By DAVID GREER KPA Member Services Director
The past, present and future of Kentucky and its many fine newspapers – that
will be the primary focus of the 2009 KPA convention Jan. 22 and 23
at the Galt House Hotel & Suites in downtown Louisville. Convention
goers will be treated to a viewing of the famed KentuckyShow! multimedia
presentation and hear Gov. Steve Beshear speak at the Friday Changing
of the Guard luncheon. A third of our convention breakout sessions
will be devoted to online and new media. That includes sessions on
social media for newspapers, web site design and learning how to animate
your online ads.
But the convention won’t forget the all-important topics of advertising,
editorial and circulation as KPA brings in top-notch nationally known
speakers on a variety of topics.
The convention begins Jan. 22 with a three-hour advertising breakout
session with Mike Blinder, noted speaker and author. Blinder is an
expert on Internet ad sales and has just published his latest book, “Survival
selling even in the toughest times.” After many years in radio
and television, Blinder moved into online ad sales. His Florida-based
firm, The Blinder Group, has more than 350 media clients worldwide
and helps them maximize revenues through effective sales training and
revenue generation programs.
Also at 1 p.m., Jan. 22, Lisa Tackett Griffin, a computer software
trainer since 1983 and a pioneer in pagination and remote printing
methods for newspapers, holds a three-hour breakout on software applications
for advertising and editorial staffers with an emphasis on InDesign
and Illustrator. She believes strongly that Illustrator is an under-used
and under-appreciated program at many newspapers. Griffin is a staff
member of the UT/TPA Institute for Newspaper Technology. There will
be a separate registration fee to attend the Blinder and Griffin breakouts.
The highlight of the Jan. 22 evening will be a 6 p.m. screening of
KentuckyShow! at the nearby Kentucky Center with a reception to follow.
Dinner is on your own. If you’re a Kentucky native, KentuckyShow!
is sure to put a sentimental lump in your throat during a look at our
state’s past, present and future. And if you’re new to
the state, KentuckyShow! is a concentrated yet entertaining look at
the Bluegrass. It’s not to be missed
Friday morning’s convention action begins at an 8 a.m. business
meeting with some important proposed changes to KPA’s by-laws.
Editorial breakouts
Al Cross, director of the Institute
for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, assistant professor
of journalism at UK and longtime Courier-Journal political writer,
will lead two breakout sessions. The first is “How they
did it – how papers did big reporting projects” while
his second breakout will address covering and guiding economic
development in your community.
Next, Stan McKinney, longtime news editor and award-winning
photojournalist at the Central Kentucky News Journal, will be
joined by two Campbellsville University officials as they talk
about the C-U photo archive project using more than 20 years
of McKinney’s negatives from the CKNJ. McKinney is now
assistant professor of journalism at Campbellsville University.
Dennis Anderson, managing editor of the Lawrence (Kansas) Journal-World,
now leads a multimedia newsroom at his paper. His staff of 75
journalists is responsible for the newspaper, two web sites and
6News, a daily cable news program. The Journal-World won the
Suburban Newspapers of America Newspaper of the Year Award in
2005 and again in 2007 and it also received the AP Managing Editors
Convergence Award in 2007 and 2008. Before moving to Kansas,
Anderson was a 10-year veteran of Gannett. He has worked at papers
in Connecticut, New York and Illinois and has won awards for
his column writing and supervisor skills.
Associated Press reporter Brett Barrouquere is based at the
Louisville AP bureau and has received considerable training from
AP in investigative journalism skills. Before joining AP in 2004,
he worked for papers in Louisiana and Florida for 10 years. Barrouquere
will share his knowledge of how and where to find important public
records.
Time management is always an issue with sports editors and
sports reporters. There are always too many schools, games, athletes,
youth leagues and issues to cover and never enough time. So learning
how to use the available time wisely is the hallmark of a successful
sports department at any paper. Benjy Hamm, editorial director
for Landmark Community Newspapers and himself a former AP sports
reporter as well as editor, managing editor and reporter at papers
in North and South Carolina, will moderate a panel discussion
on time management for sports staffers.
Joining Hamm will be Peter W. Zubaty, sports editor at The
Kentucky Standard in Bardstown since 2007. Zubaty, a veteran
of Kentucky papers in London, Somerset, Pikeville, LaGrange and
Kingston, Tenn., knows a thing or two about time management.
He is responsible for covering sports at three local high schools
in addition to a myriad of other sports beats.?
Also on the panel is Steve Doyle, editor of the Sentinel-News
in Shelbyville. A Shelby County native, he’s been editor
of his hometown paper since September. Before that, he spent
more than 28 years at the Orlando Sentinel, where he was associate
managing editor for sports, features, business, and most recently,
content development. He also served as president of the AP Sports
Editors and Florida Sports Writer associations.
Roy L. Moore, noted author and dean of the College of Mass
Communications at Middle Tennessee State University, former associate
vice president for academic affairs at Georgia College & State
University, professor emeritus of journalism at the University
of Kentucky and former executive director of the UK First Amendment
Center, will address media law issues for newsrooms and advertising
staffs. Moore, a licensed attorney in Kentucky and Georgia, has
authored several books on media law and is often interviewed
in the media on First Amendment issues. Come with your media
law questions and concerns. |
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Advertising breakouts
Peter Zollman is founding principal of Classified Intelligence and
the Advanced Interactive Media Group, internationally known consulting
groups that work with newspapers, broadcasters, dot-coms and yellow-page
companies and technology providers to develop profitable interactive
services. Zollman will lead two breakout sessions. The first will
concentrate on increasing your paper’s classified ad revenue
while the second will cover competitive selling against local radio
and yellow pages publications.
Mary Ann Taylor, former supervisor of the employment/public accommodations
unit and the current supervisor of education and outreach for the Kentucky
Commission on Human Rights, will tell us the language pitfalls newspapers
should avoid when publishing ads for housing. It seems that a few Kentucky
newspapers are cited each year for such violations. Taylor’s
tips and insight can keep your paper from being fined by the KCHR.
She has previous experience with several state agencies, including
the Cabinet for Health and Family Services.
More and more online ads use animation to attract visitor eyeballs.
The software program that does the web site animation is Adobe Flash.
Ben Duerr, a former Chicago-based producer of materials for online,
print and the web, now teaches web and graphic design at Daymar College
in Louisville. He will give us a 60-minute introduction to Flash for
online advertising. That’s his day job. By night, Duerr writes,
produces and performs weekly on Ohio Valley Wresting and Derby City
Wrestling, seen Saturday nights on TV? on the Louisville CW network
affiliate. Leave this breakout session early and you run the risk of
Ben clamping you in a half nelson.
Circulation breakouts
Lon Haenel began his newspaper career 12 years ago with the Janesvile
Gazette, a family-owned daily in Wisconsin. He began in retail ad
sales where he flourished. That led to several promotions after he
generated more than $250,000 in new revenue. Three years ago, Haenel
moved into circulation as sales and marketing manager. This year,
he was promoted to circulation director. Haenel has often been recognized
for his creative circulation promotions – the subject of his
KPA presentation.
Geoff Vanderlin is with Shaw Newspapers, a company with a number of
newspapers in Iowa and Illinois. He too has recently been promoted
and recognized inside and outside of his company for his innovative
circulation promotion methods. Come and hear Geoff speak and pick up
valuable tips for building your paper’s circulation.
More and more newspapers are using the convenience, speed and low-cost
benefits of e-mail to conduct circulation promotions. The Louisville
Courier-Journal is one such paper. Amanda Davis from the Courier-Journal
circulation staff will talk about her paper’s successes with
using e-mail for circulation marketing.
Robert Rubrecht is director of circulation marketing for the Newspaper
Association of America based in suburban Washington, D.C. Rubrecht
will speak about NAA’s study of future circulation trends and
will also discuss circulation resources available for newspapers through
NAA.
New media
Gary Sosniecki is a regional sales
manager for TownNews.com. He specializes in weekly newspapers.
He joined TownNews a year ago after a 34-year career that included
owning with his wife, Helen, three weeklies and publishing a
small daily, all in Missouri. He also worked for papers in Tennessee,
Illinois and Kansas and now resides in Iowa. He’s a past
president of the Missouri Press Association, Ozark Press Association
and Missouri Press Service. His breakout will focus on weeklies
that still aren’t online or haven’t figured out how
to make money online. Topics will include why papers need to
be online, how to do it, how to make money online, how to post
news without hurting your print product and building online traffic.
Sosniecki did all this and more when he developed a web site
for his small weekly in Missouri.
Caroline H. Little will offer an online overview. Little works
as an adviser and consultant for the British-based Guardian Media
Group, a company looking to make a big splash in the American
market. Her duties include consulting with Guardian, publisher
of the famed Guardian newspaper in London, on U.S. web strategies
and online acquisitions. Previously, she was CEO and publisher
for Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive where she was responsible
for developing online strategies for the Washington Post and
Newsweek and several other web sites. She recently spoke in the
Netherlands at the World Association of Newspapers conference.
Social media is a hot topic these days and the KPA convention
presents two speakers on the subject. Kurt Greenbaum is director
of social media for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, where he oversees
the newsroom’s efforts to more closely engage readers with
the newspaper and web site. Since Greenbaum’s arrival at
the Post-Dispatch, STLtoday.com has seen several redesigns and
seen its traffic increase substantially. There has also been
a marked increase in the newsroom’s support of the site.
Greenbaum worked several years as a newspaper reporter in Florida,
started his paper’s first web site and later managed a
business news web site in Florida that enjoyed significant growth
under his leadership before moving to St. Louis.
Meanwhile, Jackie Reau is CEO and founder of Game Day Communications,
a Cincinnati-based new media business. She has 15 years experience
in marketing and public relations. Her firm’s clients include
the Cincinnati Bengals, the Reds, Downtown Cincinnati Inc., and
the Cincinnati Enquirer. Last year, her firm launched its Digital
Media Team to help clients harness emerging technology and social
media platforms. Greenbaum and Reau will offer many tips on how
your paper can harness the power of social media to increase
sales of your newspaper and increase your web site traffic.
Designing an attractive web site that entices eyeballs and
keeps them is an art form and Mario Garcia Jr. is a noted new
media designer with 15 years of experience. He is a frequent
speaker on multi-level storytelling and web design. He’s
worked with more than 100 news organizations on improving their
web sites. Garcia is also an adjunct faculty member at the University
of South Florida where he teaches multimedia journalism. His
father, Mario Garcia, is a world-renowned expert on newspaper
design.
Shooting video is becoming an everyday practice at many newspapers.
Yet it’s a different world than shooting still photos.
Nathan Stevens is a former editor for WTVQ and WDKY in Lexington.
Now, he’s on he faculty at UK where he teaches videography
and editing. Come to Nathan’s breakout and learn the ins
and outs of shooting video. |
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Associates, educators
The KPA Associates will offer a two-hour breakout session on strategic
planning. More businesses than ever use the strategic planning process
to map the journey to success. Come and learn how it’s done.
Also, Kentucky’s college journalism educators will have a meeting
late Friday afternoon.
Reception, awards banquet
A reception begins at 6 p.m. Friday and the annual awards banquet begins
at 7 p.m. where results from the KPA Excellence in Kentucky Newspapers
Contest are announced. |