Persona

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Revision as of 16:32, 8 August 2011 by Bill Densmore (talk | contribs) (WHITE PAPER SAYS IT'S TIME FOR ACTION)

WHITE PAPER SAYS IT'S TIME FOR ACTION

BRANSON, Mo., Aug. 4, 2011 -- A non-profit collaboration to share technology, users and content could help news organizations find new revenues and become better at serving the public, according to a report by a Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute researcher at the University of Missouri.

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  • ANNOUNCEMENT
  • NEWS RELEASE
  • FULL PAPER
  • BLOG & COMMENTS
  • Time to make the marketplace for privacy, trust, identity and information commerce

    A growing attention economy is transforming the news business. It represents for the institutions which practice journalism a chance to survive beyond the era of mass-market advertising, by becoming “information valets” for their readers, viewers and users. Trust, access, identity and value are core issues, affecting convenience, privacy and personalization. The attention economy will invite new collaboration among news, advertising, publishing, entertainment, technology and philanthropic services.

    As the news and paper come unglued, what will pay for journalism in the new news ecosystem? We need a new digital marketplace for information. Managing information overload is an opportunity. That’s what this forthcoming white paper is about. It suggests how publishers can cultivate customized, one-to-one relationships with users, provide them personalized information, and get paid for doing so.


    WHAT DO WE MEAN BY PERSONA?


    News organizations need new revenues to improve journalism’s service to participatory democracy. They might provide a new service to the public besides trying to sell stories. Managing the privacy and information preferences of individuals is one such opportunity.


  • READ SHORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
  • READ FULL PAPER ONLINE or DOWNLOAD PDF
  • READ EARLY COMMENTS
  • ADD BLOG COMMENTS
  • VIEW BILL DENSMORE PRESENTATION
  • DOWNLOAD SEVEN-PAGE SUMMARY
  • LISTEN to April 27 discussion

  • Thus the defining new-revenue challenge for news organizations in the 21st century is no longer just managing proprietary information, but learning to help the public manage our attention to ubiquitous information. In less than a decade, we have moved from a world of relative information scarcity -- access restricted by a variety of technical choke points -- such as presses -- to a world of such information abundance that the average user's challenge is not how to access information, or even how find it, but how to personalize, trust and make sense of it.

    The Internet as we know it today is not up to this task. “From Paper to Persona: Managing Privacy and Information Overload; Sustaining Journalism in an Attention Age,” explains how a new public-benefit collaboration could help stop the shrinking of American journalism.

    REFERENCE LINKS

    An Information Trust Association will recognize in its governance structure the interests of at least four different constituencies: rights-holders (authors/artists), publishers (aggregators), audience-owners (banks, publishers, billers etc.), and end-users.

    VIDEO: The Information Valet Project: Origins in 12 minutes

    • VIDEO: In August, 2008, Bill Densmore arrived at the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism with a mission -- create a shared-user network owned by the nation's news and information-services industry which could address privacy, enhanced advertising and charging for content. Watch this 12-minute video of Densmore’s May 5, 2009 presentation of his research: http://vimeo.com/4557201

    5,392 08-03-11