Monday, February 15, 2010
Where Do Stories Come From?
A national survey, conducted by Cision and Don Bates of The George Washington University, found that an overwhelming majority of reporters and editors now depend on social media sources when researching their stories. Among the journalists surveyed, 89% said they turn to blogs for story research, 65% to social media sites such as Facebook and LinkedIn, and 52% to microblogging services such as Twitter. The survey also found that 61% use Wikipedia, the popular online encyclopedia.
Most journalists said that social media were important or somewhat important for reporting and producing the stories they wrote.
| Importance of Social Media to Journalists (% of Respondents) | |
| Degree of Importance | % of Respondents |
| Important | 15% |
| Somewhat Important | 40% |
| Neither Important nor Unimportant | 16% |
| Somewhat Unimportant | 16% |
| Unimportant | 12% |
| Source: Cision Social Media Study, October 2009 | |
The groups placing the highest levels of importance on social media for reporting and producing stories were journalists who spend most of their professional time writing for Websites . Those at Newspapers and Magazines reported this less often. The differences between Magazine journalists and Website journalists is statistically significant.
While the results demonstrate the fast growth of social media as a well-used source of information for mainstream journalists, the survey also made it clear that reporters and editors are acutely aware of the need to verify information they get from social media.
Heidi
Sullivan, Vice President of Research for Cision, says "Mainstream media
have hit a tipping point in their reliance on social media for their
research and reporting...however... it is not replacing editors' and
reporters' reliance on primary sources, fact-checking and other
traditional best practices in journalism."
According to the survey, most journalists turn to public relations professionals for assistance in their primary research:
Don Bates, founding director of the GWU Strategic Public Relations program, cautions that, though "Social media provides a wealth of new information for journalists... getting the story right is as important as ever... PR professionals... have a responsibility... to ensure the information they provide journalists is accurate and timely...
We use the term research in the broadest possible sense. We do not perform an audit, nor do we analyze the data for accuracy or reliability. Our intention is to inform you of the existence of research materials and so we present reports as they are presented to us. The only requirements we impose are that they are potentially useful and relevant to our readers and that they pass the rudimentary test of relying on acceptable industry standards. We explicitly do not take responsibility for the findings. Please be aware of this and check the source for yourself if you intend to rely on any of the data we present.
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