The Contrast and Tension In Quality Between Online Aggregation and Original Content Explored - John Blossom
Friday, June 4, 2010 at 01:46PM
Ralph Kerle in Content, Social Media, Technology, media, web

Quality is as quality does"may not be a saying that came out of Forrest Gump's mouth but it's a simple formula that seems to be proving itself on the Web as traditional sources of quality content lose audience share to  search engines and social media sites.

At the same time, though, the ever-increasing popularity of social media sites does not always seem to be balanced by mature quality control. But don't mistake immature techniques with inadequate potential: the techniques used to generate social media are carving out a new path to content quality that's here to stay.

Professional publishers find themselves oftentimes railing against the Web as a devil's den of half-baked information and hailing the quality of their content. And, as underscored by ongoing issues with Wikipedia content quality and conflicts of interest, there are some real concerns out there in the world of  user-generated content.

Yet online content quality is suffering on the traditional side of the equation these days as much as on the "new" media side. For every time that a weblog like Engadget manages to be taken in by a fake memo on a major product announcement there are instances such as paidContent.org correcting a claim from a major newspaper of a deal between Google and major U.K. news outlets based on an unattributed source. And then there's venerable Nature magazine's claim (premium) of measurably higher content quality in Wikipedia compared to long-established Britannica that was debunked in an online journal's publishing of Britannica's response as a highly questionable piece of research.

In this crazy mix of pots and kettles everyone seems to have a bit of soot on their face. Social media has a lot going for it but the economics of today's social media scene have a very dark side as well.

Weblogs are bulking up with more professional editorial staffs to take on traditional publishers but their quality seems compromised oftentimes by the rush to cover too many stories too thinly.

At the same time traditional news outlets continue to cut editorial staffs back to the bone - and then some - in a race to build online revenues in time to offset sinking print revenues and soaring print costs.

The net result is an explosion of half-baked online content from all corners striving to attract online audiences whose perceptions of the news cycle have shrunk down to the attention spans of teenagers and foreign currency traders.

A recent New York Observer article points to a major culprit in the flight from quality in online content: search engines. Forbes.com, one of the more successful and growing online business media portals, is noted by the article as having a notably high level of editorial staff turnover, linked by one disgruntled ex-employee to its being a "page-view sweatshop." In the era of auditable circulation numbers, concerns about advertising revenues could be separated fairly cleanly from the editorial process.

Today each and every article produced by a publisher winds up being its own independent publication in the eyes of search engines trying to perceive its relative value - and hence determining its ability to draw in ad revenues.

In essence, each article becomes a brand of one.

Add in the increasingly standard technique of creating links to news content in social media services and the editorial merits of a given story are fast outweighed by other techniques that are likely to drive its publisher's revenues.

How does one address the need for high-quality content in a context-driven publishing environment?

Here are a few thoughts as to how and where quality content will survive and thrive:




If you need some help accepting these suggestions take a close look at traffic statistics for major Web sites and note a disturbing pattern: sites focused on traditionally authored content are dropping in ratings across the board as content created and aggregated by social media and search engines continues to rise.

Quality is as quality does is a formula that challenges both traditional publishers and new media sources to consider the evolving nature of content quality.

In this in-between period in which social media techniques are still very young but very popular we'll continue to have confusion about what's quality content.

But don't mistake growing pains for permanent awkwardness.

Quality is moving towards the heuristics that drive social media quickly - and permanently.

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Original article by John Blossom published on May 30th, 2007 as "The Quality Gap: The Race for Context Pushes Content Quality to the Sidelines" on Shore.com.

Find out more about John Blossom and the management consulting services of Shore Communications Inc., covering the business of enterprise, media and personal publishing at Shore.com.



Article originally appeared on The Creative Leadership Forum - Collaborate - Create - Commercialise & Transformational Change (http://thecreativeleadershipforum.com/).
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