Nonprofits and the Social Web

Thanks to Beth Kanter’s blog for the great little find of a presentation by Steve Bridger.

As we prepare for an overhaul in Anchorage, I find myself thinking more and more about community, “tribes,” interactivity and relationships.

If you’re at a local station, especially in a mid-size to smaller market, this is defintely worth a quick scan.

New KQED.org shames me!

A few years back I had a meeting with our TV manager and our Radio manager and we talked about the web. Specifically, I wanted to develop some kind of taxonomy of topics into which all our content — locally-originated or national — could fit. We could post extras, our local stuff, links to national stuff, all in different topical areas that would be of interest to our audience both broadly and in specific niches.

Of course, we never had the resources to actually develop the taxonomy into something useful online, but the dream was there…

Well, KQED has gone and done it. They blended it into their site redesign, and it looks fabulous. Todd Mundt scooped me earlier this week but I couldn’t let the week pass without throwing in my own congratulations. And, yes… I’m jealous.

But to make myself feel better, I’ll pick one nit: The columns of content in the footer do not line up with the columns of content in the body of the page, indicating that the site is not built on a traditional graphic designer’s grid. So there. 😉

Seriously, though, it’s hard to blend a multiplatform service into a unified web site. I’ve actually done it both ways and it’s harder to do it this way. Lots of competing interests get involved, making a designer’s life tougher. So big congratulations to the KQED web team.

I hope to steal all their ideas before the end of the year.

Stay Current

Everyone in the public media world reads Current, right?

Well, Current isn’t just on paper any more. Be sure to join the fray online at a new Ning site setup by editor Steve Behrens. It’s called, cheekily enough, DirectCurrent.

So far writers from Current and readers are posing questions and sharing ideas both related to recent articles and just out of the blue. Good stuff.

Free account setup required. See you there!

Get Connected

If you’d like a preview of some of the difficulties headed for the public media space, look no further than all the blogging and analysis — and sniping — going on in the newspaper industry. Public media’s problems will be different in style and emphasis, but the core problem is identical.

Be sure to read the latest post by industry veteran and analyst Steve Yelvington.

It’s about connecting with your community in an honest, human way. This is less important for the national outlets, but critical for those in smaller markets where community connection will be critical. Knock over the ivory tower, if you have one…

DTV Conversion: 199 and counting

We’re now just 199 days from the end of (the vast majority of) analog TV broadcasts in the United States.

That would be February 17, 2009 for those keeping score.

I’m ready — I’m sitting on cable and I have a DTV antenna outside — it’s just not hooked to the TV yet. How about you?