Next-gen news professionals have guts – and imagination
You might think, with the news industry as financially beset as it is, that none of the current crop of college kids would want to major in journalism. But as I was happy to discover Saturday at the Society for Professional Journalists Cleveland Chapter spring conference, titled Rise Up in Cleveland, a lot of young people out there find journalism both interesting and promising.
A number of them attended a panel I was on called The Journalist as Entrepreneur, giving me hope that the industry’s next generation is already thinking about how to re-imagine journalism in effective, profitable and highly creative ways. As panel leader Chris Seper, co-founder and president of the online start-up MedCity News, pointed out, what looks like an era of disaster for the news business is actually a time of unsurpassed opportunity for media entrepreneurs.
That’s true of many fields these days, and the more total the industry implosion (banking? real estate?), the bigger the opportunities are. I know that money people by definition are cautious people, but what everybody needs right now — from the humblest job seekers to the entire U.S. economy – is investors with daring, people who understand that the future is going to have to look a whole lot different from the past and who ardently want to make that future happen now.
It’s no time to be timid. And I’m excited to see that, in the news industry at least, some of our youngest adults are also our bravest. I’m betting they’ll be among the most innovative, too. You can find out what some of them are thinking and doing by checking out the RJI News Collaboratory.
