
Wednesday, June 21, 2006
1) Last summer, this was New York Times executive editor Bill Keller's message to the staff as he described the integration of the online and newspaper operations. Over
the past ten years the newsroom of Nytimes.com and the newsroom on 43rd
Street have been partners at a distance -- separated administratively,
culturally, geographically and financially. We have built bridges --
most notably the Continuous News Desk -- and we have admired each
other's work, but we have not been full collaborators. This was
probably a healthy arrangement in the formative years, because it
allowed our digital operation to flourish, to experiment, to move at
its own quick rhythm and focus on the competitive new digital world.
The result is, unassailably, the best and most widely read newspaper
website in the world, one that consistently wins every award in the
field and that continues to attract new readers in droves.
But
in those ten years, the world has changed. The digital news operation
is now grown up and strong, ready to enlarge its ambitions. The
reporting and editing staff at the original newsroom is much more at
ease with the Web, more eager to embrace it both as an opportunity for
invention and an alternative way to reach our demanding audience. We
have a burgeoning video unit that is eager to be a larger presence on
the website, at a time when most users of Nytimes.com have graduated to
the kind of high-speed delivery that makes video appealing. And all of
us appreciate that one of the biggest long-term challenges facing our
craft is to invent a digital journalism and new services for our
readers that both live up to our high standards and help carry the cost
of a great news-gathering organization.
We have concluded that our best chance of meeting that challenge is to integrate the two newsrooms into one. This will enable us to fully tap the creative energy of this organization and thus raise digital journalism to the next level. In the coming weeks, we will be working with editors and staff in both places to work out details and accomplish a smooth transition.
2) Today's short brief in the Globe's business section is considerably less lyrical. The Boston Globe will integrate its news-gathering operations with the Boston.com website as part of its strategy of making its content more readily
accessible on various media. Globe editor Martin Baron will oversee
editorial operations for both operations and will coordinate how news
and features are reported, edited, and presented online and in print. Boston.com
general manager Richard Gair will continue to oversee technology
functions. No layoffs will result from the move. Globe publisher
Richard Gilman said the integration ``will help us to expand our reach
and influence, gain revenue and market share, and fiercely compete with
a host of rapidly changing and expanding media options for readers and
advertisers." Both the Globe and Boston.com are owned by The New York Times Co.
3) The Herald had its own spin on the move today and it was -- not surprisingly -- not flattering. Globe Web site loses autonomy By Jerry Kronenberg
Just call it the Boring Broadsheet.com.
The Boston Globe is putting its Boston.com online unit more directly under the print publication’s control.
“When
we launched Boston.com, autonomy and absolute focus were essential for
success,” Globe Publisher Richard Gilman wrote his staff in a memo, a
copy of which the Herald has obtained. “Now, we are in a new phase of
heightened competition . . . (and) to flourish in this new environment,
we need a more integrated approach.”
Gilman wrote that the Globe plans to merge the two operations’
editorial staffs under Globe Editor Martin Baron’s control. Plans also
call for Globe executives to oversee Boston.com’s marketing, design,
finance and human resources.
Additionally,
the paper intends to move some 35 Boston.com sales and editorial
staffers from their current downtown locale to the Globe’s Morrissey
Boulevard headquarters.
Despite the Globe's soft-peddling of the news, the merging of the online and print operations under Baron's control is a major -- and definitely overdue -- move for a paper that had been too slow to create a working relationship between its dead tree and cyber journalists and whose web operation, while successful, was often treated as a dangling appendage. (There was a detrimental psychological impact on the rank-and-file as well with many talented veteran journalists feeling alienated from the online effort.) That's been changing recently with the introduction of more blogging and the creation of web editors. And the announcement today would seem to be a belated acknowledgement that everyone on Morrissey Boulevard should be pulling in the same direction .
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