Thursday 14th October: Reappraising local news across platforms

Good morning! Today's newsletter is brought to you by Chris.

There's a lot to absorb in this quick summary of a study into local news on Facebook - but one thing you'll be unsurprised to hear is that Facebook's priorities aren't aligned with local publishers. Shock horror! The study, conducted by Benjamin Toff and Nick Mathews from the University of Minnesota’s Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication, found that "issues of importance to local audiences are being drowned out in favour of harder-hitting news pieces with national relevance".

"Posts about hard news stories, especially on a national level, consistently brought more engagement than the softer, more locally relevant stories. 'Even local organisations get more bang for their buck when they post about non-local subjects,' Toff said."

The whole piece is well worth a read, if only for the data on how wire copy tends to perform in terms of Facebook engagement. But in light of everyone's rush back into local news - from Axios to Google - it seems there are still fundamental aspects of local news coverage we need to reappraise for the platform era.

Here's an interesting one - the NYT is trialling an in-house audio app which collates all its audio content in one place. It's zigging where others are zagging by publishing through third party apps and services. And if it succeeds, other publishers with deep pockets might remove the middlemen too.

We're fans of Black Ballad, so we're very happy to hear that it's received a significant amount of cash - from private backers and crowdfunding - to invest in more reporters and technology. It's exactly what Tobi Oredein told us she was hoping to achieve this time last year.

Earlier this year we heard that a number of sites are cutting back on the amount they publish in service of better audience engagement; now The Telegraph is trying something similar with its newsletters. P.S. I cannot stress enough that you should not unsubscribe from this newsletter, even if you think it will deepen your engagement with us. It won't.

This week's podcast:

On this week’s episode we hear from The New Republic’s Literary Editor Laura Marsh. She tells us about what makes working in an audio format especially rewarding, discovering famous literary contributors, and why non-news content is such a good touchpoint for audiences.

We’ve opened entries for the third year of the Publisher Podcast Awards. They are designed to celebrate the podcasting success of publishers and media organisations, whether they’ve been in the podcasting space a while or have just launched their first one. Entry is free, so have a look at our categories and see if you’ve got anything that could be award-winning!