Yes, I am once again succumbing to the easy temptation of a list, an odious form of journalism that I don’t like.
But the people, they seem to like these lists. So here are the top 10 events in business journalism for 2006:
10. The failure of business journalists to accurately report about the holiday shopping season. Maybe it’s because this is fresh on my mind, but this web site has been full of comment after comment about publications totally missing the boat. Sales were lackluster at best, but you wouldn’t know that from the fawning coverage that was typically given retailers. Are we that gullible?
9. The legal battle between Donald Trump and New York Times business journalist Timothy O’Brien. Trump has sued
8. A new managing editor at Fortune. While dozens of daily
7. Changes at Reuters, including a new editor in chief. The new editor, David Schlesinger, is an American, and he’s pushed the wire to be more involved in ‘participatory’ journalism. In
6. The new publications. Despite the overall malaise in the print journalism world, business publications are proliferating. Two new biz magazines, American and Dealmaker, made their debuts in 2006. Crain Communications started Financial Week, while Conde Nast will unveil Portfolio, a new glossy monthly, in April 2007. In addition, Fox News is expected to roll out its business news cable channel later in 2007. Let’s face it, business journalism is a growth industry.
5. The overhaul at the Washington Post biz desk. Not only did
4. The unveiling of the new CNBC.com web site. The business news cable channel has previously been an afterthought in providing business news and information on the Internet, with web sites such as TheStreet.com, Marketwatch and others garnering much of the traffic. But its new web site, unveiled in early December, ups the ante for all of those aiming for visits and page hits in the business journalism world.
3. The overhaul at Dow Jones. I’m not just talking about the
2. The decision to cut stock listings from printed newspapers. While many papers continue to offer this data on their websites, the slashing of pages from the biz section means a loss in stature for the business desk in the newsroom. In addition, at some papers it means a smaller news hole for business stories.
1. The disclosure that Hewlett-Packard tried to discover what
More importantly, it showed business journalists that their stories and tactics are closely followed by those in the executive suite. It also shows the steps that others will take to prevent us from doing our jobs. Let the battle continue.
Have a happy new year, and let’s all hope 2007 brings a renewed interest among media companies in covering business news.
What’s interesting is that when I look back at the top 10 list for the first six months of the year, only two events — the cutting of stock listings and the changes at the Post — were repeats.
In other words, there’s been a lot of serious issues and changes facing business journalism, and those changes are happening at a fast pace.
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Thanks for the mention at #7. I think the innovation Chris is referring to is "machine readable news" allowing automated trading off news stories -- manual trading off the news of course has been going on for a long time! The press release describing it in more detail is available here: http://about.reuters.com/pressoffice/pressreleases/index.asp?pressid=2795
Good list. If there were room for an 11th story, I hope you'd consider the broader changes in news delivery & ownership, resulting in & from the dissolution and privatization of Knight Ridder, likely sale of Tribune Co., continued growth of Bloomberg, changes at Time Inc. and Gannett,, Google-Monster-Yahoo-etc. news ad deals, Craigslist, alongside the Dow-Jones, Reuters, Wash. Post, speculative new business mag developments you charted.
Great list! Just about anything Chris Roush writes is worth reading.