BEING A journalist right now is not easy. You face daily menace and harassment from every corner: repressive governments and would-be autocrats, abusive Tweets and Facebook posts, as well as physical threats and an unprecedented risk of being killed for your work. Add to that the chronic stress of working in an industry bedeviled by existential financial crisis.
The reward for coping with all
this? Hardly anybody trusts you. According to the 2021 Edelman Trust Barometer
Spring Update: A World in Trauma, trust in traditional news media is at a record low (though
trust in social media is even lower). While the public’s trust in most
institutions (including government and NGOs) isn’t strong, its faith in news
media is even feebler. You know it’s bad when people say politicians are more
credible sources than us journalists.
Increased political
polarization and a swamp of disinformation deserve much of the blame, it is true.
Increasingly, journalists aren’t viewed as independent voices, but perceived to
have hidden agendas, making them either “with us or against us.” Meanwhile,
factbased news is competing for attention with rage-inducing, button-pushing
disinformation. Some “bad actors” are actively targeting journalists’
credibility— and too often succeeding, thanks to the enabling environment of
today’s social media ecosystem.
Case in point: Intrepid 2021
Nobel Peace Prize winning Filipino-American journalist Maria Ressa. My
organization, the International Center for Journalists, working with the
University of Sheffield and Ressa’s Rappler news site, recently conducted a
forensic analysis of
hundreds of thousands of social media attacks against Ressa over the past five
years. Nearly 60% of these attacks were specifically designed to undermine her
professional credibility and, by extension, public trust in her journalism.
What can be done to reverse
this hostile tide? Better self-regulation by the social media platforms would
help, as might other policy interventions— though there is currently little
consensus about what these might be, and many journalists worry that government
actions ostensibly designed to help the media often end up doing the opposite.
That is why many journalists believe the best strategy is simply to “put your
head down and do your job.”
I don’t believe that’s good
enough. It is time for a fundamental rethink of journalism, from how it is
produced and distributed to how it interacts with audiences to how we measure
impact. Restoring trust requires numerous actions, large and small, that
journalists and the organizations that still employ them can take. Think of the
suggestions that follow not as some kind of shovel-ready blueprint for change,
but rather as an initial exploration of possible steps that might make a
difference.
Rethinking Reporting
One suggestion comes from an
unexpected source: Pope Francis. The pontiff recently articulated a vision for
journalism that speaks directly to rebuilding a culture of trust. The
journalist’s mission, he said, is “to explain the world, to make it less dark,
to make those who live there fear it less and look at others with greater awareness,
and also with more confidence.” In other words, don’t stop at uncovering dark
doings; supply the light, too.
Many journalists, of course,
are already doing plenty of both. They reveal the “dark doings” by helping bring down corrupt governments
in Slovakia, uncovering human
trafficking rings in Nigeria, and documenting an
escalating hunger crisis in Afghanistan. They also provide some light,
reporting on the lives of people in São Paulo’s most under-resourced
and under-covered communities, on successful voter turnout efforts
in the Navajo Nation, on what countries can learn from Estonia on cybersecurity,
and on and on.
Without cutting back on
essential investigative journalism that exposes problems, are there other smart
ways media organizations can figure out how to do more reporting on solutions?
And how else can newsrooms evolve their coverage to be more relevant to
readers? A few suggestions:
- Fight
disinformation head on. Newsrooms
could take a more holistic approach to covering disinformation,
scrutinizing the “Infodemic” the same way they’ve tackled every aspect of
the COVID-19 pandemic. They can ferret out the figures behind
disinformation campaigns, and regularly report stories like this,
uncovered by researchers, that found that just 12 Facebook, Twitter, and
Instagram accounts were behind the majority of misinformation across the
platforms on COVID-19 vaccines. Imagine if newsrooms did this
kind of work on a regular basis, identifying misinformation pathogens as
they crop up, rather than waiting for them to spread. News outlets could
team up regularly with researchers and think tanks with the computing and
analytics power to identify such social media trends.
- Connect
better with audiences. Research shows that people engage
with news more when a piece of journalism answers the question all readers
often instinctively ask: “What does this mean for me?” Why not do
more stories that take a big issue and bring it down to its impact on a
community and less horse-race style political coverage? One example: Code
for Africa, a civic engagement organization, regularly launches
data-driven projects that, for example, help people calculate the gender
pay gap in any African country, or see competing prices for medications at
pharmacies near them.
- Put
trust in the frame. In every story, journalists should
ask themselves, “How can I approach this piece in a way that helps people
trust it?” That may include highlighting solutions instead of just
problems; including a diversity of voices; and directly involving the
audience in the piece — by crowdsourcing community input, for instance.
Edit For Transparency
Few outside journalism really
know how news is produced. This opacity contributes to suspicions about
journalists’ bias. The “story behind the story” offerings by some news outlets
(like the New York Times Insider) are a step in the right direction. Media
organizations should consider going further by:
- Better
distinguishing opinion from straight news. As
opinion pieces and news analyses have proliferated across all types of
news outlets, so have more opportunities for audience confusion. In
a 2018 study, just
43% of people said they could easily distinguish news from opinion on
Twitter and Facebook.
- Sign
on to efforts such as The Trust Project, a
consortium that has developed a series of eight “Trust Indicators” that
news organizations can use to show who and what is behind a news
story. Research by
the University of Texas at Austin found the indicators improve a news
outlet’s credibility. The indicators audiences paid most attention to were
“the description of why the story was written (noticed by 44%) and
information about the Trust Project (noticed by 43%).” The project, which
launched in 2017, has just 200 media partners worldwide to date. 2022
should see that number grow much higher.
- Measure
and communicate the impact of news. Following up
on a story’s impact makes good editorial sense, whether it’s a big
investigative piece, or a purely local story about some ordinary problem.
A Brazilian outlet, Gazeta do Povo, attempted to do just that
a couple of years ago, producing an impact newsletter for its audience. A
citizen journalism effort in India, CGNet Swara, has
tracked hundreds of tangible impacts of its reporting (electricity turned
on, teachers paid) and lets its audience know.
It’s The Distribution, Stupid
In today’s social media
dominated world, controlling how content is distributed has become a complex
challenge that many news organizations struggle to meet. Research from the
Reuters Institute shows, not surprisingly, that news is less trusted when
seen on disinformation-infested social media platforms. The media has tried to
respond with push notifications and newsletters galore, reaching readers
through their phones and inboxes. That’s a start. But journalism needs to work
more creatively to figure out other ways to gain more control over distribution
of its product. For instance:
- Create
consortia. We’ve seen great editorial collaborations like
the Panama and Pandora Papers. But there are other types of
collaborations, ones focused on distribution and co-branding, that could
help build better connections with readers. These might take the form of
experiments like the Ohio Local News Initiative that is banding together
small outlets and community groups across the state under a single
umbrella. Or the effort by Switzerland’s
largest media companies to create a single log-in for all
their sites to reclaim a direct connection with readers. Initiatives like
these could also yank audiences out of their own echo chambers and direct
them to new sources of information. Or consider #FactsMatter, which brings
together fact-checkers and news organizations in Nigeria with social media
influencers (i.e. trusted messengers) to help get the accurate news they
produce to larger audiences.
- Think
big. News organizations came late to the
digital age and have been playing catch-up ever since. Yet a few journalistic
mavericks were actually ahead of their time. Roger Fidler, at the
now-defunct Knight Ridder, invented the tablet in the 1990s, 15
years before Steve Jobs, but newsrooms were too fat and happy to pay
attention. We need to reignite that sort of innovative spirit — and this
time, back the big ideas it generates. We don’t yet know what will be the
Next Big Thing. What we do know is that the time for complacency is long
over.
Whatever you think of these specific ideas, the overall thrust should be clear: Strengthening journalistic credibility cannot be an afterthought, something that news media turn to after doing the “real work.”
This is the real work for news organizations and those of us who value and support them. Trust needs to sit squarely in the center of every aspect of the journalistic enterprise, from reporting and editing to marketing and distribution.
The stakes are high. Journalism faces not only a
crisis of trust but an existential financial crisis as well. Yet people are
much more likely to pay for news that they trust. Solve one crisis, and you
might just solve the other. (The author is the president of the
International Center for Journalists, a nonprofit that empowers an unparalleled
global network of journalists to produce news reports that lead to better
governments, stronger economies, more vibrant societies and healthier lives.)
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