Evolution of print to online journalism ‘held back by lack of training’

Journalists are keen to learn new skills to cope with the changing news environment, but aren’t being given the training or resoruce to do it, a debate in Darwin heard last night.  

Speaking at the Future Of Journalism debate organised by the Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance at Parliament House, the union’s federal secretary Chris Warren said: “Times are tough and we are going to need to develop new ways of working if we are to survive. “Journalists are getting excited about the new trends and new technologies we are being handed. But what’s not clear is how that’s going to stack up economically. The disruption to the business model continues to be as profound as it has been rapid.

“Media owners cannot see their staff as a cost to be cut – that’s short term. They need to work out how to get the maximum value out of the considerable resource they have.”

Jano Gibson, a former Sydney Morning Herald journalist, and now web editor at the ABC in the NT, told the audience that during his time on the newspaper, the challenges of filing both a fully considered piece for the print edition and something rapid for the web site met major resistance. He said: “I saw a lot of frustration from print journalists to the point of rebellion. In the early days at the Herald it was it was overstepping the mark if you were even going to file for the web.”

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