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RefreshRT, rethinking roanoke.com

Poll shows people relied on newspaper, social media and radio during power outage

Thank you to the nearly 190 readers who responded to our poll about your news source during the massive power outage last month.

You shared really valuable information and ideas about how we can better cover and deliver news in such a situation. We found it interesting that the printed newspaper and social media were equally important sources for updates during the outage.

Almost 42 percent of those who responded said that without power and a smartphone, they relied on the newspaper for information. About 32 percent said they turned to Facebook and 22 percent followed Twitter.

“Since all communication, including cell, internet, TV, land line, etc., etc. were out, I went to a local restaurant on occasion and bought a newspaper,” one respondent wrote. “This storm just proved with all of the technology available today, everything was cut off in a split second.”

A few responders even suggested we put out more papers. “There weren’t enough Roanoke Times newspapers to go around.”

The results reaffirm our approach to pushing news out via as many channels as we can. One thing we’ll keep in mind in the future is possibly repurposing some of the online content for print. For example, one person said that we should have printed a list of places where you can get ice. We had something similar on Facebook, where we asked people to post what businesses were open or closed. Maybe next time we could consider also publishing that information in the newspaper.

The poll also revealed that people depended on mobile news sites (40.5 percent) and websites (21.5 percent). Several gave kudos to one of The Roanoke Times community sites, thebotetourtview.com, to social media updates from Botetourt View reporter Cathy Benson and to weather guru Kevin Myatt for keeping them connected.

Kevin Myatt on Twitter is awesome. Keep him happily tweeting and you’ve done all I can ask.”

Finally, we realized from your feedback that we omitted from the poll a critical source of information during the outage – radio.

Many commented that radio was their primary – and often times only – source when the power was out. Some suggested that radio stations should consider interrupting their regular programming with frequent updates during an outage.

“Please put updates on the radio!!!! I had nothing else. My internet and land line phone was also out. How do expect me to look at anything on facebook, twitter, mobile news site? (I do not have a smart phone),” one responder wrote. “Go back to the radio especially at night when people are more worried and concerned. I listened to the radio as much as I could but basically heard nothing.”

“I used a battery operated radio, but stations were not giving out info but at regular news times….and then info was limited….they should have been updating/repeating info for shelters, etc. every 15 minutes,” another responder said.

To recap, here are some of the key takeaways and opportunities:

  • More frequent updates on the radio.
  • Better advertise The Roanoke Times text alert system (some reader said they didn’t know we offered them) and consider more text alerts.
  • All news organizations should use social media to provide frequent updates.

Do you have other suggestions on ways we can better deliver news and information during similar situations? Please share with us. 

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Buy your favorite photo

Photos like this are now available for purchase at roanoke.mycapture.com.

Looking for a gift? Or maybe you love a photo you’ve seen by a Roanoke Times photographer. We have good news … now you can request and purchase many of the photos that you see in the pages of The Roanoke Times and throughout roanoke.com.

Visit roanoke.mycapture.com and you’ll find some select albums and favorite front pages that are available for purchase as reprints or you can order a mug or magnet with the photo on it.

We just set up the photo store a few weeks ago, so we’re still stocking it, but you’ll already find several photos from our 125th anniversary photo exhibit and this year’s All Timesland pages. You can also easily request a photo, and as long as it is a Roanoke Times photo (not one that a user has submitted), we will upload it to the system for you to purchase.

Check out the galleries and photo gift options.

To request a photo or front page be added to the gallery for purchase, click “Can’t find a photo” link on the left and complete the form.

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eBooks: Should they be in our future?

This post is from reporter Mason Adams.

Since going to work for the Roanoke Times I’ve become a collector of the various books the newspaper has published over the years.

Visit a Timesland used bookstore or antique mall on the right day and you can find books of Ben Beagle’s columns or commemorative reprints of the Roanoke Times’ front page over the years.

These days, the Roanoke Times is not likely to publish a book for sale.

Admittedly, I’ve been a little slow to jump on the eBook train. I still like haunting used bookstores and looking for bargain finds there, and although I love turning pages, I have little desire to read my favorite tomes on a Kindle, Nook or iPad.

But I recognize the technology’s potential. EBooks have removed much of the cost and materials associated with publishing books, making it easier for unknown authors to publish their work.

Newspapers have already started to jump on board. The Los Angeles Times published its first eBook last fall, and the New York Times reports that other publications – Politico, the New Yorker and Huffington Post, among others – are doing the same.

I think that one of the Times’ greatest assets is its archives. Librarian Belinda Harris looks after files on a variety of subjects and individuals, plus an archive that dates back to the 1890s. She uses that to collect and write each week’s “Looking Back” feature.

So I wonder: Is there an audience for eBooks collecting past material from the Roanoke Times?

You could collect stories recounting the rise and fall of Victory Stadium, the Flood of ‘85 or even the best collected columns of Dan Casey from 2008 to the present (though that would make for a very, very short book).

I’ve got plenty of other ideas for Roanoke Times eBooks I’d like to see:

–The rise of Republicans in Virginia’s General Assembly.

– A collection of Beth Macy’s best stories and columns (which could be timed in conjunction with her upcoming book about John Bassett III and Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co.)

– An annual collection of Virginia Tech football reporting.

– The life and times of former Roanoke Mayor Noel Taylor.

– The wild and wooliest true crime tales of Timesland.

Those ideas deal just with existing material and don’t even begin to scrape the surface of the potential for long-form writing on news that’s breaking now. ProPublica published a gripping story last month that also spawned a radio show (and subsequent podcast) on This American Life and also an eBook. It’s clearly a rare story that merits that treatment, but to my mind that ProPublica story and the way it was published indicates a brave new world for enterprise journalism.

Would you read Roanoke Times eBooks? If so, what collections would you like to see?

And by way of background, incidentally, here’s a short video with one of the past books published by The Roanoke Times. This is the newspaper’s 100th anniversary publication, which I borrowed from education reporter Courtney Cutright’s desk.

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Open mic: Share your ideas

Today’s is open mic here on RefreshRT. We want to hear any ideas you have about the redesign of roanoke.com. Our teams are working on various parts of the site, and your feedback has been really valuable. Keep it coming because we are listening.

What other things should we consider as we remake roanoke.com?

Give your ideas about design, navigation, multimedia and everything in between.

And if you have other news sites to point us to, please share those as well.

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We’re now on Pinterest

Have you started pinning? We just got started. Check out The Roanoke Times/roanoke.com boards and let us know what you think!

Not familiar with Pinterest? Well, it is a social networking website that allows users to organize and share images and links, sort of like a virtual bulletin board. In the short time Pinterest has existed, it has rapidly grown in popularity and is now one of the top 10 social networking sites on the Internet. We’ll be selective about pinning items that would appeal to avid Pinterest users.

Check out the following boards:

Food: recipes from PlateUp.roanoke.com and other bites for local foodies.

Style Street with David Verde: following Southwest Virginia fashion

In the know: The Roanoke Times/Roanoke.com’s board to keep you informed of the coolest contests, happenings, deals and more.

The  Roanoke Times photos: from our talented photographers

Roanoke area real estate

Editorial cartoons: by Virginia cartoonist Chris O’Brion

Community in SW Virginia: from our community blogs

Down to Earth: gardening advice and ideas

Follow our boards so you see the new things we pin, and feel free to repin our content. You’ll find the follow button in a few places on roanoke.com. 

We’re still learning, and your feedback can help us.

Check out our boards and tell us what you think.

 – What else would you like to see us pin?

 – What’s your favorite thing to pin?

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Dig into our new gardening blog; photo/video poll results

Have you seen our new gardening blog, Down to earth? The idea for this blog actually “grew” here on the RefreshRT blog, when commenters said they would enjoy having such a blog.

You may be familiar with blogger Karen Hager from her gardening column that runs in the Extra section every other Saturday. She’s been pleased with the response so far; it seems there are lots of eager gardeners out there with lots of questions and useful information to share with one another.

If you’ve got ideas for Karen,visit her blog! You can also find ”Down to earth” on our mobile site, m.roanoke.com. From the topics page, click on blogs and you’ll see it in the list.

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The results of our photo/video poll were enlightening. Out of the 30 respondents (we hope more people will vote in the future), readers seem to overwhelmingly prefer breaking news videos and photo galleries. This was interesting.

Follow-up question: For those who like breaking news videos, we’d like more clarification.

What if it’s a press conference? (The recent firing of former Virginia Tech basketball coach Seth Greenberg comes to mind).

Or do you mean you’d like us to get videos on breaking news scenes like major traffic accidents?

Would you view user-submitted videos on our site?

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National and international news headlines — where do they fit?

This post is from Managing Editor Michael Stowe.

A few years ago I wrote a column noting how the front page story selection of our printed newspaper has evolved in the past 15 years.

For years, the front page was dominated by the top national and international news. That’s reversed today, with news from the Roanoke and New River valleys featured prominently every day.

Why? You can get national news from dozens of sources — but  our newsroom uncovers and tells the stories of Western Virginia better than anyone else.

We used the same philosophy when we launched roanoke.com in 1997 with the goal of making it the destination Web site for news and information about the Roanoke region. The Gateway page of the site is designed to showcase content produced by our staff, content you can’t find anywhere else online.

You might be underwhelmed if you come to roanoke.com hunting for the latest national and world headline. It’s there — look for the link in the left corner of the gateway — but it’s hardly prominent and, if you click on it, you get a text-heavy listing of stories.

We receive calls from readers looking for a non-local story that published in the paper but not on roanoke.com. Currently we don’t archive stories from the Associated Press on our site. But that could change with the redesign.

Do you think it should?

We have an opportunity to rethink how we package and display news from the Associated Press. It will never be the focal point of the site but that doesn’t mean it can’t be better than now.  Your feedback to these questions will help us moving forward:

Do you look at roanoke.com for national and international news?

Are there specific topics of content — politics, education … — that you would like to see more prominently displayed on roanoke.com?

Do you have suggestions of other local/regional news Web sites that better integrate national and international stories on their sites?

If not roanoke.com, where do you go online for national news? Why do you like that site?

What other comments do you have in regards to our national and international coverage on roanoke.com?

 

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Are QR Codes The Future of Printed News?

This post is from Phil Woods, Digital Product Manager.

Quick Response (QR) codes are the square matrix barcodes that are popping up everywhere from product packaging, to retail displays, to print advertising, to billboards. While QR codes simply store text, the most common use of QR codes is to provide a link to digital content from mobile devices.

To access QR code content, you’ll need a QR reader app on your smartphone or tablet. The app will use your device’s camera to scan and decode the QR code. As an example, scan the barcode below to download my contact information to your contact list.

There are countless potential uses of QR codes for a newspaper. For example, a QR code can link to an online video or a photo gallery for news stories. Similarly, QR codes could link to the latest online updates for a developing story. For a few other examples of QR use, check out 39 ways newspapers can use QR codes.

What are your impressions of QR codes?

If we started using QR codes more regularly, would you scan them?

Have you seen any creative uses of QR codes?

 

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Breaking news: Is it broken? What’s your fix?

This post is from managing editor, Michael Stowe.

Nothing consistently drives readership on roanoke.com more than breaking news.

For instance, our story on Virginia Tech kicker Cody Journell’s arrest in December got more than 10,000 pageviews within the first few hours it was on the site.

So, one of our primary goals with the site redesign, is figuring out the smartest way to display those stories.

One commenter on an earlier RefreshRT post offered this opinion: “The breaking news box should be more attention grabbing. It’s a bit small and sandwiched between the calendar and “check this out!” box.”

Good point.

current breaking news display on roanoke.com

That’s where our breaking stories first appear and the headline can get lost up in the header. Then, after about five minutes, the page updates and moves a headline link to those breaking stories to the top of our “Today’s News” story list on the page.

We recognize it’s not the best system, and we’re looking forward to the redesign providing us with multiple new options for quickly posting new content on roanoke.com.

A few questions we are already considering, and we’d love your thoughts on:

– Do we even need to use the red “Breaking news” tag next to the story?

– Should we instead simply time stamp each story when it is posted or updated?

– What are the best ways to more clearly differentiate  between a high-interest, important breaking story — a police officer getting shot on Virginia Tech’s campus, for instance — and more routine news that we post multiple times a day. Bigger headlines and larger photos are good options, of course, but there are many ways those can be designed.

– What news sites do you visit frequently for breaking news?

– What do they offer that’s better than what we’re doing now?

I’m eager to hear your thoughts.

Of course, our digital strategy for covering breaking news goes far beyond simply posting stories and waiting for you to come find them. In a post on Wednesday I’ll talk about how we use text messages, Facebook, Twitter and other social tools to connect with you.

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Let’s talk mobile

Switching gears a little, today we want to get your thoughts on mobile news sites. Do you visit our mobile site, m.roanoke.com, from your smartphone? If you haven’t visited m.roanoke.com, check it out and see what you think. Beyond the latest news page which features the top headlines, click on the “topics” page to find much more content, including blogs, weather, movie times and reviews, and much more.

We’ve heard from many users that you’d like to be able to access the full site (roanoke.com) from our mobile site, and we’ve just made that option available. From m.roanoke.com, scroll to the bottom and you’ll see a link in the footer to “view full site”.

What other mobile news sites do you visit and what features on these sites do you like?

Do you use any news apps on your phone? Which ones?

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About this blog

The Roanoke Times is redesigning its website, roanoke.com.

As the project continues, we want to hear from readers who have ideas and can help us build our future online. This is the place for those conversations and for the latest news about our redesign. | Meet the feedback team

Also look for updates on other new digital offerings, including our tablet and mobile apps.

RSS feed | Follow @RefreshRT on Twitter

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