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Journalists Should Join Google+ to Understand What Comes Next

This month’s Carnival of Journalism, a site that I’ve organized where bloggers can convene to all write about the same topic, was hosted by Kathy Gill, a social media consultant and senior lecturer at the University of Washington, who seized on the new social network that is Google+.

Still in its infancy, Google+ has been the topic of many-a-tech blog posts. As a former tech writer, I love and hate this stuff.
Sometimes I want to slap Mashable right in the “http” and tell them to
never do another “Top X Ways [name your industry professionals] Can Use
[new social-networking tool].” If you are curious though, here are the top five ways journalists can use Google+, courtesy of Mashable.

Equally, I want to avoid speculation about Google+ vs. Facebook or Twitter, etc. It’s a valid conversation, but there
is already plenty of it. If a Facebook executive has a sneeze that
sounds like “aww-choogle-phluss,” the tech press is all over it.
I personally am not a fan of Facebook and welcome my Google+ overlords.
I do have a post in me about privacy, Silicon Valley speculation, etc. —
but I don’t want to add my voice to that already loud chorus.

Instead, I want to write about Google+ in terms of everyday average
use — both how journalists use the Internet and how everyday average
people use the Internet (assuming the latter is slightly different).

Sure enough, 10,000 Words (the Mashable of journalism blogging) recently did a post on the top 10 ways journalists use the Internet.
This is the ENTIRE Internet mind you — but the results of the study are
revealing. According to research, journalists use the Internet for:

1. Reading news

2. Searching for news sources/story ideas

3. Social networking

4. Micro-blogging

5. Blogging

6. Watching webinars/webcasts

7. Watching YouTube

8. Exploring Wikis

9. Producing/listening to podcasts

10. Social bookmarking

By rough estimate, I’d say six of those activities can be encapsulated
by Google+ in a way they can’t be on Facebook (partly because Facebook
looks like a user-interface designer puked on a screen). One could
argue that with Google Hangouts you can add another one or two activities to
the count above, and considering the network is still young, who knows where it
could go?

While I won’t venture what the top 10 Internet activities are for
non-journalists, I suspect the majority of them are social in nature,
including email (Gmail having lots of penetration) and research (Google
again). Now we can start to see some real Epic 2014 scariness/potential.

The real lesson here is that journalists on Google+ should keep in
mind how they are using the platform and how the public might be using
the platform. The two aren’t necessarily the same, and all too often, we
think the rest of the world uses web technology the same way we do.
Whenever I want to be humbled, I watch a member of my family use the
computer and think to myself — ignorance is bliss.

The reason to be on Google+
isn’t because it’s the newest, hottest, sexiest thing. That might be a
good reason to be on it as an individual (hard to separate) but not why
you should be on it as a journalist. You should be on these sites to
understand how people are communicating and the vocabulary of this
communication. Friendster informed MySpace which informed Facebook which informed Google+.

If you ignore these sites, you will fail to understand how a growing
portion of the population deals with the flow of information, and
inevitably how more people will deal with this flow in the future. The best journalists will be problem solvers on the social web.

If you are a journalist your JOB is to understand and insert yourself into the flow of information. That’s what Google+ represents, the flow of information.

A version of this article first appeared on my blog, DigiDave.

David Cohn :David Cohn has written for Wired, Seed, Columbia Journalism Review and The New York Times among other publications. While working toward his master’s degree at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, Cohn worked with Jay Rosen as editor of the groundbreaking Newassignment.net in 2006. Cohn also worked with Jeff Jarvis from Buzzmachine.com to organize the first Networked Journalism Summits. Most recently he is the founding editor of Circa. He was the founder and director of Spot.Us, a nonprofit that is pioneering “community funded reporting.” In academics he has been a lecturer at UC Berkeley’s journalism school and was a fellow at the University of Missouri’s Journalism school at the Reynolds Journalism Institute. He has been a contributing editor at NewsTrust.net, a founding editor of Broowaha and an advisor to many new media projects from OffTheBus.net and Beatblogging.org to The Public Press. He is a frequent speaker on topics related to new media and beyond.

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