Tuesday, 8 September 2009
Work placement at Sky TV
Placements can be arranged in various programme areas at the new Sky News Centre at Osterley, and in Sky Showbiz Online, based at nearby Great West House, in west London. There are also rare opportunities in regional bureaux. Most of the placement work involves research, planning and writing in the following areas:
* Sky News Online
* Sky News programmes, including weekend work
* Specialist areas such as Sky News Business and Sky News Sport
* Sky News Radio
* Five News.
* SkyNews.Com
* Sky Showbiz Online
Placements in other parts of Sky News might be available for suitable candidates, who indicate an interest in home affairs, world news, the environment or health and medicine.
Candidates for Online must be able to demonstrate a flair and commitment to on-line journalism and digital production techniques.
Candidates for Sky News Radio should ideally have some radio experience already, and provide an example of their voice.
Placements will normally last three weeks, and will be unpaid. Students are responsible for their own transport and accommodation arrangements.
If you want to apply, you should write to skynewswork@bskyb.com, with a full CV, and a 500- word thesis on 'Why Should Sky News (or Sky Showbiz Online) Offer Me a Placement?'
You should indicate where you’d like the placement – and why - and when you'd like it to happen; the more flexible the timing, the easier it will be fit in. Easter is very popular, and is booked well in advance.
Be aware that there are many more applications than Sky News can accommodate, and most candidates will be disappointed.
Preference will be given to candidates who can demonstrate a clear understanding of what’s happening in the world, and a keen commitment to journalism, in the form of quality freelance work or other work experience. We are particularly interested in students committed to multi-media news, with a thorough appreciation of online journalism.
Thursday, 27 August 2009
Journalism promo video
Sunday, 5 July 2009
SEO - Wikipedia is the way to go
Our google SERP position is still not great. We have moved up from not being on the top 50 pages, to being on page two for "MA Journalism" (see" Page Result here. We have are oscillating between the top of page 2 and the bottom of page one for the less cpmpetitive BA Journalism term. We are dominant in Yahoo and Bing! - where Page Rank is apparently far laess of a factor.
The real discovery is the importance of Wikipedia.
I think we can quickly increase traffic by 10x or 100x by getting lecturers to add their teaching materials (or make new ones - eg video) and then linking to those from Wikipedia.
That is by far the easiest, cheapest and above all quickest way to increase traffic. Building google Page Rank is slower than I anticipated.
AND NOW A MOAN...
The university front page has only PR 6 for its front page (very low for a university). The attention at the moment seems to be going into the relative side issue of redesigning the university site - its look and functionality.
I have failed I think to get it across that the university's own web site is in fact only a tiny proportion of its total presence on the web - which consists of things like what is said about us in The Student Room, on blogs, on comparison sites and our presence on Wikipedia or You Tube or Flicker. In journalism the experiment has really demonstrated how the university central website is only a small proportion of that view of us on the web (even when people are searching Winchester University). When people are searching for subjects (well for journalism anyway).
We do need to add page rank and rank high rank page to the sub-domain to get to the top of google SERPS. My experience at Westminster was that having SERP=1 in google makes a dramatic difference in both traffic and applications.
It is depressing that we can't seem to send a text link from the PR 6 front page of the university site to the sub-domain - just for experimental purposes if nothing else. Other unis do it - such as Falmouth (a direct competitor). Fighting these people you have the sense of having your hands tied behind your back, because they have optimised their front page to PR8 and then share that down with courses they are trying to promote.
On the redesign the main functionality issue I think is to move away from dynamic templates, because at the moment the CMS uses 'dynamic' templates which are efficient for internal pages on an intranet; but can be discriminated against by search engines (especially Google) because the search engines can sometimes thing they are duplicate pages. This I think may account for why out of 200 pages google is only spidering about 120 pages on the sub-domain; because they are all on dynamic templates and google might think they are duplicates.
On the look of the site, that is not so important. It looks clean and professional at the moment, so given the many things that need attention (eg comprehensive DMOZ listing for faculties and courses) I would say that is less important than many. We do need to add video on the front page. We have to avoid an ego trip over having a snazzy front page, but which has no traffic to speak of. Many high ranking and high traffic pages have very simple design- Content is King (and functionality).
Given all this the main thing the front page does for it accumulate Page Rank (not traffic). A text link from the front page to the sub-domain would lift the sub-domain's page rank (finding out empirically how much would in itself be a useful thing to do). The sub-domain has low page rank (two pages with PR2 and one page with PR1). A link from our only PR6 page would lift that I think (we could monitor the results).
Lastly on conversion we are getting enquiries now from the MA from abroad at about the rate of one a month - one from Russia, one from India. That's not bad given we have only SERP google page 2 and we are not listed in any comparison sites or on things like British Council lists of courses (due I suppose to the lack of a DMOZ listing, or a lack of UKPASS entry or up to date UCAS entries.
Lastly, lastly I have discovered that the university updates the UCAS content only once a year and that this happens in July, so you need to get busy with that now otherwise you might miss the boat. There seems to be no system whereby when a course is validated or revalidated that it get automatically listed by the university in UCAS or UKPASS which in my humble opinion is a systems problem which needs sorting out.
New marketing person is very switch on and I think has grasped the importance of UCAS in the context of basically no other visibility and I think getting it sorted. But there's more attention being given to the university site, it seems, than our presence on UCAS. That's like all the attention going on arranging flowers in the reception area of the building (granted it makes an impression on the visitors we have from time to time) - but at the same time ignoring a 2 minute slot on peak time ITV (which is roughly what the UCAS page is for is by way of metaphor).
Friday, 19 June 2009
From Graham - worth reading
Court allows journalist to defy order for notes
Friday, 19 June 2009
A Northern Ireland journalist won a significant legal battle yesterday against police attempts to obtain details of her confidential dealings with the Real IRA.
A judge ruled that the life of Suzanne Breen would be placed at risk if she was compelled to hand over material relating to the Real IRA killings of two soldiers near Belfast in March.
Journalists and human rights groups welcomed the judge's decision as significant to media freedom. Breen, the Belfast correspondent for the Dublin Sunday Tribune, had faced a prison sentence of up to five years if, as she vowed, she defied a court order to hand over information.
Police wanted to examine her computer, telephones, notes and all other material relating to stories that she wrote about the Real IRA in the wake of the murders of Sappers Mark Quinsey and Patrick Azimkar outside the Massereene army barracks in Antrim.
She said yesterday: "Today is a great victory for me and for the Tribune, but it's also a victory for journalists across Ireland and Britain and elsewhere around the world."
She had told an earlier hearing that the dissident republicans would regard any co-operation by her with the authorities as an "act of collaboration" with the security forces.
A campaign in support of her case attracted support from prominent journalists, academics and others and hundreds signed a petition organised by the National Union of Journalists.
In his judgment, the Recorder of Belfast, Judge Burgess, said there was a strong public interest in bringing the killers to justice, but he had to consider seriously the existence of a real risk to Breen's life.
He described the Real IRA as a "ruthless and murderous group of people" who, if Breen handed over material, would treat her as "as a legitimate target with the murderous consequences that could and may well follow".
The judge said that while the material that Breen held was likely to be of substantial value to the police investigation, he had to place considerable weight on the protection of life.
He said it would "be close to inconceivable as to how she, and potentially her family, could be protected."
Wednesday, 17 June 2009
I've updated my personal website
I've embedded the website on this messageboard using the embed code discussed below:
Wednesday, 10 June 2009
Using blog as a messageboard - on journalism sub-domain
Here's the HTML code.
So if you ever get access to the www.winchester.ac.uk server (maybe just to update course details) then you can embed a message board with all your own protocols and user policies. Of course you and the university have full liability for anything said. But this is a very quick and easy way to rig up a CMS, certainly.
Obviously the window containing the messageboard would be a lot wider when you use a university website template. It is plenty wide enough.