In my (long ago) days as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, I used to keep a monster steel rotary contact file next to my telephone.
It was my lifeblood. In it were contained the names and contact information for the vast majority of my sources. Often, on my source cards, I also noted spouses and kids’ names; perhaps a birth date or anniversary; even a favorite restaurant or bar where my contacts liked to hang out.
I kept personal contact cards in my rotary file as well. Family. Friends. Restaurants (takeout and especially delivery numbers).
No one – and I mean no one – got to peek into my contact file. For truth, if some public relations or corporate communications executive had been able to study it, s/he would have learned more about me and who had my ear than I would ever be willing to publicly disclose.
And then came Twitter.
While communications executives already follow legions of journalists who have Twitter accounts, the vast majority of journalists simply use the social networking service as a headline service for stories that they or their colleagues have reported.
My NewsBios research colleagues and I do pay attention to what the journalists we track post on Twitter. It is a convenient one-stop method of knowing who is reporting what. And some journalists, especially the younger ones, feel at liberty to share their personal lives, opinions and sense of humor with their followers. That’s a nice bonus when we’re hunting for insights that wouldn’t otherwise surface in their news stories or in their official bios.
But for me and my NewsBios team, who aim to ascertain the rarely seen influences that impact how a journalist reports and how an individual journalist’s personal experiences and biases integrate into their professional lives, nothing beats a thorough analysis of whom the journalists follow on Twitter.
Granted, this is more art than science. For any single given journalist, reading too much into whom they are tracking on Twitter can be misleading.
But when you look at trends across dozens, even hundreds of journalists – as we do monthly – what emerges is a reasonably accurate picture of the private side of these public reporters, editors and anchors. Kind of like having the opportunity to browse through a journalist’s contacts file.
Here are the 10 most common personal “tells” we spot when scrutinizing who it is that journalists follow on Twitter:
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