3.2.1 – launch a community website for Cardiff

Posted: February 1st, 2010 | Author: Ed Walker | Filed under: blogging, Journalism, social media, social networks, web | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Cardiff sign

Three weeks and a little bit into the role as Online Communities Editor with Media Wales and we’ve only gone and launched a community website for Cardiff.

We’re taking a bit of a risk, developing as we go along and hopefully building a community around the yourCardiff website. I’m hoping that by being open during the development stage we get people chipping in, suggesting ideas and feeling like it’s their site too – rather than just being developed some suits in an office.

This does however mean we’ve got a few gaping holes, some bits that say ‘under development’ and no doubt some parts that don’t display properly in Internet Explorer or some obscure browser.

But, it’s a win. We’ve hit the ground running, we’re building from the bottom up and hopefully creating a site that Cardiff can be proud of. It’s about the little things, celebrating what happens in communities (both location and interest wise) across the capital city of Wales.

We’ll no doubt have some fallings out, some disputes and some triumphs but I’m sure it’ll be fun along the way as we try to break our content down into hyper-local chunks – putting news and information into the hands of people in Cardiff. Sounds dangerous, it could be. Sounds ambitious, it is.

We’ll be using social media to help build our community, but it’s also about getting out of the office, out of the media hub and sticking our camera or pen and paper, into different places to find out what’s going on.

As I saw posted on a rather visceral blog post the other week – hyper-local is nothing new. It’s doing what local news organisations do best, tell people what’s going on in their area and community (be that location or subject of interest) but the web just opens up new opportunities and ways of doing that.

And finally, a huge thank you to unclewilco (Andrew Wilcox) for his break-neck development over the last few weeks. There’s much more to come.

Image credit to Auntie P


Council coverage in Lancashire Evening Post

Posted: November 28th, 2009 | Author: Ed Walker | Filed under: Journalism | Tags: , , , , | 4 Comments »

Picked my local paper to cover as part of Help Me Investigate’s look at how much council reporting there is UK local newspapers. The Lancashire Evening Post covers Preston and the surrounding Lancashire areas. It’s a Johnston Press title and is based at their multimedia/printing/production hub at Broughton, Preston.

I found that there were 35 pages devoted to news on 23/11, 25/11 and 27/11 and of these 6.25 pages were given over to ‘council reporting’.

Like others I’ve been finding there is little reporting of council meetings, more stories are created from council press releases and then a few quotes from councillors. It’s also not clear when these councillors were saying these quotes, although the councillors title and ward are always attached.

The best edition for council reporting was 27/11 when there were lots of small stories in with reports from environment/planning meetings which boosted the coverage for that day. Council reporting rarely got leads, these were reserved for crime and lots of debate about the recent decision to move the National Football Museum away from Preston to Manchester.

Am going to do the Lancashire Evening Post again next week and try to get an edition each day (I couldn’t get hold of a copy on 24/11 as it was sold out at all my local newsagents!).