Launching The Spot.Us Ship: Community Funded Reporting

It’s a simple principle: Journalism is a process, not a product – and that process should be participatory.

That sentence describes what I have worked for throughout my
journalism career. I am constantly trying to push that principle
forward. It started as a freelancer for Wired.com, continued through my
work at Columbia Journalism Review and freelancing for Seed Magazine.
Working for Jay Rosen and Jeff Jarvis obviously pushed my career forward and gave me the opportunity to work on amazing citizen journalism projects like Assignment Zero, Beat Blogging, NewsTrust and the Networked Journalism Summit and more.

I’ve been very lucky in my career that I’ve had the opportunity to
always push boundaries. I hope I can continue to do so for many years
to come. Today it’s official – Spot.Us, my most recent and perhaps
largest project, is launching.

I’m looking to tackle a large problem with a small executable solution.

The problem: Revenue.

Journalism is a process not a product, but that process takes time and people who do it professionally need to be compensated.

The Solution: Community Funding.

The process of journalism should be participatory – and perhaps one
way it can be made participatory is if the public has the opportunity
to commission the journalism they want to see.

Traditionally .001% of the public has a freelance budget to hire a
journalist. We call those people “editors.” Spot.Us is an attempt to
increase the percentage of people that can have an editorial influence.
I am incredibly passionate about this project. As I noted when I first
announced it at NewAssignment.net – I would be perfectly content if
this becomes my lifelong contribution to journalism.

How it works!

Anyone can create a “story tip.” These can be anything – but must
have a local Bay Area focus. We will expand into other regions soon.

Reporters create story “pitches”: These can be inspired by tips or their own original idea.

News Organizations can get exclusive rights to content if they
donate 50% or 100% towards a pitch. Any extra proceeds go back to the
original funders.

If no news organization pays for exclusive rights – we will still
make the content available to republish by anyone for free and publish
it on our site.

That’s how it works, so what is next?

That’s Where You Come In!!!

Yes, your time is precious, but if you believe that journalism is a
public good, everyone wins and your donation of time, effort or money
won’t be for nothing – it will mean EVERYTHING!

Citizens: I need your help. You are the only ones that
know what stories are untold. Let us know what you want investigated by
creating a tip. Do the ground level community organizing around pithces
and tips you are passionate about – grow the network. Just 40 people
donating $25 each is enough to fund the average story. In return you
get a new sense of editorial power. Finally you can determine what
investigations get reported on in your community.

Reporters: Try pitching the public. If it works –
you’ll get paid for doing what you love. You can build out your
portfolio, find new story ideas from the tips and through Spot.Us you
can pitch traditional news organizations and the public at the same
time!

News organizations: It’s time for freelancers and
publications to move forward together. Use Spot.Us to stretch your
freelance budget, discover a fresh pool of talent and forge positive
relationships with your readers. If you have freelancers you already
work with – why not let them crowdfund half their wage on Spot.Us?

Journalism hasn’t had it easy lately. But journalism MUST survive
the death of its institutions. I earnestly believe that journalism, as
a process, plays an integral role in our local democracies. I hope
Spot.Us can play a small part in making sure we continue to move
forward in that vein.

ONWARD!!!!!!

(Oh… check out http://spot.us too)

3 thoughts on “Launching The Spot.Us Ship: Community Funded Reporting”

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