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Mark Evans

the blog - examines the world of telecom  and  technology  from  a distinctly Canadian perspective.

the person - lives in Toronto, CA with  his  wife  and  three children, and  works  as director of community with PlanetEye Inc.
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View Article  Interviews 2.0?

A few days ago, Steve Rubel had a post on reinventing the media interview. He suggested a number of different approaches such as having reporters post their questions on the blogosphere, and allowing people/sources to respond. He also suggested bloggers use a Technorati tag to identify when they're replying to a reporter's question, or a "ping pong style approach" when journalists blog questions to specific sources who blog. While I can certainly appreciate Rubel's intentions, none of his proposals make sense. In fact, they seem to demonstrate a perplexing naivete about how the journalism business works. In particular, Rubel seems to forget journalists are, by nature, ultra-competitive. This means none of us wants to give a rival reporter the slightest sniff about what stories we're working on and who we're interviewing - whether it's a news story where a press release has been issued or a feature. When you work in an industry where you - and your boss - can easily measure your performance every day against the competition, you do everything you can to maintain an edge. For example, Mathew Ingram, a friend, blogger and fellow mesh organizer, and I engage in an odd professional "dance" when we get together because he writes about technology for the Globe & Mail while I work for the National Post. It's a difficult exercise sometimes because there's a lot happening, and who better to discuss the interesting companies, entrepreneurs and issues than someone who shares your enthusiasm?
   To be honest, Rubel's proposals demonstrate the ongoing divide between the PR and journalism worlds in how reporters do their jobs. Frankly, most PR practitioners have no clue about news organization's operate. You wouldn't believe the number of phone calls I receive during the heart of afternoon deadlines, or PR folks who call me to see if I received their earlier e-mail. Too many PR people are focused on pitching their clients rather than pitching stories that involve their clients - and the difference is enormous. To be fair, there are PR people who get it. Those are the ones who actually read your stories and get a feel for your interests, or those who see news happening and figure out an effective way for their clients to offer some perspective/comment. Going back to Rubel, he does make a valid point that a good chunk of most interviews don't appear in print or on air. This is where a reporter's blog could be used to provide things such as transcripts or podcasts of interviews.
Note: Mathew Ingram's take on Rubel's post can be found here, while a post from British journalist Ian Delaney, who shares my skeptical views on Rubel's suggestions, is here.

View Article  Blogger.com Finally Gets Makeover

Wonders never ceases in the blogosphere - Microcrosoft comes out with a pretty good blog publishing tool, and now Google unveils a much-needed update to Blogger.com, which has been strangely ignored by the search engine giant in recent years. TechCrunch has all the nitty-gritty detail,s and you can check out the beta here. Before anyone gets carried away from the new and improved Blogger, you really have to ask yourself why Google has given it so little love since buying Pyra in 1999 - despite the fact the blogosphere has been exploding. I mean Froogle, Okrut and Google Blog Search got more attention than Blogger, which has been lacking many of the most basic features (e.g. trackbacks, for pete's sake) while rivals such as TypePad, Wordpress and Blogware have aggressively pushed forward. Blogger, however, has managed to stick around because it's an easy platform for newbies to get started. I haven't had a chance to check out the new Blogger but all I can say is "it's about time!".

My blog has moved. Check out the new Mark Evans. It's part of my mini-blog empire that also includes All About Nortel and Twitterrati. You can subscribe to Mark Evans Tech by clicking on the RSS symbol above.
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