The days when social media engagement meant assigning an intern to run your feeds are long over. At least, that’s what we heard from The Atlantic’s Matt Thompson on Episode 162 of the Mediatwits. You have to have creativity, analytical skills, reporting capabilities, good judgment and strategic sense to be an “engagement editor,” the new vogue title in digital newsrooms. The high bar makes sense considering the impact engagement editors have on audience perception. Engagement is no longer about just keep track of letters to the editor or patrolling the comments, according to Elia Powers in a story on MediaShift. They are often the public face of the publication and, as Jack Murtha describes in Columbia Journalism Review, will have to publish in circumstances that would give other journalists pause. They also have to be aware of all the publishing platforms out there especially as some are calling platforms the future of news. A succinct way of putting it comes from John Ketchum of Center for Public Integrity, who describes an engagement editor’s role as being “a vessel between the audience and the staff.” We’ll ask our guests to decode the job of the engagement editor on this week’s Mediatwits with guests Justin Banks, deputy editor of audience for the New York Times; John Ketchum, engagement editor at the Center for Public Integrity; Elia Powers, assistant professor of journalism and new media at Towson University; and regular guest Andrew Lih, at American University. MediaShift’s Mark Glaser will host, with Jefferson Yen producing.
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MEDIATWITS BIOS
Mark Glaser is executive editor and publisher of MediaShift and Idea Lab. He is an award-winning writer and accidental entrepreneur, who has taken MediaShift from a one-person blog to a growing media company with events such as Collab/Space workshops and weekend hackathons; the weekly “Mediatwits” podcast; and digital trainings, DigitalEd, in partnership with top journalism schools. You can follow him on Twitter @mediatwit.
Andrew Lih is a new media journalist and associate professor of journalism at the American University School of Communication. He is the author of “The Wikipedia Revolution” (Hyperion 2009, Aurum UK 2009) and is a noted expert on online collaboration and journalism. He is a veteran of AT&T Bell Laboratories and in 1994 created the first online city guide for New York City (www.ny.com). Follow him on Twitter @fuzheado.
SPECIAL GUESTS
Justin Banks is deputy editor of audience development at The New York Times. Prior to joining The Washington Post, where he ran the Post’s audience and digital news team. Justin joined The Post as the newsroom’s first editor for search. He’s on Twitter @bankonjustin
John Ketchum joined the Center from NPR where he worked for Morning Edition. Before that he was at Marketplace as part of a four person team dedicated to covering the income divide in America. John blogged and ran social media strategy for the team. John is excited to break down complex topics in a way that people can understand in the social space. He believes that now more than ever, people want to understand the world around them. This means meeting them at the mediums they use. Follow him @Ketchcast
Elia Powers, is an assistant professor of journalism and new media at
BACKGROUND
Just in case we haven’t hammered home the importance of platforms for you, here’s what other people have been saying. The Awl’s John Herrman has been writing on the existential dread publications have concerning platforms. If his assertion that links are the least important component of most Twitter articles than the role of the engagement editor becomes that much more important. This isn’t considering the changes that Facebook’s Instant Articles or Twitter and Google’s rumored joint project competing with Instant Articles might have on the industry. But social platforms have capture the attention of publishers and it’s not just because of the audience numbers that they can provide. They are also places where important discourse can occur and publishers such as the Los Angeles Times are paying attention.
But what makes a social media editor different from an engagement editor? A lot of what engagement editors do is on social media. Julia Haslanger followed The Nation’s Annie Shields around for a day and this is what she found. You could lump some of what Shields does for The Nation under social media manager, tasks like promoting stories and monitoring platforms, for instances. But she also helps craft headlines, edits the home page, and tests new elements on the website. The overlap between engagement and social media editor is changing because the position is relatively new in journalism and the terms are still relatively fluid.
What defines an engagement editor? How do they interact with the rest of the newsroom? Do they always have to be “on” because their domain is social media? Is there a difference between social media editor and engagement editor? What standards and practice in social/engagement have taken hold recently?
Jefferson Yen is the producer for the Mediatwits Podcast. His work has been on KPCC Southern California Public Radio and KRTS Marfa Public Radio. You can follow him @jeffersontyen.