J-Lab Survey: Citizen Journalists in for Long Haul
8 February 2007The University of Maryland’s J-Lab has done just that. With financing from the Ford Foundation, it has thrown 60 questions at 191 citizen journalism participants. The survey follows up on more in-depth interviews among 31 sites earlier in the year.
It’s a great project, and J-Lab did a great job — even though no social review sites appear to have been included in the mix. This probably reflects the self-centered myopia of the journalism community. Still, there is plenty of meat to ponder here. This is what the survey found.
1: Do the hyper-localites think they serve a real purpose? Eight-two percent said they provide local information “not found elsewhere.” Seventy-seven percent said the sites supplement “what local media can provide.” Seventy-four percent said the sites “build connections to the community.”
2: Do they think they impact their communities? Eighty-two percent said they provided opportunities for dialogue. Sixty-one percent said they “watchdogged” local government. Thirty-nine percent said they helped the community solve problems. Twenty-seven percent said they increased voter turnout. Seventeen percent said they increased the number of candidates running for office.
3: Do they think they are directly competitive with local media? Forty-five percent said they compete with local dailies. Forty-four percent said they mix it up with their local weeklies. But according to J-Lab, “others say the competition is every other web offering — from neighborhood listservs (21 percent) to social networking favorites that define community as the world.”
4: Do the sites think they are “successful” enough to stick it out? Of the 110 respondents answering J-Lab’s question, 73 percent said they were already successful, profits or not. Fifty-one percent said that continued operation of their site did not require revenues. Asked how long they would stick with their efforts, “82 percent of the 139 respondents bypassed ‘1,’ ‘2’ or ‘3’ to ‘4 years’ and instead assert that they were in the game ‘indefinitely.’ ”
My own sense, readers know too well, is that citizen journalism is struggling to gain footholds; that most citizen journalists are “me” journalists
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