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BEST PRACTICE BENCHMARKS IN GLOBAL BUSINESS JOURNALISM

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Title: BEST PRACTICE BENCHMARKS IN GLOBAL BUSINESS JOURNALISM


1
BEST PRACTICE BENCHMARKS IN GLOBAL BUSINESS
JOURNALISM
  • REUTERS NEWS
  • NIGEL STEPHENSON, EDITORIAL TRAINING MANAGER,
    EMEA
  • AMERICAN UNIVERSITY OF BEIRUT, OCTOBER 13, 2008

2
NEWS THAT INFORMS THE WORLD
  • Reuters is the largest international news agency
    -- providing professionals around the world with
    stories that move the markets
  • Reuters News is seen on over 400,000 screens
    around the world and viewed by over 1 billion
    people every day.
  • In 2007, Reuters filed over three million news
    items from 197 bureaus in 132 countries.

3
REUTERS BY NUMBERS
  • In 2007, Reuters produced
  • 2.49 million headlines
  • News in 19 languages
  • 3 million news items
  • 730,000 alerts
  • 515,000 picture images
  • 54,000 video stories

4
BUSINESS NEWS
  • Company news (microeconomics)
  • Economic indicators (macroeconomics)
  • Markets bonds, stocks, commodities
  • Political risk

5
WHO DO WE WRITE FOR?
  • Business has moved to front page, TV news
  • Tell the story for a broad audience
  • No jargon
  • More drama, more colour
  • Real economy boots on the ground

6
MORE NUMBERS
  • Put numbers in context
  • Think milestones biggest one day fall since
  • But be careful with superlatives
  • Dont use too many!

7
WHERE IS THE VALUE?
  • Breaking news for trading community
  • Exclusives
  • Analysis - ideas

8
THOMSON REUTERS TRUST PRINCIPLES
  • Independence
  • Integrity
  • Freedom from bias

9
INDEPENDENCE
  • fundamental to the trust that allows us to
    report impartially from all sides of a conflict
    or dispute.
  • crucial to our ability to report on companies,
    institutions and individuals in the financial
    markets, many of whom are also our customers,
    without regard for anything other than accuracy,
    balance and the truth.
  • our duty as journalists to avoid conflicts of
    interest or situations that could give rise to a
    perception of a conflict.

10
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
  • Personal investments
  • Before you report on a company in which you or
    your family has any kind of shareholding or other
    financial interest you must notify the interest
    to your manager or bureau chief.
  • You must not deal in securities of any
    company, or in any other investment, about which
    you have reported in the previous month.
  • If you are regarded as a specialist in a
    particular area of business or industry you must
    notify your manager or bureau chief of any
    financial interest you may have in that area or
    industry.

11
GIFTS AND ENTERTAINMENT
  • Journalists must not accept any payment, gift,
    service or benefit (whether in cash or in kind)
    offered by a news source or contact.
  • We pay our own way and make our own travel
    arrangements.
  • Under no circumstances should we take or offer
    payment (whether in cash or in kind) for a news
    story.
  • No insider trading or tipping

12
INTEGRITY
  • Act within the law
  • No news by deception
  • We identify ourselves at all times as working
    for Reuters. We do not pass ourselves off as
    something other than a journalist
  • Information must be properly obtained
  • Purloining data and documents, breaking into
    premises, electronic eavesdropping, telephone
    taps, computer hacking and defeating passwords or
    other security methods on internet websites are
    all illicit and should not be used in the course
    of our work.

13
FREEDOM FROM BIAS
  • Take no sides, tell all sides
  • In MA, allow target company to state its
    position
  • Fair and balanced
  • Seek (and seek again) the other side of the
    story. Especially important in stories about
    troubled companies
  • No journalists opinion in news stories
  • No investment advice
  • Anything on the merits of an investment must
    be sourced

14
ACCURACY
  • Accuracy or speed? Which is more important?
  • Brutal competition. Performance measured to the
    second.
  • Win targets in every bureau
  • But
  • Accuracy is at the heart of what we do. It is
    our job to get it first but it is above all our
    job to get it right. Accuracy, as well as
    balance, always takes precedence over speed

15
SPEED
16
SOURCING
  • Named sources wherever possible
  • Push hard for on-the-record quotes
  • Anonymous sources must have direct knowledge or
    represent an authority
  • Use of anonymous sources strictly policed
  • As specific as possible
  • Negotiate hard with your source to agree a
    description that is sufficiently precise to
    enable readers to trust the reliability of our
    anonymous sourcing

17
RUMOURS
  • Reuters aims to report facts, not rumours
  • Duty to explain market movements
  • even if market moves on a rumour
  • Do not spread the rumour
  • Try to determine whether it is true
  • Keep checking

18
GLOBAL
  • Markets are global
  • 2,500 journalists in 150 countries
  • When a big story happens, we are there

19
EXCLUSIVE
20
  • Any questions?
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