2013 review of research literature in Digital Journalism about the rise of mobile devices and the response of news organizations.
by John Wihbey | January 23, 2013 | mobile tech, technology, telecommunications Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Email Republish This Article Close window XYou are free to republish this piece both online and in print, and we encourage you to do so with the embed code provided below. We only ask that you follow a few basic guidelines.
by John Wihbey, The Journalist's Resource
January 23, 2013
A 2012 report from the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism and the Economist Group, “The Future of Mobile News,” found that an estimated 50% of U.S. adults now own either a tablet device or smartphone that connects to the Internet, and 66% of these device users say they get news from these mobile devices.
The report notes shifts in news consumption patterns: “There is growing evidence that mobile devices are adding to how much news people get. As many as 43% say the news they get on their tablets is adding to their overall news consumption. And almost a third, 31%, said they get news from new sources on their tablet.” For those fearing that the rise of mobile news access will simply bring about a more headline-driven environment, other data offers a mixed picture: “73% of adults who consume news on their tablet read in-depth articles at least sometimes, including 19% who do so daily. Fully 61% of smartphone news consumers at least sometimes read longer stories, 11% regularly.”
The Pew/Economist report, which also shows divergent demographic patterns, is complemented by data from another 2012 survey and report, from the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism. The Reynolds report found an association between tablet ownership and increased news engagement: “About 41% of the large media tablet owners who also owned a smart phone said they used their devices on average more than one hour per day for news. About 31% of those who only owned a smart phone spent that amount of time consuming news.”
For journalism, these changes offer many opportunities, observers say, if approached in the proper way. For more on this, see these articles by Tom Rosenstiel and Cory Bergman at the Poynter Institute.
A 2013 paper titled “Mobile News: A Review and Model of Journalism in an Age of Mobile Media,” published in the inaugural issue of the journal Digital Journalism, reviews the existing research literature on how Internet-enabled information and communication technologies (ICTs) are changing both producers and consumers of news media. The paper, from the University of Gothenberg in Sweden, serves as a useful overview for those trying to understand, in context, the frenetic changes in the news industry.
Key points in the paper include:
The paper concludes by proposing a framework for understanding these mobile news dynamics. It’s a model that sees a continuum along two lines: the continuum between human work and machine work; and the continuum between customization and repurposing. There is an inherent tension here, the author notes: “One finds that the production of mobile journalism has generally traveled from the human-led customization dimension towards the technology-led customization dimension (alongside some who exercise only different kinds of repurposing). Mobile news publishing seems to have become increasingly synonymous with excelling in technological customization, harnessing technological assets that enhance the perceived affordances of mobile devices.”
A related 2012 reported from Columbia Journalism School’s Tow Center for Digital Journalism, “Post-Industrial Journalism: Adapting to the Present” (PDF), makes several salient points about mobile news in the context of larger industry trends. First, “Web advertising has never generated anything like the same revenue per reader, mobile looks even worse, and the continuing rise in online advertising generally is now often bypassing traditional news properties altogether. Meanwhile, hoped-for sources of direct fees — paywalls, micropayments, mobile apps, digital subscriptions — have either failed or underperformed.” Furthermore, “the old model, where most users visited a home page or used a mobile application tied to a single organization, will continue to lose ground to superdistribution, [with] users forwarding relevant materials to one another. We already live in a world where the most widely circulated stories acquire audiences that dwarf the median headcount.”
Tags: technology, telecommunications. mobile tech