How I set up a community journalism blog for where I live

Posted: April 26th, 2009 | Author: Ed Walker | Filed under: Journalism, blogging, social media, social networks, web | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments »

In January 2009 I decided as a new year’s resolution to set up a blog for where I live. Inspired by St Albans Blog, run by Robin Hamman, I boldy registered Preston Blog. I decided to go with a wordpress.com account as I wasn’t sure how much time I could commit and I was also a little short of cash so a domain and hosting were out of the question.

Since January 2009 I’ve been amazed at what the blog has achieved. It’s now just a few unique visitors away from having 10,000 in three months. No mean feat for something that I try to update as and when.

What’s the point in having a community journalism blog for Preston, Lancashire? Well, simple really: people want it. The sheer number of emails I’ve had and twitter messages saying “thanks for the blog/post, keep it up”.

I thought I’d take the chance, just over three months on since launch, to reflect on how the blog is going and pass on some advice for anyone thinking of doing something similar for where they live.

It will take up your time, a lot of your time

I started off just posting here and there. I thought no one would read what I wrote, then I saw the stats. 100 unique visitors a day, holy shit, people are reading what I write and they are commenting too. I started pulling hours getting content. You need to be prepared for the commitment of it, for talking about it, going to random events, getting lost down dead-end roads because Google Maps told you that’s where the venue was.

You will get involved in your community

People love publicity, they like to let you know they are doing stuff. Make sure you’ve got your optimistic people-loving mindset on as you’ll meet some weird, amazing and wonderful people. I’ve already met a Subbuteo enthusiast, a man who loves Open Street Maps and a bunch of rather kooky authors at a live literature night. But I love that, I love the diversity of it all.

Twitter is your friend

Twitter has been brilliant. Without it then I don’t think I’d have found half of the content I currently have on my blog. I post all my content to it, I thank guest writers, I debate things with people. Twitter is my living breathing news feed from the people of Preston. I use a great little application called Twitter Local, or the ’stalking thing’ as it was referred to by my ex-girlfriend, to find anyone who is twittering in Preston, Lancashire. I follow them to see what they are saying, and if they like what I’m about they can follow me back.

Other people will write far better than you

I have a wide and far-reaching network of guest writers. They are great and without them the blog wouldn’t work. I have someone who is an expert on the built environment, so whenever there’s a story about a ‘new development’ in Preston he knows what is actually going on. I have students climbing over each other to write stuff and get it in their published portfolios, although whether I’m a ‘real’ media outlet will be up to their tutors to decide. I want the blog to be a variety of voices writing about what they are passionate about, people will always read passionate writing. It’d be boring if it was just me all the time. One of the best and most viewed pages on the blog is ‘Get Involved‘. I count getting involved as anything from subscribing by RSS, commenting on a post to writing a guest post.

Look online and you will find

I’ve found some great content on Flickr, I have a feed of photos that comes in and is updated nearly daily with people snapping ‘Preston’ on flickr. Some of the shots are incredible. I don’t need a photo crew, I’ve got a whole photo community. The same with video, there’s plenty out there.

Don’t just sit online

Because my phone bill would be huge, I have to get off my laptop and go and speak to people. I phone people and arrange to meet them face-to-face. It’s great, the interview is so much better and you learn so much more about what’s going on. Preston Blog also inspired the Preston Tweetup that was fantastic. Just over 40 people came together, with a live-twitter feed, and discussed how the web could be used for Preston Guild in 2012. Local council’s should be doing this stuff, but they don’t, so we will instead. The ideas were ace, the people were ace and we’ll do it again sometime soon. But it was offline, it was great publicity for the blog and it made for some great content.

There’s a few thoughts about the blog and how it’s gone. I’m enjoying it and now it’s the time to get serious with it. The local newspaper has no rival, and it’s getting a bit lazy. Preston Blog has shown there is a demand for quality, local, community reporting. Preston has no newspaper, and I’d never open a newspaper, but it can have a great and virbant community journalism resource.

Over the coming months we’ll hopefully be shifting Preston Blog to a domain name, getting a new design with a proper Wordpress template. We’ll be bidding for some funding, registering as a nonprofit, and building some great content. We’ve got plans to live-cover some events over the summer, with full multimedia coverage. But, although we’ll get bigger, we will never forget what the blog is about. It’s about Preston, it’s about the people that live there, the places you can go, the things you can do, and the stories that it all holds.

Thank you to everyone who has read, writter for, commented on, twittered about or spoken about Preston Blog. We appreciate your support.


TNTJ: What have you done to build your brand online?

Posted: December 9th, 2008 | Author: Ed Walker | Filed under: Journalism, blogging, social media, social networks, web | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »
personal branding

personal branding

This month’s topic over on Tomorrow’s News, Tomorrow’s Journalists is an interesting one and one that I voted for in our very democratic way of deciding December’s topic. What have you done to build your brand online?

See where you are online

The first thing I did was go and see what is out there about me on the internet. A quick Google of my name ‘ed walker’ made me realise first of all: a) I have a really common name b) There’s a ‘Sir Edward Walker’ – not me. Having a common name is the first hurdle in building a brand online, because if you’re called Japhael Jiminez – chances are you’re pretty unique.

Start a blog

Starting a blog is a must. This should be the core of your brand online. This is where you live and breath online. If possible try and buy your own domain and a bit of hosting, as having your name as a yourname.com/.co.uk/.net will help massively when it comes to boosting yourself up those all important Google rankings. After starting your blog and making it look pretty, get posting. Post about stuff that matters to you, it’ll probably matter to other people. Your blog should be your living CV, blog about stuff you’re working on, your success’ and even some of your failures. Make sure you’ve got an ace ‘About’ page, so that if people want to know more about you they can find out.

Link to people

You’re not going to build this brand alone. When posting on your blog, link out and link far and wide. If you link to people, they will probably come and look at your blog and see who you are. They might even link back if they like your stuff!

Have a good presence on LinkedIn

Forget Facebook, Bebo, MySpace etc, LinkedIn is the professional networking site and it can be used by potential employers to find you and see who you are and what you do. Ensure your profile is fully filled out, keep it updated reguarly and you’ll be surprised how much traffic it can bring to your blog and also how highly LinkedIn profiles rank in Google and other search engines.

Claim your blog on Technorati

Technorati is the bloggers website. It’s important to claim your blog as this will tell you who is linking to you and give you an authority ranking. As more people link to you, your authority grows.

Listen to those who know

I suggest people like Chris Brogan and Adam Singer, who aren’t journalists, but have built up highly successful blogs and follows online. They have built a brand around themselves online, and as a result have benefitted financially but also in building up a big and useful network of contacts.

Network offline and transfer online

Face to face is still and always will be the most powerful communication tool in the world. Make use of it, at a networking event? At a party? Social media is reasonably in right now and while it may not be the best conversation starter it’s a great conversation finisher. Make sure you leave people you’ve been speaking to with your blog address, or if you’re a guest speaker make sure it’s on your slides.

Twitter and other social media

Make sure you’re using social media such as Twitter to join in the conversation, find and follow relevant people. Give people a reason to follow you by posting regularly and by posting interesting links to Twitter. Don’t tell us what you had for breakfast, that’s what Facebook status updates are for. Make sure all your social media presences link to your blog and that your blog links to all your social media presences. Think of your blog as the continent with lots of little islands around it.

Join relevant networks (like TNTJ!) and get networked

If there’s a network for your industry, join it and meet people. You’ll be surprised how interested they’ll be in what you do and what you may be blogging about.

Image in this post is used under creative commons from flickr user See-Ming Lee


Theme decided on for blog

Posted: July 27th, 2008 | Author: Ed Walker | Filed under: blogging, design | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

So this is what I’ve gone with, after a few failed attempts. Easy, clean and plenty of scope for some customisation – and very widget friendly. Going to get busy with the stylesheet over the next couple of days and funky it up a bit. Got it thanks to this guy.

Had to ditch the footer though, as it wasn’t working with the widgets for some reason. You can see what it should have looked like. I think I’ll just create a new footer to match the new stylesheet when it’s done.

Haven’t done this level of design/coding for over a year since finishing my degree, so it’s good to get back into it.