“Journalism is the first rough draft of history.”
-Philip L Graham, Publisher, Washington Post

I had several conversations this week about how Communications Directors and other media relations folks can use Twitter to interact with the printed press. Interesting topic for a few reasons:
My colleagues and I stopped using news wires, primarily because of the cost associated with their services. The same effort that it takes to write a press release and submit it through news wires can easily be used to broadcast yourself by serving as your own news service.
Communications needs have changed, as well. I find more value in the interaction and feedback with our constituents on our blogs and social networks (primarily Facebook).
All this said, many journalists are adopting 2.0 tools in order to save their 1.0 business. Just this week, the New York Times appointed Jennifer Preston (@NYT_JenPreston) the New York Times’ first Social Media Editor. Both the Times and Washington Post are doing a great job using new media and multimedia tools, and creating unique content using free resources such as Google maps and API calls.
So how do you find the reporters/journalists that best fit your communications needs? Try these resources. (If you have other ones, let us know by leaving a comment!)
By the way, if you’re a major newspaper needing a Social Media Editor, tweet me @sherrymain. I’m interested… and interesting!
Read moreI often find myself trying to explain why I tweet, how it helps me, and why not Facebook… to list just a few questions. Tweeting isn’t for everyone. And, to each their own.
So here are my personal reasons for Tweeting (note: this does not translate to my philosophy on my professional/business uses of Twitter):
Join the club and follow me @sherrymain
I’d love to hear about your personal philosophy on tweeting too. What do you get out of it? Leave me a comment and let me know.