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Better journalism or better profits? A key convergence issue in an age of concentrated ownership

journal contribution
posted on 2004-09-01, 00:00 authored by Stephen Quinn
Convergence has become an accepted form of journalism at media organisations around the world. These organisations are adopting a range of business models to find ways to pay for these innovations. The main drivers behind this radical change in media production are consumers' changing media habits, cheaper digital technology, and the disruptive forces that these two drivers generate. Technology also makes possible new forms of storytelling, which potentially allows journalists the chance to do better journalism through convergence. This article focuses on the key issue of whether editorial managers and journalists are embracing convergence to save money, or to do better journalism. It begins by defining convergence (while accepting the wide variety of definitions) and describing two main models of implementation. It then considers the factors that lead to easy introduction of convergence followed by the factors that hinder its introduction. Examples are provided of converged media around the world. This article ends with a warning about the dangers for democracy of misapplied convergence in an era of increasing concentration of ownership.

History

Journal

Pacific journalism review

Volume

10

Issue

2

Pagination

111 - 129

Publisher

Auckland University of Technology

Location

Auckland, New Zealand

ISSN

1023-9499

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, Auckland University of Technology

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