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Be it: What MSM can learn from Barack Obama
Published on 27/01/08
by Zac Echola
Shortly after polls closed last night, my wife got a text message from Obama’s campaign. He was the projected winner of the South Carolina primary.
A few minutes later I logged into Gmail, where Obama had already sent me an email about the victory and where I could watch his speech.
About a half an hour later a friend in Washington sent me a text with the percentage breakdowns.
This morning I logged on to Facebook to see a notification from Obama, a simple copy/paste job from the email sent earlier.
Sometime today, I’ll watch his speech and Clinton’s concession speech on YouTube, since I was busy playing Super Mario Galaxy while he actually gave the speech.
Except for a CNN breaking update I got via Twitter last night (after Obama’s text message), I knew who won the primary without ever seeing a newspaper or TV site.
Only today, when I checked CNN’s excellent primary elections section did I go to an MSM site. News that I care about comes to me, despite the source.
I, like many other people, only go looking for news (on my days off) if something has first come to me to pique my interest. Then I find a site with valuable, contextual information laid out in a way that I can explore the data (in this case, exit polls). I can passively receive information I’d like to know.
If you’re not actively seeking out your audience, you’re doing something wrong.
Media organizations should be doing the same thing Obama does. It should be everywhere I am and it should provide valuable, easy-to-use added context and content if and when I decide to hit their sites.
The end. Or is it?
Please leave a comment so I know what you think about this post. After that, check out It's randomonium! Or, if you're so inclined, take a gander at what I'm reading and my del.icio.us links.
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Comments on What MSM can learn from Barack Obama
7 Responses
The decentralized, unpackaged media world | Howard Owens
27/01/08
[...] Weaver linked to this post from Zac Echola before I saw it, but it’s an important map of how the wired get and filter [...]
Notes from a Teacher: Mark on Media » Sunday squibs
27/01/08
[...] What MSM can learn from Barack Obama. Zac Echola: “Media organizations should be doing the same thing Obama does. It should be everywhere I am and it should provide valuable, easy-to-use added context and content if and when I decide to hit their sites.” We truly are increasingly in the news-finds-you age. [...]
Mich
28/01/08
So good, I’ve re-posted in two places. Full credit, of course. I hope that’s okay.
What I really want to know is, how’s Super Mario Galaxy? I’ve only Best Buy-played it.
Zac Echola
28/01/08
Copy my stuff all you want. I’m just throwing out ideas. Credit or not, I just hope to get people thinking.
As for Super Mario Galaxy, if you’re a fan of platform games, this might be the best Mario game ever. Starts off way too easy, but then picks up.
Random Thoughts 01/31/2008 - New Comm Biz - New media strategies for business
31/01/08
[...] What MSM can learn from Barack Obama | Zac Echola [...]
The Journalism Iconoclast » My advice for j-students who want to make a difference (and get a job)
31/01/08
[...] If you look at the way most new sites integrate with social networks, it’s a very me-first strategy. News companies are only interested in finding ways of getting users to push news content onto social networks, but it doesn’t really serve the readers. Instead of asking our audience to seek us, we should go out and seek our audience. [...]
BeautyAbility » I’m a Certifiable “Obama Mamaâ€
29/02/08
BeautyAbility » I’m a Certifiable “Obama Mama 
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