2008 Knight Journalism Fellow Andrew Haeg took our Bootcamp class two years ago. Now he's back at American Public Media in Minnesota, applying a design-thinking approach to his work. He shares reflections with us below.
The
journalists listen intently as residents step forth to talk
affectionately of
their neighborhood, Frogtown.
This
day-long experiment is
part of a larger initiative to combine old-fashioned beat-the-streets
reporting
with the latest networked technologies. It’s also the latest effort in a
budding
campaign, early and imperfect, to apply design thinking to journalism.
Both are
what I hope will become a widespread, concerted response to the
disconnections
that have imperiled journalism and distanced journalists from the public
they
serve.
But take a
moment and
empathize with the modern journalist: She is under extreme pressure to
ask
questions she knows someone will answer succinctly and by deadline.
There’s
little time to wonder why, or ask why not, or to ponder the broader
question:
so what's really going on? There
are shows to produce, stories to write, newsholes to fill. And surely we
media
consumers’ appetite for the new and novel is voracious. But yet, I
suspect that
(though they’d have a hard time articulating it if asked) extreme users
among us
(news junkies, constant listeners and the uninterested and disengaged)
suffer
from a certain information malnourishment.
Seems a tall order. But we have the raw materials at
hand. For
the past seven years, we at American Public Media have been building a
new form
of journalistic audience engagement known as the Public Insight Network.
The
PIN, as we know it, is a way of doing journalism, and a way of thinking
about
journalism. Sources in the Network receive queries from journalists and
Public
Insight analysts targeted to them
based on
demographics,
past responses, interests, etc. All responses flow into a database,
enabling
better query targeting down the line. Even seven years old (eons in
Internet
years), and with 85,000 sources around the world, the PIN is in its
infancy. Twelve newsrooms are Public Insight partners, and we expect to
have
implemented the Network in 30 by the end of the year—with prospects for
substantial growth and technical development on the horizon.
With solid, adventurous work here, we
can rapidly prototype and
iterate new approaches to engagement and news coverage that make the
best use of
resources like the Public Insight Network,
Hacks/Hackers,
and the leadership of newsroom visionaries around the country, to
purposefully
meander (the design thinker’s drunken walk) towards a new age of engaged
journalism.
And then
there are news leaders—like design thinking aficionado John Keefe,
senior
executive producer at WNYC
in New York, or
Anders Gyllenhaal, editor of the Miami
Herald, or Jonathan Weber at the new Bay
Citizen, and principals the Knight
Foundation, which funds our
work as well as hundreds of journalism innovation initiatives around the
country—who recognize that engagement is the key to the future of
journalism,
and who are doing the spadework so that a new/old kind of hyper-engaged
journalism can take root. And there are fascinating new ventures like Hacks/Hackers (led
by former Stanford Knight
Fellow and d.school alumni Burt Herman) and an abundance of barcamps
that are
bringing journalists and programmers together to dream up new
techno-social
ventures to create more relevant, enticing forms of journalism.
But
the
success or failure of this work turns on how we answer a single
question: How
are we meeting the information needs of people, of citizens, and of our
democracy? To adequately and rigorously explore this question, we need
to deploy
armies of design thinking ninjas to conduct in-depth interviews, to
patiently
observe people in their native habitats, so we can understand what it is
we’re
missing from our information diets. What’s the gap between what we say
we get
from the news, and what we demonstrate that we get from the news by what
we do?
What deeper set of needs does news serve, and how might we reinvent how
we
produce journalism to serve those needs? On a societal level, where is
the
evidence of information gaps, and how might we fill those?
-- Andrew Haeg
Editor, Public Insight Network
American Public Media

Impressive blog! -Arron
Posted by: rc helicopter | December 21, 2011 at 02:29 AM