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OverviewEntrepreneurial Journalism explains how, in the age of online journalism, digital-savvy media practitioners are building their careers by using low-cost digital technologies to create unique news platforms and cultivate diverse readerships. The book also offers a range of techniques and tips that will help readers achieve the same. Its opening chapters introduce a conceptual understanding of the business behind entrepreneurial journalism. The second half of the book then presents practical guidance on how to work successfully online. Topics include: • advice on launching digital start-ups; • how to use key analytics to track and focus readership; • engaging with mobile journalism by utilising smartphone and app technology; • developing revenue streams that can make digital journalism sustainable; • legal and ethical dilemmas faced in a modern newsroom; • the challenges of producing news for mobile readers. The book features leading figures from the BBC, Google and the Guardian, as well as some of Britain’s best entrepreneurial reporters, who offer advice on thriving in this developing media landscape. Additional support comes from an online resource bank, suggesting a variety of free tools to create online news content. Entrepreneurial Journalism is an invaluable resource for both practising journalists and students of journalism. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Paul MarsdenPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.280kg ISBN: 9781138190368ISBN 10: 1138190365 Pages: 184 Publication Date: 19 January 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsList of illustrations List of contributors Acknowledgements Introduction 1 What is news and what is journalism in 2016? Rebecca Whittington and Catherine O’Connor 2 The business of journalism With Andrew Youde 3 Innovation 4 Building your idea 5 Being an entrepreneurial journalist With Wayne Bailey 6 Starting your website and writing online 7 Engaging, measuring and reacting to your audience 8 Your smartphone as your best reporting tool With Lindsay Eastwood 9 Using social media to promote your work 10 The boundaries you must not cross and remaining ethical in the journalistic Wild West With Nigel Green IndexReviewsKelly Toughill, University of King's College, Halifax, Canada - 'It is comprehensive. It hits all of the major points of contemporary production and sustainability...We need a new text for the first-year course (Foundations of Journalism - Module in Journalism Economics). Nothing out there is adequate. This might work well. We also need a good text on entrepreneurial journalism for our graduate program.' Sue Greenwood, Staffordshire University, UK - 'The focus on practical skills and advice is the strongest element in making this a book students will want to use... The focus on case studies makes for a more accessible book and delivers a much broader range of voices and experiences for students to learn from... Including freelancing as entrepreneurialism is a strength... I would recommend that it was made available to my students as supplementary reading.' Tim Dunlop, Centre for Advancing Journalism, University of Melbourne, Australia - 'Sounds like a good, basic intro to some important issues, including the use of tech in performing journalism. The interviews with people like Jeff Jarvis could be valuable... I would say that the real weakness here is that the material is likely to be very dated by the time of publication and that there is not nearly enough attention to social media.' Kelly Toughill, University of King’s College, Halifax, Canada – ‘It is comprehensive. It hits all of the major points of contemporary production and sustainability…We need a new text for the first-year course (Foundations of Journalism – Module in Journalism Economics). Nothing out there is adequate. This might work well. We also need a good text on entrepreneurial journalism for our graduate program.’ Sue Greenwood, Staffordshire University, UK – ‘The focus on practical skills and advice is the strongest element in making this a book students will want to use… The focus on case studies makes for a more accessible book and delivers a much broader range of voices and experiences for students to learn from… Including freelancing as entrepreneurialism is a strength… I would recommend that it was made available to my students as supplementary reading.’ Tim Dunlop, Centre for Advancing Journalism, University of Melbourne, Australia – ‘Sounds like a good, basic intro to some important issues, including the use of tech in performing journalism. The interviews with people like Jeff Jarvis could be valuable… I would say that the real weakness here is that the material is likely to be very dated by the time of publication and that there is not nearly enough attention to social media.’ Author InformationPaul Marsden lectures at Leeds Trinity University, UK. He specialises in online journalism, teaching trainee journalists how to build news websites, use technology to tell stories in innovative ways and utilise social platforms to build an audience and generate income from digital reporting. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |