Bridging the gap between Nine’s metro newsrooms and its data team

Aug 18, 2021 at 12:14 am by admin


Aimie Rigas says a couple of years back, very few of Nine’s metro topic editors knew who compiled the data they referred to.

In an INMA blog, the publishing director of audience development at Australia’s Fairfax Media says the teams at the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age had been on separate floors with little interaction between data engineers, analysts and the broader newsroom.

“Slowly, we’ve managed to bridge that gap,” she says. “We had to explain the intricacies of newsroom workflows to engineers and analysts, and translate data into actionable insights for editors.

“The result has been a better-equipped newsroom, better informed data team, and better served audience.”

As a result the data team is more integrated with the newsroom than ever before. “We invite them to regular editorial meetings – even if it’s ‘just in case’ someone asks a question about how the data works. The best part is, they genuinely find it interesting to see how the broader newsroom responds to the work they’ve done,” she says. “It gives them greater insight into how we use the tools they give us and how they can improve them.

Communication between data analysts and journalists has resulted in dashboards that provide the right information.

 

Rigas says they’ve found that the more the newsroom can put a face to the team behind the dashboards they use, the more likely they are to reach out when they spot a bug, find something interesting in the data, or make a suggestion to enhance the dashboard experience for everyone.

“Slack channels do most of the heavy lifting for us, but we also have regular catch-ups,” she says. “One of these is for the prioritisation of ad-hoc analysis, and another is for sharing insights from that analysis back to key editorial stakeholders. From there, we discuss the best way to share this with the broader newsroom.

“Usually this happens in a fortnightly ‘audience insights’ session the audience team hosts. It’s scheduled for lunchtime, is open to the entire newsroom, and staff will dip in and out depending on their workload for the day. There are slides to show key takeaways, but it’s very much a casual conversation where an insight is shared and the newsroom jumps in with more questions or observations.”

She says the sessions cover everything from content read most in conversion journeys, to which newsletter readers are the most engaged. “We also use them as an opportunity to showcase work from around the business.

“We’ve had our product director share their team’s broader product roadmap, tying each item to the insights we’ve seen in the data. We’ve had the head of consumer subscriptions share brand campaigns, research, and the latest acquisition numbers and churn rates.”

Unsurprisingly, sharing insights leads to more questions. “If we can’t answer them on the spot, the data team ensures those questions are answered in their next batch of analysis. And on the cycle goes.

Insights lead to more questions, which lead to better understanding between both teams.

 

“We always talk about building trust with our readers, but this feedback loop helps build trust between teams. The constant communication between product, marketing, and editorial means we’re more aligned than ever before. This presents advantages for our audience: The content we produce is reflective of the brand campaign they see in market while the product experience they have with our platforms complements our editorial strategy.

“We’re constantly looking for ways to improve the relationship. This isn’t to say we’re never satisfied. We’re just conscious of complacency. In the same way the newsroom uses dashboards to see how our readers are engaging with content, our data team tracks how we’re interacting with their dashboards. Very meta, I know. They come to us when they notice a dip in usage of specific dashboards. It forces us to question whether we can improve that dashboard or why it failed where others have succeeded.”

Rigas says she’s written before about how the newsrooms are focussing on what content doesn’t work to create more of what does. “The data team follows the same principle,” she says. “It’s led to us retiring some dashboards, like the monster-sized analysis dash that tried to do everything for everyone, and focusing on dashboards that answer questions tied to specific goals. This process keeps us focused.

“Instead of the newsroom asking ‘can we have XYZ metric added’ and jumping straight into solution mode, we question what we’re trying to achieve and work on the best way to measure that goal.”

And they’re seeing results: “Our Topic Editor Dashboard (affectionately known as TED) was born out of conversations with editors,” she says. “One of the key objectives when developing TED was to understand what content wasn’t working so that we could improve it or stop doing it. We needed to do less, but make it better.”

Editors were looped into the development process early. The data team built a prototype, and a small working group provided feedback until the tool was intuitive enough for broader rollout. Someone from the data team attended every training session, and each of those sessions provided clues about how to improve TED to meet the needs of the people using it.

“In the past year, we’ve reduced the total number of articles published by 19 per cent and increased subscriber pageviews per article by 12 per cent,” she says. “This process was such a success that we’ve mimicked it for other dashboard creation, like our newsletter dashboards.

“Not only is our newsroom engaging more with data, but our audience is engaging more with our content.”

Tags: data SMH TheAge
Sections: Digital business