Street Fight reporting:
Between Patch’s beta redesign, NextDoor’s big funding round in
the spring, and the Guardian’s hyperlocal news project, N0tice,
continuing to expand in the U.K., the hyperlocal news landscape appears
to be converging on the idea that hyperlocal information needs to be
social. Meanwhile, adding to noise in the local content space, the Journatic scandal
in the early summer thrust a set of new hyperlocal plays into the
spotlight, raising questions about the sustainability of models which
looked to data and technology to replace the heavy costs of editorial
content. While the trend line appears to be pointing to a model founded
in social, the role of data in editorial, and user-generated content
remains very much up for debate.
EveryBlock, one of the
earliest entrants in the hyperlocal data space, rebooted in 2011 after
being bought by MSNBC.com in 2009. The pivot shifted the product’s focus
away from its roots in data aggregation toward a more interactive
product centered largely around user-generated content. This past summer
saw some major changes for EveryBlock’s management — NBC Universal
acquired MSNBC.com; meanwhile, EveryBlock founder Adrian Holovaty
announced he was leaving the company in late August.
We caught up with EveryBlock’s president, Brian Addison (who will be appearing at the Street Fight Summit
in two weeks), to discuss the state of the space, and the role of data,
editorial and user-generated content in the future of hyperlocal news.
...
While data was at the core of our product when EveryBlock first
launched, we found, over time, that it kind of has a niche appeal. In a
way, we need to return to the question of what consumer need are we
trying to address with this data? How much value do we as a reader place
with that type of information? With EveryBlock, some of our users value
that, almost raw, data. And it drives more value if you put some
editorial around it. But for us, data still plays an important role in
what we do but we’ve shifted our focus from the aggregation and
organization of that data to a set of community features that have
driven our growth from our redesign about a year and a half ago.
http://streetfightmag.com/2012/07/02/journatic-ceo-accepts-blame-for-blockshoppers-fake-bylines/
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