnerships with local bloggers.  We link and quote content from blogs of interest across a range of subject areas.  The bloggers have a set of guidelines, to ensure no slanderous or highly offensive content is submitted, but they are independent.”  

Hamman continues, “It is an alliance and a community.  The BBC sources interesting news and views, which effectively promotes blogs with something interesting to say but not necessarily with the larger audience they deserve.  In turn we gain by populating the BBC Manchester blog with credible and engaging content.”

The BBC does not ask for a link or any other reciprocal deal, as often happens. Simply a blog gains a bigger audience. Experience however suggests that bloggers do link back and talk about the BBC blog though and the Beeb picks up brownie online points.  

Indeed Hamman claims that “we have more links into our blog than Chris Moyles or Chris Evans have to their online presence, despite having millions of radio listeners.”  

By supporting an online community, by having an open, transparent relationship the BBC blog is becoming as he puts it, “a credible part of the community.”

 “It is a two way street. A conversation rather than a request.”

With the new media workshops and seminars the bonds with local publishers are getting stronger.

The BBC blog is in putting itself in an excellent position: offering quality community driven news with less risk and cost. The BBC Manchester blog has proved a successful forerunner and others are now developing.

While commercial broadcasters and publishers complain about the Beeb’s incursions into their regional territories in the area of news provision – both broadcast and digital – they’ll need to keep a wary eye on Hamman and his team and their plans.

www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/manchester/

Hamman’s blog can be found at www.cybersoc.com/

Rob Baker can be found at www.artisanmc.co.uk


Something to add? Then leave a comment below or email us now.


Did you enjoy this article? Please share it!
Digg!Reddit!Del.icio.us!Google!Live!Facebook!Slashdot!Technorati!StumbleUpon!Newsvine!Furl!Yahoo!


Sponsored links:




  Comments (1)
RSS comments
 1 By Louise Bolotin, on 25-06-2007 15:26
Is this initiative going to include blogs from around the north-west or will the BBC continue to insist that Cheshire does not exist?  
 
http://www.how-do.co.uk/north-west-media-comment for details...

Add your comment
Name
Email (optional)
Website (optional)
Comment

Email me when someone else comments
Anti-spam question (required): 2 + 9 =

 
< Previous story   Next story >


Featured Digital Jobs

Digital Planner/Strategist
Concept4 are on the lookout for an entrepreneurial digital guru to join the team as a Planner, as part of the expansion of our dynamic, innovative digital services.
 
E-Business Facilitator
We are looking for an E-Business Facilitator to work within the Marketing team to support our online activities.
Today's other news
Master Google with UK first at Salford Business School
Dinosaur shows what Manchester's made of
Citrus Suite develops Project Canvas interaction
5 Live launches Northern Development Fund
New media meets old as StuckOn gets CSAhell on the radio
True North promotes Holburne Museum reopening
APS Group wins Family Investments contract
Manchester Matters launches on Monday
MEN deal aids Trinity Mirror performance
Ahoy Creative gives parents a break with Away Without The Kids
Madhouse promotes K3 with naked employees
MOSI turns to London agency kin for interactive gallery
Acrobat thinks Victorian for Gourmet Candy Company brief
Mando Group Labs officially launches
Charles Lawson returns for Coronation Street play
JudgeGill unveils Harrods department for WWRD
 
 
 How-Do Events - click here    How-Do Events - click here
 
 
 
Most read in the last three days
No move to Salford yet for Peter Salmon (Updated)
Brazen's Robbie Platt joins Weber Shandwick
Why is video taking over the world?
Nickelodeon opens £10m theme park in Blackpool
Rippleffect saddles up for British Horseracing campaign
Paver Smith income up despite public sector hit
Madhouse promotes K3 with naked employees
Gorillaz hit the App store courtesy of Matmi
Stage 9 on track for Preston Trams
Ideal returns to BBC Three
Featured articles
The most comprehensive ever review and assessment of the top communicators and marketers working in public services in the North West: the Public Sector 100. READ
Media 100
The North West’s top marketing folk who collectively control marketing expenditure in excess of £500m and whose endeavours help sustain tens of thousands of jobs. READ
2009media100 The full listing of How-Do's Media 100. The 2009 list in its entirety, offers the definitive compilation of the most influential and powerful media, creative and digital folk based in the North West. READ
 
Contact us now
The How-Do poll
How can traditional publishing firms make money online?
 
Latest comments
Cath: These people should not be allowed to take these roles unless they are 100%... READ
Radio Caroline: But the pettiness is what makes people come to the site. Everyone loves to ... READ
Lorna Kay: The highly inflammatory article by Paul Revoir on page 11 of to-day's Daily... READ
Enough: Also Anonymouse - get down off your high-horse. You threw your two penneth ... READ
Mrs Ackroyd: What a load of numpties GMG are. You wouldn't want them running anything i... READ
Brian: Why do marketeers use 'inspired by' when the word 'evokes' is more believab... READ
How-Do RSS/Twitter

Track How-Do headlines in your RSS reader:

RSS feed

View all of our feeds.

Follow How-Do on Twitter:

How-Do Twitter
 
 
 Media City UK
 
 


 
 
 
Front Page | Jobs | News | How-Do TV | Features | Comment | Rumours | How do they do | How did they do | Blogs | About | Ad Rates | Login | MarketPlace
NEWS BY SECTOR | Publishing | Broadcasting | Marketing Services | Digital Media | Other Media | The Wrap | Polls | How-Do Awards | How-Do Events
 
UKFast - managed dedicated server specialist