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Does newscounter’s right to reply really help communicators?

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007 at 8:53 pm

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Newscounter is a new UK-based website with an interesting idea behind it.

In their own words it’s

a new right to reply service for people and organisations to respond to controversial press stories. This should
stimulate debate about public trust and the role of the media in society.

Newscounter editors scan the UK press and receive nominations from registered users - controversial or particularly newsworthy stories are then put live on the site.

Users can then petition for a response to a controversial story, read responses put forward by parties named in the original articles and then vote which side of the argument they think is most persuasive.

It’s an interesting concept - take for example this story about dog poo that appeared in the Daily Mail (can’t find it on their website). It has been voted to recieve a response, and newscounter has secured a response from the authority named in the story.

The story and response that are combined on the website certainly seems to present a more balanced version of the story. This is likely to help communicators when the tone of media coverage is typically negative to their cause.

Newscounter also tries to ensure that their version of the story/response ranks highly in search engines. If they don’t rank highly they say they’ll buy their way to visibility:

If the newscounter response isn’t on the first page, we buy google advertising to make sure it is.

Doing a quick Google (UK) search on the dog poo story suggests they’re not quite there with this part of the service yet - at the time I searched the story wasn’t in the first page of organic results nor the paid-for listings.

And here lies my main problem with newscounter: while the principle behind it seems fine, the fact that the story/response is disconnected from the original coverage means that its value as a tool for redress seems limited.

If a story appears in printed press, then an online response, however balanced, is of limited value as only a small proportion of offline readers are likely to track the story on the newscounter website or in web searches. The only way around this is for newscounter to secure large reader numbers that approach the readership of offline titles.

For stories that exist primarily online then there’s more potential for newscounter to make an impact. To be effective it needs to gain equivalent profile and readership to the websites or blogs that it seeks to counter.

From my initial glance a few ways that newscounter could use to do this would be:

  • Providing RSS feeds for stories covered and responses
  • Increase the profile of the titles in which original articles appeared to help search engine positioning
  • Ensure the site is covered by Technorati to help cover original articles in blogs

Organisations that want a right to reply have to pay as customers. Although it’s not clear what the newscounter charging structure is, I’d bet that most of the organisations on the site so far haven’t paid though.

As a communicator I’d be looking for some evidence of the effectiveness of this approach before committing budget to it. That said it’ll be interesting to see how it evolves over the coming months.

(image credit: raisinsawdust via flickr)

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Comments on “Does newscounter’s right to reply really help communicators?”

  • Newscounter

    Thanks for your advice, Simon. We will work on your suggestions - I’d particularly like to do RSS when budget allows.

    Newscounter is particularly applicable for the generation of people who still access news, but do so online rather than by reading a newspaper. You’re right that the web provides an opportunity to build a readership which challenges the volume of national newspapers (although many of these will be different people).

    As a subscriber to Newscounter, you can measure the success by:
    * the proportion of key stakeholders that read the response
    * the number of times the search engine advert is displayed
    * the number of click throughs from blogs

    Hope this is helpful and we can use your input to improve the service.

  • Heather Yaxley

    I just don’t see the value of this - beyond helping clients feel better when they think the media has been unfair. Rather than a one-off “feelgood” Newscounter piece, the organisation would do better to build more positive relationships with the media, use their own online communications to present clearly their perspective (or better still a balanced account) and learn to SEO their strengths so they come up when a story is searched.

    Of course if a story is true, no amount of presenting your “side” is going to balance out the fact that you need to do something to address the problem.

  • Dan Schawbel

    Cool concept…..seems like this new website has a lot of great features

  • James Thellusson

    To Dan’s points…but most do what you say already. And it isnt enough for them. The problem is the consumer tends not to go to the corporations web site to ‘hear their side’. If they do, the surveys show they dont ‘buy what the see there’. One of the key strengths of this site is that it isn’t the corporate site which is why it needs to stay impartial and non judgemental.

    If you look at the Baby Products versus Which story on the home page at the moment, you can see another emerging value in the site for corporations or indidivuals. They’re ‘winning’ the battle for public opinion with Which!. That’s a new asset they can re-use in their battle to challenge Which and balance public opinion.

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Simon Wakeman

I've been on the web since 2001 and have been blogging about marketing and public relations since January 2006.

I'm currently Head of Marketing at Medway Council as well as a freelance marketing and PR consultant.

The content and opinions expressed on this website are not endorsed by nor reflect the views of any company or organisation I work with.

Simon’s passion and enthusiasm for all things digital is infectious. He has a great ability to keep his focus on clients’ big strategic issues, while keeping calm and motivating the team around him. It’s always a pleasure to work with him. Rishi Dastidar

I have used Simon for the last three years on a number of projects. Not only is he knowledgeable and professional, but he has a full grasp of a customers needs and can deliver the right creative and business results for a customer. Ian Lockyer, BMEA

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