1st Edition

Entrepreneurial Journalism How to go it alone and launch your dream digital project

By Paul Marsden Copyright 2017
196 Pages 37 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

196 Pages 37 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

196 Pages 37 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Entrepreneurial Journalism explains how, in the age of online journalism, digital-savvy media practitioners are building their careers by using low-cost digital technologies to create unique news platforms and cultivate diverse readerships. The book also offers a range of techniques and tips that will help readers achieve the same. Its opening chapters introduce a conceptual understanding of... Read more

List of Figures

List of Contributors

Acknowledgements

Introduction

  1. What is News and what is Journalism in 2016?
  2. Contribution from Catherine O’Connor and Rebecca Whittington

  3. The Business of Journalism
  4. Contribution from Andrew Youde

  5. Innovation
  6. Building your idea
  7. Being an Entrepreneurial Journalist
  8. Contribution from Wayne Bailey

  9. Starting your website and writing online
  10. Engaging, measuring and reacting to your audience
  11. Your smartphone as your best reporting tool
  12. Lindsay Eastwood

  13. Using social media to promote your work
  14. The boundaries you must not cross and remaining ethical in the Journalistic Wild West

Contribution from Nigel Green

Index

Biography

Paul Marsden lectures at Leeds Trinity University, UK. He specialises in online journalism, teaching trainee journalists how to build news websites, use technology to tell stories in innovative ways and utilise social platforms to build an audience and generate income from digital reporting.

Kelly Toughill, University of King’s College, Halifax, Canada – ‘It is comprehensive. It hits all of the major points of contemporary production and sustainability…We need a new text for the first-year course (Foundations of Journalism – Module in Journalism Economics). Nothing out there is adequate. This might work well. We also need a good text on entrepreneurial journalism for our graduate program.’

Sue Greenwood, Staffordshire University, UK – ‘The focus on practical skills and advice is the strongest element in making this a book students will want to use… The focus on case studies makes for a more accessible book and delivers a much broader range of voices and experiences for students to learn from… Including freelancing as entrepreneurialism is a strength… I would recommend that it was made available to my students as supplementary reading.’

Tim Dunlop, Centre for Advancing Journalism, University of Melbourne, Australia – ‘Sounds like a good, basic intro to some important issues, including the use of tech in performing journalism. The interviews with people like Jeff Jarvis could be valuable… I would say that the real weakness here is that the material is likely to be very dated by the time of publication and that there is not nearly enough attention to social media.’