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How Argo communicates (or tries to)

Photo by Stéfan on Flickr.

Among the most difficult parts of this project for me has been figuring out how to conduct or facilitate meaningful conversations among people at 12 stations, spanning three time zones. Here’s a MediaShift postthat walks through some of our efforts to do this:

Project Argo is an ambitious undertaking. It involves networking NPR with 12 member stations spanning three time zones with a different mix of bloggers and editors at each station. The stations cover a variety of regionally focused, nationally resonant topics that range from climate change to local music.

Communicating effectively within these parameters has required creativity and experimentation. And we’re still learning.

I’ll break down our various approaches — what we’ve tried, what’s working, and what we’re still working on — using the three tiers of communication: One-to-one, one-to-many, and many-to-many.

As they say, “Nothing will work, but everything might.” Read the rest at MediaShift.

The Argo approach to software development

This post for MediaShift considers the development philosophies behind Argo:

Part of the mission behind NPR’s Project Argo is to construct a software platform that can maximize the output of a one- or two-person team of reporters. Project Argo is a collaboration between NPR and member stations to strengthen public media’s role in local journalism. As the project has progressed, we’ve realized that we evolved a set of design and development principles that have guided our work throughout.

This is how software invention looks in the era of the framework: Ten years ago, armed with an unstoppable designer/developer combo like Argo’s tech architect, Marc Lavallee, and our designer/front-end developer, Wes Lindamood, we would have built a system from scratch. But almost from the moment our planning for Argo began in early 2010, two things were clear to us: (1) Software such as WordPress, Drupal and Django gave us a great start toward what we wanted to accomplish. (2) No one piece of software would meet all the needs of our bloggers. The bloggers were certain to use tools like Twitter, Flickr, Facebook and Delicious in addition to whatever we used to publish their site. So we set about building a content management ecosystem, integrating a variety of systems into a coherent whole.

Read the rest at MediaShift.

The lamest blog post of all time …

Sad lego. From Kalexanderson on Flickr.

If you could take a vote to determine the worst types of blog posts, the listicle-without-content would probably show up pretty high. (Yes, numbering is narrative, but if you’re tapping into our reflex to look at anything that’s been put into a numbered list, you’d better deliver X quantity of terrific insights.)

But I’d venture to say that the very worst genre of post is the apology post – a.k.a. any post that begins “Sorry I haven’t written in so long.” The apology presupposes that your community of readers have been waiting with bated breath for your next contribution to the world, checking back every few days in anticipation before clicking away, despondent.

That state of affairs is highly unlikely to be accurate. Typically, the biggest loser when you don’t post is you.

Continue reading

In case you missed it, CommonHealth kudos

It’s been quiet here the past few weeks, as we’ve been on the road. Today, I had check-ins with several of the Argo-bloggers after our gathering on the West Coast. There’s a ton of great stuff happening in Argo Land, however, and now that I’m back in DC, you’ll start hearing more about it. Meanwhile, though, I want to call attention to this well-deserved high praise from the Knight Science Journalism Tracker for our CommonHealth bloggers Carey Goldberg and Rachel Zimmerman:

CommonHealth has sparked a very interesting discussion, which should be essential reading for anyone who read the Times piece. It’s an interesting way of doing journalism in the blog era. Instead of calling sources for comment, open it up to anyone who cares to respond. I’m guessing that even reporters as good as Goldberg and Zimmerman would not have found some of these fascinating responses using the old-fashioned tricks of our trade.

Much more on this very soon.

Toledo Wes and the Bombers Score Big

ArgoBowl

Toledo Wes (middle) looking supremely confident after asserting his dominance on the hardwood. Matt Thompson (left) and Marc Lavallee each had their own... uh... style.

All work and no play makes Argo a dull team. With that in mind, your friendly Argo friends went looking for fun out of the D.C. sun for a little while.

What better way to clear our heads for an afternoon and to ready ourselves for the next wave of station launches than to wear other people’s sweaty clown shoes and smash some pins?

Yeah… bowling! You’ll be pleased to know the regulars at Lucky Strike lanes are still marveling at the technique and style on display as the Argo team lit it up, setting the sports world back a couple hundred years.

I’m pleased to say, we bowled a 300 game!

(editor’s note: Yes, it is technically true, if you added up our four scores, we reached 300. But that is quite different from the bowling term “300 game”.) Continue reading

Dark secrets of the online overlords video

I tend to gesticulate a lot.

I gave a version of my “Dark secrets of the blogging superstars” preso to a group of news directors from public radio stations (including a couple of our Argo stations). The Knight Digital Media Center has posted a video of the session online. Feel free to take a look. Slides used during the session are below.

And Two More Make Six

Food on a stick at the Minnesota State Fair

Image courtesy of Flickr user Cathyse97

Last week I started introducing you to the new Argo bloggers. We have two more to announce now, completing the first wave of sites.

Minnesota Public Radio has brought on board Alex Friedrich to be the dean of its higher education site.  Alex spent the past year getting his masters at the London School of Economics. He is a former St. Paul Pioneer Press reporter who covered education for the Monterey County Herald (Calif.). Alex has covered a wide range of stories from the Russian elections in Moscow to the I-35 bridge collapse in the Twin Cities. He may be best remembered around the MPR newsroom though as the guy who once appeared on-air for eating nothing but food-on-a-stick for 12 days straight at the Minnesota State Fair in 2006… and lived to talk about it. To be fair, it was a reporting assignment for the Pioneer Press, not simply a craving for corn dogs!

Cassandra Profita is the new Argo blogger at Oregon Public Broadcasting. We like that Cassandra began one of her stories with, ‘Spotted this month: Six men heaving hundreds of dead bodies into Clatsop County’s Lewis and Clark River.’ She goes on to explain that they were, in fact, ‘dead fish bodies — or what remained of them after six months of storage.’ Sounds like the right tone for her blog on the collision between development and environmental policy in the Northwest. Cassandra is an award-winning reporter for The Daily Astorian (Or.) and reports weekly for the local NPR member station KMUN. She has degrees in journalism and environmental studies from the University of Missouri.

It’s a great group. Can’t wait to see the talent that the next six stations bring on board.

I’m logged into my Argo site. Now what?!

To my great happiness, several of you have the keys to your Argo sites. And from conversations with many of you, you’re now looking at that big checklist I posted Monday and saying, “Er, OK, what, when and how?” Hopefully this will bring a semblance of order to your world.

First, content is paramount.

More than anything else on that list, we want the Argo-bloggers in the system posting stuff. It doesn’t all have to be real stuff, either. Anything they post, they can delete before we go live without causing any harm. To the extent that they can be posting genuine content – quick takes on news items, quotes from the day’s events, etc. – and tagging them with the appropriate topics, that will be very, very useful in fleshing out your site for launch. But I want them to get comfortable with the system above all; comfortable composing posts there (not in Microsoft Word) and not afraid of breaking anything.

Then, focus on categories and topics.

A lot of things flow from the topics you select for the site. Crucially, they compose the main site navigation, but they also feed into Delicious and other aspects of the process. Get your four or five main categories finalized first (many of you already have), and then determine the topics you feel comfortable launching with.

Meanwhile, I’m working on an F.A.Q…

You can find that document here. (There’s not much in it yet.) That is an invitation to ask me all your questions about how to use the platform, which I will then answer and put into the FAQ. (See how this works?)

… and a number of screencasts.

We’ve started posting screencasts and how-tos to introduce you to your Argo site at docs.argoproject.org. Right now, you can learn how to customize your site navigation, how to add navigation to your station site, how to make slideshows, and more. I’m working on screencasts to show you how to post photos and video, how to dress up different types of posts (Q&As, single quote posts, long posts, and other stuff), and how to add your site metadata (all the “about the site” stuff, links to your Twitter and Delicious feeds, etc.).

Did you catch that URL?

Bookmark it: docs.argoproject.org. It’s a companion site to this one, where we’ll be storing instructions on how to use the Argo platform.

Any questions? E-mail me, or post ‘em in the comments!

T-Minus One Week, plus ‘You’re Hired!’

Humanosphere - KPLU So, it’s come down to this.

All of this talk over the last year or so, the submission of proposals, hiring of staff, station visits, our UnConvention, blogger hires, design sprints… and in just one week we will be launching the first of our Argo sites – unleashing them on an unsuspecting world.

The first six sites to launch are: KPLU, WNYC, KALW, OPB, MPR, and KPCC

The team here is deep in the throes of checklists, design tweaks, and QA-ing the publishing environment. We are also fully engaged with the first group of stations finalizing their ‘to-do’ lists – populating the blog with real posts, categories, topics, and providing ad tags.

One of the great pleasures of the project has been seeing the time and attention that has gone into ensuring the right hires at made at each station, taking into account subject expertise, Web savvy, experience in building networks (via social media or in person), and ensuring we have a diverse pool of candidates. Some of you have been asking about hires at other stations. While some in the second batch of stations to go live are deciding among finalists, here are the bloggers who will be live next week:

KPLU made one of the first hires, bringing in Tom Paulson to curate its global health blog. From KPLU’s Keith Seinfeld:

Tom was a Science and Medical reporter at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer for 22 years, until it stopped publishing a print version and laid-off most of its staff last year.  He also was one of the first reporters to cover the topic of “Global Health” in the daily news media — starting with the day Bill Gates announced he was giving most of his immense fortune to improving health in developing countries.  If you type “Tom Paulson” into an internet search, you’ll find more than 400 stories he wrote at the P-I about global health.  In the process, he’s traveled for stories to Africa, Asia and Latin America, and he’s earned international recognition for his reporting.

KPCC has hired Leslie Berestein Rojas to write a blog about the 1.5 and second generation immigrant experience in Southern California. Leslie’s vision is to explore:

…the cultural fusion that has become an ever-bigger part of the region’s identity, with these new generations influencing one another and the culture in general. [It's] a place that has given birth to cultural mashups like Kogi BBQ – the brainchild of a second-generation Filipino-American married to a Korean-American who loved Mexican food and came up with the idea of Kor-Mex fusion, which he calls “L.A. in one bite.” Gotta love that! It’s a classic story of the new Southern California, and there are many others like it.

Rina PaltaYesterday was the first day on the job for Rina Palta, KALW’s blogger to focus on cops and the community.  Rina is no stranger to KALW or public media. She has done some reporting previously for KALW. Rina came to radio from print, having worked at Mother Jones magazine. Rina expects to closely examine the issues of parole, recidivism and gangs in the Bay Area.

WNYC has hired Azi Paybarah to cover the ins and outs of politics in New York. Azi has covered politics for the New York Observer, the New York Sun and New York Press. His departure from the Observer for WNYC was noted in Fishbowl NY.  Azi has 1,300 followers on Twitter and helped launch political blogs at both the Sun and Press.

Minnesota Public Radio and Oregon Public Broadcasting are working out final details with their hires. We’ll update with their hires shortly.