Al Smith Social media in local government

13Aug/093

Press cuttings: There must be a better way

I've been looking at some of the functions the communication and marketing department performs and how they can be performed with less people (we're losing staff through transformation). Specifically if by changing the way we do certain things we can save time and money, or if we can do it better.

Having looked at press cuttings prepared by our team it does seem that this is one area that could be improved.

Present situation

Every day we take the morning (Journal) and afternoon (Evening Chronicle) regional newspapers. The weekend newspapers from Saturday (Journal and Chronicle) and Sunday (Sunday Sun) are looked at on Monday morning.

Press Officers then look through the papers for anything relating to Newcastle City Council, mark the pages by category, publication, date and page number and pass them to a Communication, Marketing and Press Assistant who cuts them out and files them away. A folder is kept for each category containing one month's original cuttings.

In addition a round-up of the weekend's news is provided to senior officers and members by email.

As part of my role I receive Google Alerts for news relating to the council. I have been asked at times to circulate links to relevant articles.

What's wrong with this?

  • Duplication in the articles clipped by Press Officers and picked up by Google Alerts
  • Time taken by Press Officers and Communication, Marketing and Press Assistant
  • Archive is not searchable other than by date/category
  • Archive is not used
  • Cost of newspapers
  • Duplication of function across council (directorates, officers, members taking papers themselves)

My solution

I've been bookmarking the articles I've picked up on delicious. I cut and paste the url, title and first par from the articles and add relevant tags, e.g. publication, +/-.

Advantages

  • The archive is searchable
  • Members/officers can subscribe to updates via RSS
  • email digests can be produced automatically via Tabbloid
  • Quicker than manual approach
  • No duplication
  • More news sources
  • Reduces cost of hardcopies
  • Reduces cost of NLA fee

Disadvantages

  • Not all content published online (approx 50% of Chronicle/Journal/Sunday Sun on random sample)
  • Does not avoid NLA link sharing fee
  • Members/officers prefer tactile hardcopy
  • Column inches not measured

Issues for improvement

  • Additional searches can be added to Google Alerts to pick up some missed articles but coverage will still be patchy
  • There are some people that will always prefer hardcopy, but is this a justification for expense?
  • Initially press office would need to take hardcopy as a backup (they need to know the news before it's added to the web)
  • This system is reliant on the type of data added to third-party websites but could cover more than the current system

I'd like to hear from blog readers about this. What do you think are the merits of the two systems and which should we use? Is there any way of integrating the two or should one be abandoned in favour of the other?

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17Jun/090

Where to start? – further reading/resources

As part of a meeting I'm preparing for this afternoon I'm putting together a list of resources that I will send through as a follow-up email (further reading - if you like). It's a basic intro to some of the things which usually come up when I'm having an introductory chat with people about social media and web 2.0.

I thought I'd blog this as it may be useful to more than just the one organisation and there may be some in here that people haven't seen before.

Some of them are blogs, some are specific articles on blogs (which isn't to say the rest of the blog isn't worth reading) and some are just general cool geekery which may get your juices flowing for a new project.

LGEOResearch - Well this is a good place to start. Local Government Engagement Online Research, to give it it's full title, documents ongoing developments in social media and local government. Regularly updated with interviews, best-practice and case studies by Liz Azyan.

Social Media Staff Guidelines - Codifying social media behaviours can be tricky. Nevertheless it's something that is asked of us and can go some way to allaying the concerns of a risk-averse organisation. This article provides numerous examples which can be taken as a starting point and adapted to meet your needs. Another article, from Mashable, makes suggestions as to how a social media policy should be written.

Managing online reputation - Citizensheep has produced a great process flowchart to help you decide when to wade in online and defend your brand/organisation. Useful stuff!

Ben Marsh - This guy did cool things with #uksnow creating a real-time collaborative weather map. It may be that the map is blank when you look at it, that's just because nobody is tweeting about snow at the moment. If it was snowing I could go to Twitter and post the following "#uksnow NE1 [first section of postcode] X/10 [where X is density of snow out of ten]". A snowflake would then appear on the map, it's size would be regulated by the score out of ten. This combination of tagging and mapping is a simple idea which can be transferred to other topics. Vodafone noticed this and asked Ben to make this #ukhols map, driven by "#ukhols NE1 [first section of postcode] Leeds [place where you are holidaying this summer]".

Utah.gov - Right then, you're going to build a public sector website, have a look at this one first. Take from it what you can, if you can improve it then go ahead - and tell me what you've done!

Really Simple RSS - Post from Dave Press explaining RSS. I could recommend all of Dave's site (and do), but this article needs a particular nod as it covers a core area in a straightforward way.

Planning Alerts - If you combine RSS and geographic data you can get something like this site. It takes data from councils who publish their planning applications in a usable format (ask your techy people). You can then subscribe by email to receive updates on new planning applications in your area. Stuart Harrison from Lichfield council (and others) has adapted this to send Twitter Direct Messages through Twitterplan. Nice.

That should be enough to start with.

Anyone want to recommend more?

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Web 2.0 strategies for local govt (specifically Newcastle City Council), football fan, music lover and cynic.

The views expressed here are my own and are not necessarily those of the Council itself.

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