What were your big takeaways from ONA? Most interesting talks? Links to services? Please share any lessons or ideas you had here. If you blogged about your experience, please add a link here.
Permalink Reply by Yuri on October 5, 2009 at 11:26am
12 things every news site should know (via Jesse James Garrett):
1) Know who you are. Define what you're best at.
2) Be in the Web, not on the Web. See your product as part of the Web, not a delivery channel.
3) The Web is not the world. Deliver well what users come to your site for.
4) Know what people do with news. People absorb news. People want to apply news. People want to share news. News provides pleasure.
5) Support different modes of engagement. Design solutions that support scanning needs and deep dive needs.
6) Every page is the home page.
7) Navigation is dead. Long-live navigation. People don't use global navigation, they use contextual navigation.
8) Put the multi in multimedia - Use a variety of means to tell stories
9) Headlines should tempt, not tease. Headlines should make people want to know what is on the other side of the link, not just wonder what the story is about.
10) Think outside the blob. Structure your data.
11) It's an application, not a publication. Create a tool that let's people work with the news, not just read the news.
12) Try things out, throw things out.
Link economy session was great (disclosure: my Publish2 peeps, yeah!). Also, Jay Rosen's live, participatory "Rebooting the News" session was excellent. I'll add the video here when it's finished.