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Newsletter

Winter 1998-99 Issue


Scholarships offered to high school seniors

NINA again is offering $500 in scholarships to talented high school journalists in northern Illinois.

Information has been sent to area high schools, and seniors have until March 12 to return completed applications.

Students interested in a NINA scholarship should contact their high school guidance counselor, call the NIU Department of Communication at (815) 753-1712 or check the NINA Web site.
Please publicize the scholarships in your newspapers. Feel free to use this article in part or whole, or simply download a press release from our Web site.



Great programs, new members highlight our '99 agenda

By Cheryl Wormley
NINA President

There's a spirit of excitement and anticipation among Northern Illinois Newspaper Association Board members. For the past 18 months, we've been reshaping the organization, trying out a new committee structure, learning and having fun. In 1999, we will focus our energy on offering programs that will meet your needs and on increasing NINA's membership.

I look forward to this year as NINA president, knowing that we have a talented board and very committed executive officers. Rick Nagel, Press Republican, is first vice president and will chair the committee that plans the spring and fall conferences. Mark your calendars. The spring conference is Friday, April 23, and the fall conference is Friday, Oct. 29. Both will be held at Northern Illinois University.

Lonny Cain, The Daily Times, Ottawa, is second vice president and chair of the education committee. The charge for his committee is to offer seminars that will challenge and re-educate NINA members. Jim Slonoff, The Doings, will continue as treasurer. The executive board also includes John Etheredge, past president; Dr. Lois Self, executive secretary; and Dustin Hawkins, chair of the marketing committee. As you know, John is with the Oswego Ledger Sentinel; Lois is chair of the NIU Communication Department; and Dustin is with Press Republican newspapers.

Looking at our membership, the changes that have taken place in the newspaper industry in northern Illinois and our mission statement, the board decided that one of our goals for 1999 will be recruitment of new members and renewing memberships that have lapsed over the past few years. Dustin's committee will direct the board in reaching the membership goals.

You can stay informed about what's happening with NINA by reading the quarterly newsletter and by checking the Web site at www.star.niu.edu/nina.
I invite you to be an active member. Call Rick at (630) 513-5050 with suggestions for the conferences and call Lonny at (815) 433-2000 with suggestions for seminars and educational offerings. Give me a call at (815) 338-8040 if you are interested in serving on a committee, being appointed to the board or with ideas for carrying out our mission statement: NINA is an organization of newspaper professionals dedicated to advancing print journalism and print-journalism education and training in Illinois.

Cheryl Wormley is publisher of the Woodstock Independent.



'98 saw ambitious programs, stronger ties to NIU journalism

By John Etheredge
NINA Past President

Nearly two years ago, NINA's board of directors agreed to begin an ambitious effort to improve services to our members. Since that time, I think we've done much to realize that goal, thanks to the efforts of the nearly 20 volunteer members that comprise our board, and to the NIU Department of Communication. Consider some of our activities and initiatives we've undertaken during the past year:

* In January 1998, we hosted an informative, day-long session on interviewing techniques at The Daily Herald in Arlington Heights.

* Our annual spring conference in April, co-sponsored by NINA and the Kane County Bar Association, featured a dialogue among reporters, lawyers, judges and academics.

* In May we again awarded scholarships to outstanding NIU journalism students and, for the first time ever, granted a scholarship to an outstanding northern Illinois high school journalist.

* Our fall conference in October examined a controversial trend in journalism: the mixing of marketing and news. Our panelists included industry leaders from USA Today, The Daily Herald and Copley Newspapers. A former DeKalb County State's attorney mediated an informative roundtable discussion that capped the event.
All of our seminars and conferences were well attended, but I'm especially pleased to report that the awards banquet at the fall conference attracted so many registrants that at the last minute we had to move it to a larger room at NIU's Holmes Student Center.

*Board members also worked with the NIU Department of Communication to update and improve the department's newspaper contest rules. Look for still more changes this fall.

* Thanks to the efforts of Jim Killam, adviser to the Northern Star and our communications coordinator, we were able to keep our members informed about our activities through the publication of our quarterly newsletter and the NINA Web site.

Between conferences, our board and board committees met frequently to plan other events and initiatives. Perhaps most importantly during the past year, the NINA Board established a solid working relationship with NIU's Department of Communication. The department, under the direction of Dr. Lois Self, clearly views its association with NINA as an asset for restoring journalism education at NIU. Our members ultimately benefit from this relationship when we seek applications for reporters and editors.
Seeking to build on the successes from this past year, our executive board decided in December to make building our roster of members a primary goal in 1999.

A special thank you...
This column concludes my year and a half term as NINA board president. Before I join the ranks of past presidents, I want to thank my colleagues on our board for the opportunity to serve as president. It has been an honor and pleasure to work with a group of newspaper professionals who are so dedicated to advancing journalism and journalism education.
I also want to thank Dr. Self and the NIU Department of Communication for all of their hard work over the past year and a half on behalf of our organization. The working relationship we have achieved should benefit both NIU and our member papers for years to come. Thank you all!

John Etheredge is news editor of the Ledger-Sentinel in Oswego.


Building drawbridges?
Newsroom execs stress cooperation -- to a point -- with advertising and marketing staffs

By Jim Killam

The secret behind the success of several market-oriented newspaper companies isn't so secret after all.
Know your audience.

That was the recurring theme Oct. 30 at NINA's Fall Convention at NIU. Speakers from Copley Newspapers' Sun Publications, The Daily Herald and USA Today agreed that without market research, a newspaper has no target.

"Go to each department of your newspaper and ask them to describe your typical readers," said Melissa Snyder, vice president of marketing for USA Today. "If all departments don't have the same targets in mind, you may not get far."

Market research may be as simple as regularly listening to a variety of voices in your community, or as complex as hiring a research firm to deliver complex demographic data.

"If you believe you can edit a newspaper without the kind of information we're talking about today, you will fail," said Doug Ray, senior vice president and editor of the Daily Herald. "At one time we thought we were good ... and much better than our customers thought we were."

Copley Newspapers found the same to be true ... and borne out in the fact that only a small percentage of new residents in upscale subdivisions subscribed to Copley's daily newspapers.

"Essentially, the really hot, new markets were not saying we were vital," said Art Wible, president of Fox Valley Press Inc.

Copley hatched the idea of identifying those "communities within communities" and targeting them with free, weekly publications that really are more magazine than newspaper.

The first was targeted to the 60504 zip code: inside the Aurora city limits, but more often referred to by upscale residents as "Near Naperville."
Readers in focus groups were shown a prototype, filled with lifestyle features, calendar listings, entertainment guides and color photography ... all based on Claritas research about those readers' incomes, habits and interests. The focus groups told Copley executives, enthusiastically, that they would find time to read such a publication.

More than a dozen community publications later, Wible believes them.

"I have a different interpretation now of what 'I don't have time to read' means," he said. "It's a signal that what you're putting out is not very good."

Or, in some cases, that what you're putting out may be valuable but just isn't presented well.
"Let's not call it packaging. Let's call it respecting readers' time," said Monte Lorrell, managing editor-sports for USA Today. "A lot of times, we've already provided much of what readers want. They just didn't know it because we didn't package it right."

For example, USA Today's target audience includes a lot of people who play golf. So, the paper organized the golf coverage it already provided into a Golf Extra page that's been a hit with readers.

All of this talk of giving readers what they want and only what they want, of marketing determining news content, doesn't play well where the walls between news, advertising and circulation are well-protected. The Daily Herald's culture sure didn't change overnight, and it didn't change completely.

"Before, if ad people walked onto the newsroom floor, news people wondered what they were doing to upset the journalistic standards we had worked so hard to establish," Ray said.
"Bridging the gap is an institutional value now," he said. "But credibility in news coverage comes first."
Later, at the afternoon forum, Ray expanded on that.

"I'd been doing the business of journalism for a long time, from an editorial perspective," he said. "So we went in with some credibility. We were not going to prostitute ourselves. The canons of journalism were alive and well."

At the same time, the Daily Herald newsroom is forced to know its readers better. A list of subscription cancellations is distributed periodically to reporters, who are responsible to make five calls each. Readers' comments are turned into an electronic newsroom memo.

Sometimes, the walls remain. A ski-shop advertiser, for example, wouldn't have a say in who gets quoted in a travel-section feature about skiing, Ray said. "We draw the line every day based on circumstance," Ray said. "We've broken down some walls, but there are some that are perfectly legitimate that we don't want to see crumble."
But, being territorial doesn't fly anymore, Ray said.
"If you're so afraid to take something on for fear that that line may someday be crossed, then the newspaper and your readers are not being served."

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