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E-Media Tidbits

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Steve Outing
A group weblog about the intersection of news & technology


Paying Citizen Reporters in South Africa
Posted by Steve Outing at 3:14 PM on Dec. 30, 2005
Among most of the U.S. and European citizen-journalism ventures that I'm acquainted with, the idea of paying citizen reporters is not on the table. South Korea's Ohmynews.com pays a modest fee to its citizen reporters based on quality of the submissions. But for the most part, the thinking is that reporting by members of the public is something they do for the satisfaction alone.

Now comes word of some innovation from South Africa. The website reporter.co.za from Johnnic Media solicits citizen reporting and pays for good stuff -- grading news contributions into gold, silver, and bronze, and paying up to R35 (about US$5.50) per gold story.

South Africa multimedia-journalism instructor Vincent Maher blogged about this last week. He commented: "Johnnic have not always been the most innovative when it comes to Web publishing and strategy but this time they have leapfrogged in a massive, massive way with the launch of reporter.co.za. ... In my opinion, this is one of the biggest leaps forward by any South African media company in the last two years. Congratulations to Johnnic for having the courage to do this, and good luck with the lawyers!"

The emphasis of the site, which is set to debut on January 9 (though citizen reporters can register now), will be on watchdog/activist reporting, consumer issues, and news from abroad. Maher notes that it is tied to Johnnic's educational program, "so it helps them identify young reporters early."

Among the incentives that the site is using to entice citizen reporters are giveaway contests for registered site members (mobile phones); the "small tip-off payments" for published material; and the possibility that if a citizen news submission is for a hot breaking news alert, the site has the capacity to negotiate publication of the story or photo in Johnnic's print publications -- "with commensurate payment."

This is smart. The more I learn about "citJ," the more I have come to believe that for citJ sites to be populated with quality content and not a bunch of dreck, the industry needs to figure out better citizen incentives. (And since that's an opinion that I know will be unpopular with a good many people in the fledgling citJ field, I'll emphasize that it's a personal view.)
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