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<updated>2009-10-19T21:47:29Z</updated>
<title>Comments for End of the Year Radical Transparency for Spot.Us</title>
<subtitle>Idea Lab is a group blog by innovators who are reinventing community news for the Digital Age.</subtitle>
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<published>2008-12-22T22:02:29Z</published>
<updated>2009-01-05T22:16:29Z</updated>
<title>End of the Year Radical Transparency for Spot.Us</title>
<summary>It is the end of the year and I received some questions from the TIdes Center who are doing due-diligence reports for the Knight Foundation. I&apos;ve been meaning to do a public &quot;where is Spot.Us&quot; post for some time and since I&apos;m answering all these related questions I thought - why not just go crazy and blog the questions and my answers. If I have to update Knight Foundation - I should update everyone, since in the end I view this as a project owned by the community of people who take interest in it (everyone who has been following...</summary>
<author>
<name>David Cohn</name>
<uri>http://spot.us</uri>
</author>

<category term="Best Practices" />

<category term="Marketing" />

<category term="Participation" />

<category term="Philosophy" />

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<![CDATA[<p>It is the end of the year and I received some questions from the <a href="http://www.tidescenter.org/">TIdes Center</a> who are doing due-diligence reports for the <a href="http://www.knightfoundation.org/">Knight Foundation</a>.</p>

<p>I've been meaning to do a public "where is Spot.Us" post for some time and since I'm answering all these related questions I thought - why not just go crazy and blog the questions and my answers.  If I have to update Knight Foundation - I should update everyone, since in the end I view this as a project owned by the community of people who take interest in it (everyone who has been following our progress).</p>

<p>So - here is my progress report. The only parts left out are the financial records.</p>

<p><b>1.  Please list each anticipated outcome and explain your progress in achieving it.</b></p>


<ul>
<li>Spot.Us would begin branding itself as a pioneer in "community funded reporting." - I am <span class="caps">VERY </span>happy with our progress here.</li>
<li>We would launch an open source platform upon which local Bay Area journalists could pitch the public to fund their work as independent reporters. - the site is not "finished" by any means - but it gets the job done. I am satisfied with our progress here so far - and have plans for how the platform can improve in the future.</li>
<li>The platform would be used to fund 3-6 investigations before the end of the year. - We have funded eight stories - with two more only $200 away from also being funded. Of these ten funded stories only one is below-par in terms of the type of reporting I want to fund. I believe I know why this reporting was able to sneak through and have plans to stop this from happening again</li>
</ul>




<p><b>2.  Is the fundamental need for your project still as you described in your proposal?</b></p>

<p>Yes. I would argue that it is becoming a bigger need as we see cities like Detroit cut back their daily print. I expect to see more cities cut back in the future. While online caters very well to breaking news (it is immediate, helps increase page-views, etc), it is difficult for news organizations to do long-form journalism and for independent journalists to get work doing larger investigations. </p>

<p><b>3.  Were there any major changes in the project activities and timetable? What caused them?</b></p>

<p>So far I am happy with the progress we have made. It is always difficult to estimate when things will be ready for public consumption. I had aimed for a mid-October launch and ended up going public early November. So while the site's launch was about three weeks later than I would have preferred, I consider anything within a month of the anticipated date to still be "on time" in terms of launching a website. </p>

<p>Due to well-orchestrated marketing and exposure on the web we've managed to get enough traffic and interest to fund a few stories. Most of these will be published in January of 09' around the same time this report is due.</p>

<p><b>4.  Describe any setbacks you encountered and how you addressed them.</b></p>

<p>Starting in January of 09' is when I expect Spot.Us to have serious challenges these will be.</p>


<ul>
<li>Technical - the site will need to react to user-feedback and expand to new regions.</li>
<li>Marketing - with the initial buzz of our launch behind us - we will have to market ourselves very effectively in a grassroots fashion. We have to make the argument that journalism is a social good worthy of people's small donations. That is an easy argument to make to journalists - difficult to make to regular netizens.</li>
</ul>



<p>The only setback on my mind right now is that every newspaper in the Bay isn't using Spot.Us to fundraise for themselves (this is after all a platform anyone can use - it is <span class="caps">NOT </span>a news organization to be viewed as competition). I have presented to many of them - so they are aware of Spot.Us, but they are not experimenting with it at this juncture. In many ways this is not un-expected. I would have been pleasantly surprised if the <a href="http://www.sfgate.com/">SF Chron</a> had a freelancer create a pitch on Spot.Us and embraced the platform with open arms. Still - the impatient youth in me wants to kick down their doors and show them just how simple it is to do "community funded reporting."</p>

<p>I do think the <a href="http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune">Oakland Tribune</a> is seriously considering having a freelancer put a pitch on Spot.Us. If that does happen - it will be a great opportunity to show the other papers in the <a href="http://www.bayareanewsgroup.com/">Bay Area Newsgroup</a> (a total of 11 papers) how beneficial "community funded reporting" can be. </p>

<p><b>5.  Were there any surprises on the positive side? How did you react to those?</b></p>

<p>Little surprises every day.</p>

<p>The most apparent - there is a serious desire for Spot.Us to expand. Just about every week I get a different journalist emailing me wondering when Spot.Us will spread to another region.</p>

<p><b>6.  What other things must occur to achieve a broader impact on the students, journalists or other population you want to reach?</b></p>



<ul>
<li>I need to build out the platform more. The current site is about 1/4th of what we've envisioned/designed. Considering our budget and time limitations - I'm happy with our progress, but we need to build out at least another 1/4th before I'd feel comfortable expanding to another region. I intend to try and tackle this first quarter of 09' so that we can expand to another city (Los Angeles?) by March/April. This planning hasn't been set in stone - but it is something I'm striving for.</li>
<li>Once the platform is built out more - I will try and find another young journalist to adopt and use the platform outside of Spot.Us' organization - ie: They could start their own version using our code. Hey - it's open source. I would welcome the friendly competition. That will be a blog post called "Steal This Idea and Start Your Own Business."</li>
</ul>



<p><b>7.  How are you measuring your progress? Are those measurements working? Please attach copies of any evaluation reports.</b></p>

<p>I'm trying to measure progress in very concrete terms. As much as possible I ignore daily traffic and prefer to look at how much in donations we get per-day and how many stories we have funded.</p>

<p>Through our beta period up to today (December 20th 2008) we have raised roughly:</p>

<p>	$8,600</p>

<p>We started collecting money in early July - so it has been less than six months and Spot.Us is collecting, on average, $1,450 a month. In truth - our donations have increased since launching the site - so this "average" is a bit misleading. Last month for example (the month of our Launch) we raised over 5k.</p>

<p>Note: If we raised another 5k we will be able to fully fund the remaining nine pitches that are already partially funded as of today December 20, 2008 - bringing our total of stories funded to 19.</p>

<p>The real question of progress will be: When we launch in another city if the donations continue to increase - or if "community funded reporting" requires a community organizer - somebody at the helm, to spread word about each pitch. If that is the case - the overhead of Spot.Us will dramatically increase (we will need to hire a community organizer in every city). Even if we find that success increases with a community organizer - it is possible to expand Spot.Us to a city without one - but it requires more on the part of the journalist who will have to be their own marketer. This is a larger issue within journalism that I think is trending in this direction. More and more we hear that journalists need to create and manage their online brands.</p>

<p>......We will find out.</p>

<p>**8.  What is the average number of unique monthly visitors to your web site and any project-related web site? **</p>

<p>I only recently got Google Analytics working (long story, don't ask). I only have one month's data to look at - but I received 11,000 unique visits. I can only assume that this is "average." 11,000 unique turned into roughly $5,000. I never sold advertising - but I imagine this is a high return on investment so far. It might also be because of the initial launch.</p>

<p><b>9.  If you were publicizing the single most important outcome of your work, what headline would you write for your news release?</b></p>

<p>Excellent question!!!</p>

<p>"Marketplace for citizens, freelance journalists and news organizations created" </p>

<p>Hopefully in January I could have a headline like.</p>

<p>"Oakland Citizens Fund Reporter to Hold Police Department To Task."<br />
Pitch: <a href="http://spot.us/pitches/35">http://spot.us/pitches/35</a></p>

<p>And every month thereafter I could have a big headline on how some community came together to to fund a reporter to do some meaningful piece of journalism that would benefit the greater community.</p>

<p><b>10.  What did you do to market the project? Was it successful? What would you do differently next time?</b></p>

<p><a href="http://www.stagetwoconsulting.com/">Stage Two consulting</a> helped me market the project pro-bono (because they are so rad and <a href="http://www.livedigitally.com/">Jeremy Toeman</a> is a longtime friend and advisor). I think our marketing has been successful in terms of spreading the word about Spot.us and the concept of "community funded reporting" throughout the general blogosphere/internet. I have been working very hard to make Spot.Us as open as possible and respond to as many questions, emails, phone calls as I can. </p>

<p>Where we have to improve is in our marketing to specific groups ie: news organizations, freelance reporters, civic organizations. Starting in the new year we will be focusing on reaching out to civic organizations and nonprofits. Again: The hard part is making the argument to them that "journalism" is something that will benefit their communities. It is a surprisingly difficult argument to make. </p>

<p><b>11.  Please provide a census of program participants. What percentage were women and people of color? How does this participation measure up to your diversity goals and plans?</b></p>

<p>While we are an equal opportunity employer we have not set any specific diversity goals. At the moment David Cohn is the only full time staff member. I am a scrawny white Jewish boy.</p>

<p>Contractors to build the site have included: five males and two females. </p>

<p>Starting in January I will be hiring two part-time community organizers. Both are minorities (one is female Latina and the other Indian). </p>

<p>Reporters for Spot.Us span the gambit from White men to Asian women. Spot.Us does not exclude anyone from creating a pitch. At the same time - we can't "hire" anyone to create a pitch - so this is really up to word of mouth. Overall I am comfortable with the diversity of people that seem engaged with Spot.Us. We have a large international audience - despite the fact that they can't donate via PayPal (we can only accept <span class="caps">U.S.</span> Credit cards at the moment).</p>

<p>Questions 12-16 were about my spending habits for Spot.Us - these required spreadsheets and don't really translate well for this blog. But hey, at least you know I'm being held accountable for how the money is spent. I'll add this: David Cohn is the least well paid person on this project. I'm not doing this for money.</p>

<p><b>17.  Did you collaborate with other organizations, particularly Knight Foundation grantees, during the course of this project? How?</b></p>

<p>No, but I have every intention of doing so next year. I would love to work with the Mercury News (technically no longer a Knight organization) and have spoken with <a href="http://www.mercurynews.com/chris_obrien">Chris <span class="caps">O'B</span>rien</a> about this - but I also know it is a hard time to approach a large organization like that with anything new, especially during these times. </p>

<p><a href="http://www.mije.org/">The Maynard Institute</a> is also based here in the Bay Area and I would love to work with them on a project. I'm sure the two of us together could fundraise for a very meaningful investigation here in the Bay.</p>

<p>If I am able to expand to other regions - then the number of potential collaborations will increase ie: in Chicago I could work with <a href="http://www.chitowndailynews.org/">Chi-Town</a>, <a href="http://www.minnpost.com/">MinnPost</a> in Minnesota, <a href="http://www.voiceofsandiego.org/">Voice of San Diego</a> in SoCal, Gotham Gazzette in NY - etc. </p>

<p>I do find that nonprofit news organizations are much more open to using Spot.Us than for-profit. Perhaps because the latter automatically look at online startups as competition despite my constant explanation that Spot.Us is a platform (a tool anyone can use... like YouTube) not a news organization to compete with. </p>

<p>**18.  Please describe your interaction with Knight Foundation staff. What was most useful and what changes would you suggest? **</p>

<p>You guys kick ass. Don't change a thing. Just keep the ass-kickery alive. </p>

<p>**19.  Was Knight Foundation able to facilitate contacts with experts in the field, professional peers and similar organizations? **</p>

<p>The gatherings that Knight has organized have been very stimulating. At the very least it is nice to meet other people who are trying risky, new ventures. </p>

<p>Also the name "Knight Foundation" commands a lot of respect. I sensed several times that I was being shown the door until I mentioned Knight Foundation and all the sudden people want to listen.</p>

<p>The shame is: How many other people are being shown the door and can't say "Knight Foundation" despite the good ideas they may have been evangelizing.</p>

<p><b>20.  What else would you like Knight Foundation trustees and staff to know about your experiences with this project?</b></p>

<p>What an experience it has been! The world looks differently when you are in the eye of a storm. </p>

<p>I earnestly am happy with my progress so far. While I am an impatient youth, I also believe strongly in taking small executable steps and iterating. I originally thought that funding four stories before the end of the year would be an accomplishment. Now it looks like we are on the brink of funding ten. </p>

<p>But - as you all know, this is <span class="caps">NOT </span>a silver bullet and there are still <span class="caps">LOTS </span>of obstacles in the way. </p>

<p>When people ask me if this is the "future of journalism" - I tend to respond cautious optimism.</p>

<p>Which is to say: I have nothing convincing me that it <span class="caps">ISN'T </span>part of journalism's future. I have only been encouraged to see how deep the rabbit hole goes. I still have a flashlight on - and I'll try and let everyone know what I see.</p>]]>

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<id>tag:dipsy.pbs.org,2008:/idealab_test_blogs//31.4670-comment:41906</id>
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<title>Comment from Benjamin Melançon on 2008-12-27</title>
<author>
<name>Benjamin Melançon</name>
<uri>http://AgaricDesign.com/</uri>
</author>
<content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://AgaricDesign.com/">
Awesome.  Rock on!

For &quot;radical transparency&quot; I was looking for what you paid for breakfast (and for what) but this was pretty good!

You would call your post &quot;Steal this idea and start your business&quot;– do you see a business model with Spot.us or do you think nonprofit status and the image that as much money as possible goes to the reporters is a necessary part of making it work?
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<published>2008-12-27T15:16:09Z</published>
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