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Why Journalists Make Great Entrepreneurs

Reese News Lab students vote on ideas for media products to pursue.

One day during winter break, I stumbled upon an article about why professional journalists make good entrepreneurs. Reading the article was like a checklist of what I’ve experienced firsthand at Reese News Lab. While we may not have years of professional experience, student journalists have many of the same skills and habits.

The author said journalists:

“ask good questions”

The article framed this skill as being able to ask succinct, open-ended questions to each of a startup’s stakeholders, such as potential users, mentors and partners. Students in the lab can completely attest to this.

When my team worked on NewsLing — a translation product for local TV broadcasts — last summer, this skill was invaluable. If we had asked poor questions, we might not have reached the final product that we did. Our initial prototype was just text, and if we had just asked for feedback on that product, we probably wouldn’t have learned that our users actually wanted a real-time, audiovisual application.

“tell a good story”

The author framed this skill perfectly. When it comes to Pitch Day, the lab’s staff must craft the perfect message that mixes facts with anecdotes from users. Staffers make the problem tangible and relatable to everyone in the audience. Staffers also use stories to walk the audience through how each product works. For example, when my team pitched NewsLing last summer, we struggled to explain that our service would translate broadcasts across multiple time zones. Our team found that by walking the audience through a hypothetical daily schedule made it a lot easier to understand.

“fact-check”

Students in the J-school quickly learn that fact errors are deadly. One inaccuracy, even a misspelled name, is an automatic 50-point grade deduction. So you could say that our staff is quite experienced in making sure that all of our research is based in fact. When someone starts a sentence with “I think,” our executive director immediately instructs the team to find a definitive answer. Sure, sometimes this leads to major obstacles when a team discovers that they are working on a false assumption, but false assumptions often cause ventures to fail. When a story doesn’t go as expected, journalists know to cut their losses or pivot — this holds true for product ideas too.

In my time at the lab, I’ve found there are other useful journalism skills that apply to entrepreneurship too:

More than fact checkers – journalists are fact finders

In the lab, we want data and examples to back up everything. However, this information is not always easy to find. Journalists know how to scrounge and stalk the Internet in order to find that key piece of information. On any given day, you can find a staffer going through the surveys and polls of massive studies, like the Pew State of the News Media report. Sometimes it’s as random and specific as finding out how many women in Orange County, N.C. are divorced. One team dug through U.S. Census data just for that statistic. By the way, it’s 9.4 percent.

perseverance

Entrepreneurs face unexpected challenges daily. Whether it is trying to find an expert to discuss the idea with or just making a prototype, challenges are bound to arise. However, student journalists are especially well-versed in dealing with these problems. In the last six months, my teams have tried to get in contact with more than 50 different advertisers but only heard back from about five. Entrepreneurship comes with a lot of ups and downs, but their relentless perseverance makes journalists uniquely qualified to work with startups.

The original article reminded me of one of the biggest takeaways staffers learn at Reese News Lab — teams need diversity of thought and skill. When a professor from the UNC business school visited the lab, he was thoroughly impressed by our commitment to building and testing prototypes with potential users. He remarked that business school students often get too entrenched in the numbers and forget to test an actual product. Then again, journalists and spreadsheets aren’t always the best of friends, but that’s why we build teams.

Lincoln Pennington is a sophomore in the journalism school at UNC Chapel Hill with a second major in political science. He works as a staffer for reesenews.org and tweets from @Lincoln_Ross. He is a politics junkie interested in the future of the media and hopes to work in D.C. upon graduation in 2016.

This story originally appeared on Reese News Lab.

Reese News Lab is an experimental news and research project based at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The lab was established in 2010 with a gift from the estate of journalism school alum Reese Felts. We develop and test new ideas for the media industry. Undergraduate and graduate students learn about the state of the news industry, pitch product ideas, conduct user testing and develop prototypes. The staff of undergraduate and graduate students are required to document their work throughout their projects, compiling their research, results and recommendations on the viability of their product ideas.

Lincoln Pennington :Lincoln Pennington is a freshman in the journalism school at UNC Chapel Hill with a second major in political science. He works as a staffer for reesenews.org and tweets from @Lincoln_Ross. He is a politics junkie interested in the future of the media and hopes to work in D.C. upon graduation in 2016.

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