How to Build a Successful News Blog: 10 Information Sources You Can Use

how to build a news blogNews blogs are fast-paced blogs which track, aggregate and disseminate current news on a set range of topics. Their main selling points are comprehensiveness and timeliness: a good news blog must cover the field throughly and speedily by pointing readers to new information or developments.

Content for news blogs is published regularly on a daily basis and sometimes multiple times throughout the day. Apart from the value of the actual opinions offered by news bloggers: people subscribe to or follow these news blog largely because they help them to stay on top of current issues, innovations or ideas concerning a industry.

News blogs are also profitable if they are monetized because they publish a very high volume of content, which continuously attracts both search and referral traffic. If you’re an entrepreneur or webmaster looking to generate some online income, a news blog is a good foundation to start with because you’ll never run out of content: the consistent news flow drives you to publish regularly.

If you’re interested in a specific field, publishing a news blog forces you to keep up with what other people are talking about. It’s different from just reading other blogs because you’ll participate by contributing your own ideas or opinions. This is a good way for you to build a strong online reputation.

This article and others to come in this mini-series will examine what you need to create a successful and popular news blog.

Determining Your Information Sources: An Essential First Step

You’ve picked a domain name/brand, bought web hosting, installed a blogging platform, chose a blog design and optimized your site. What’s the next step? You need something to write about and picking the right informational sources will make sure that your news blog is not only relevant but timely and unique.

Let’s look at how you can create a list of news sources. I’ve broken the entire process in 10 points: you can choose to only use some of these sources although I would recommend exploring all of them if you have the time.

The only essential tool you really need as a news blogger is a robust RSS feed reader. It is very time consuming to check multiple websites several times a day for new content and the easiest way to go about it is to pull all the content into one cohesive location, which is your feed reader.

Whenever possible, you should always subscribe to news source’s web feed and categorize it accordingly in your feed reader. If you don’t use a feed reader, I recommend Google Reader or Feed Demon for Windows and NetNewsWire or other online feed readers for Mac.

Here are the 10 information sources you can use for your news blog.


1. Other Blogs in the Same Niche

blogroll
Image Credit: the journalist’s blogroll

One of the best ways to find interesting news is to subscribe to other blogs in your niche. This includes both other news blogs and non-news blogs and I suggest that you pay extra attention to blogs which specialize in a sub-niche because they are usually the ones who publish unique content worth mentioning.

There are several ways to find other blogs in your niche:

  • Search Engines: Do a search for topic + ‘blog’ using Google.com or try their blog search engine, which allows you to do an advanced search so you can only look for blogs with the topic keyword (‘cars’ ‘food’ etc) in the blog title.

    This increases the relevance of the search results. Other blog search engines you can use include Ask.com, which allows you to sort results according to popularity. Technorati’s search also allows you to sort results according to authority, which is the number of links pointing to each blog.


  • Blogrolls: Some of the blogs in your niche will have blogrolls or a links page with links to other relevant blogs or news sources. This is an excellent to surf around and find other relevant blogs which cover the same topic.

  • Blog directories: A simple Google search for ‘blog directory’ will give you a good amount of sites to look through. Technorati has a blog directory which includes each blog’s authority score so you’ll have a rough gauge of popularity for each blog. Blog Catalog, Google Directory and Best of the Web are also good places to check out.

    If you’re using a directory, the most important thing is to make sure that the blog is still active. Don’t be surprised if you find lots of dormant sites sitting in blog directories.


  • Personal Recommendations: Sometimes the easiest way is to ask your friends or members of a forum for recommendations on sites you should check out. The benefit of personal recommendations is that you’ll almost always come across good weblogs. It’s a good way to weed out most of the junk.



2. Social News and Bookmarking Websites

Mixx

Social news communities like Digg, Reddit and Mixx are great places to find a good source of both news and non time-sensitive content. Some niche social news websites will also allow you to network with other bloggers or webmasters in the same field and is quite useful for you to develop some useful connections.

Check out each social news website and subscribe to the frontpage or the appropriate category of news. Here is a list of social news sites to use.

You can also use unique sites like StumbleUpon to channel-surf specific tags that relate to your website. Personally, I feel that StumbleUpon is not an efficient method of accessing news because its slow and the content is often dated. However, it is useful for getting quirky or offbeat information not found elsewhere.

I highly recommend subscribing to the RSS feeds of active stumblers, instead of using the toolbar to stumble pages yourself. This is much more efficient way of accessing news via StumbleUpon. Make use of influencers who share content.

Social bookmarking websites will display what their users bookmark online and all these links are organized by tags. Content on social bookmarking sites is not always current but it’s a good place to find some obscure gems. The best way to process this information is to subscribe to these tags and put them in your feed reader.

When it comes to social bookmarking websites, don’t waste time surfing around and actively looking for content. Let your subscribed tag feeds collect in your feed reader and peruse them periodically. There are many social bookmarking sites out and you don’t need to use them all. I recommend using del.icio.us, furl and ma.gnolia.



3. Keyword Watchlists

google alerts

This refers to the monitoring of specific keyphrases or keywords related to your blog in order to pick up on relevant news. Technorati has a Watchlist feature which allows you to monitor several keyphrases when they are used by blogs.

Google Alerts is watchlist tool I like a lot because it can email you with links quite frequently on a as-it-happens basis. You can also subscribe via RSS for keyword watchlists on sites like Twitter through Tweetscan or Twemes.

Some RSS feed readers like Feed Demon allow you to set up watchlists to monitor specific keywords that appear in all your feeds. This is very useful if you subscribe to a lot of web feeds as you may often miss out on relevant content.



4. Meme Trackers

techmeme

Meme trackers are websites which organize blog posts on specific topics according to an automatic algorithm that determines which articles are cited or discussed the most. They give you a general overview of what’s being discussed in a specific niche at the moment

These meme trackers usually include a list of blog posts linking or related to the news story in question. This is useful when you want to write a quick news post and want to reference other blogs talked about it. Examples of meme trackers include Techmeme, TailRank, Megite and Technorati.

Meme trackers also exist for social media services like Twitter in the form of Tweetmeme and Twemes, which loosely organize conversations and links passed around by Twitter users. Not always an excellent source for breaking news but still useful to capture some off-the-radar information.

As always, subscribe to the RSS feed for each meme-trackers and monitor them a few times a day. They are an convenient source of content ideas and news.



5. News Aggregators

news aggregators popurls

News aggregators are somewhat similar to meme trackers and social news sites except that they do not use any algorithm to determine story visibility. They are simply webpages which pull in RSS feeds to centralize them in one location online.

For example, here’s a short list of SEO News Aggregators, which focus on aggregating the web feeds of selected blogs writing about SEO. Other general online aggregators include Alltop and Popurls. I think aggregators can be useful if you don’t like to use web feeds or when you need a quick overview of what’s happening in a niche.

Personally, I don’t really fancy using them because I always tend to overlook news items because of their format. I prefer archiving my news through the feed reader because it allows me to search through and categorize content more easily.



6. Online Newspapers and Magazines

bbc

Online newspapers and magazines will provide you with a lot of news on your chosen topic and its a good complement to blogs and social news websites, which may sometimes overlook a particular piece of news.

Online newspapers also has the advantage of offering localized news on either a national or city-basis. This is useful if you run a news blog that is divided in country or region-based coverage. Start first by subscribing to the major news outlets like the BBC, CNN and New York Times.

After which, subscribe to sources which focus more on specific angles of interest. For example, if you’re running a celebrity gossip website, you should subscribe to the Daily Mail and People.com, both of which are sites with a strong emphasis on celebrity and other tabloid-style news.

Always subscribe to online magazine/newspaper feeds according to the specific news category. You don’t need to subscribe to a entire news-site because most of the news will be irrelevant to your interests. You don’t want to overload your attention with stories you cannot use for your blog.



7. Academic Journals and Trade Publications

academic-books.jpg
Image Credit: little

Academic journals and trade publications often publish reports which you can highlight on your blog in the form of news. This usually includes polls, statistical analysis of a specific phenomenon or reports on the performance of an industry. Not all of these publications are free and some do require a paid subscription.

It’s possible to obtain complimentary copies of these academic journals regularly, if you’re a blogger with a certain degree of clout. In some scenarios, publishing houses will be willing to send you new books or journals in return for a mention on your website. It is also possible to obtain these journals by being a contributing member of a scholarly society or educational institute.

The content published in these journals is not news per se but not many bloggers pick up on these info sources so it’s an easy means for you to inject new ideas or content into the industry. This is a terrific way to position yourself as a thought-leader or maven.



8. Press Releases and Media Contacts

PR News Wire press releases

When you are starting out as a relatively unknown blogger, you need to take the initiative to accumulate media contacts. Email companies and web services which are relevant to your site’s topical focus and inform them that you are open to receiving email press releases from their marketing/PR department.

You’ll usually be put on an email list and you can take this chance to initiate better relationships with the specific PR manager/executive. Ideally, you want to be invited to launch parties and networking events as a member of the press.

You can also monitor Press Release sites like PR News Wire, which offers well categorized RSS feeds for specific industries. Press releases are great sources of direct information from both large companies and small businesses. Sometimes they can be a effective way for you to get the scoop on a big news story.



9. Insider Information

celebrity magazines
Image Credit: the scoop

This involves establishing inside sources within organizations or companies who will be willing to leak information for a big story. How do you develop these inside sources? Networking in the right places with the right people would be a strategy or you can simply offer to publicly offer to pay for scoops from people in the know.

In any case, ‘inside sources’ are often made up by bloggers and online journalists, in order to get attention and pageviews. For instance, this is very common amongst celebrity blogs because they are in the gossip manufacturing business: readers don’t mind too much if they hear another rumor that may be proven false at a later stage.

Just note that repeatedly offering false information may detract from your credibility so use inside sources only when you are very confident of their authenticity.



10. Reader Tips

boingboing

Last but not least, your blog readers are great source of information. Set up a tips email account and publicize it on your website. You might not get many tips in the beginning when your site is new but this will change as your news site grows.

Several large blogs like Lifehacker and Boing Boing receive a good amount of reader tips daily and some of them are worthy enough to be transformed into a blog post. Personally, I really like this idea because this is a passive way of receiving news. Instead of actively searching for content, you’ll getting them sent to you.

Make sure your tips hotline is clearly visible from the site. Here’s a good example of a story suggestion page you can use for your site.


And this concludes the list of information sources you can use. In the next article in this series, I’ll talk more about the specific tools you can use to increase your blogging efficiency as a news blogger.

For future reference, feel free to bookmark this article at del.icio.us

If you have any suggestions for topics I should cover in this series on building a successful news blog, please leave them in the comments! This includes any questions you want to see answered concerning this topic.

To easily receive updates on future articles, subscribe to Dosh Dosh today.

111 Comments - Share Your Thoughts
  • This is amazingly comprehensive, I don’t know how you do it! You were right in your Twitter comment, this is a good one. The advice is not just useful for news blogs, either, but anyone that keeps up with an industry or cultural faction to any degree.

    Do you have a news blog or do you have plans to create one.

  • Fantastic compilation — I especially liked the section on gathering media contacts and getting on their PR lists — that is something I need to do more of.

  • Hi !

    Good post for news blogs. I personally use BlogBridge (http://www.blogbridge.com) as a RSS feed reader. You install it in your computer, can sync your guides, you can classify the source of your news in guides. I recommend it.

    Lenis
    http://www.tecnoseguridad.net

  • I love Google Alerts! It is infinitely useful. Getting scoops and inside info is what really sets apart some blogs from others (part of why I subscribe to TechCrunch, for example, is the inside info).

  • Wow dude,

    you are gonna put traditional journalists out of business(shout out to my man Dan Rather Vs CBS). and that might not be a bad thing since they spin stories to please advertisers and political groups.

    anyway, i will be forwarding this post straight to online publishers i work with, after a stumble of course

  • Love the list. I’ve not tried to be a news blog myself, but I do enjoy using Google Alerts and social sites to keep up with what’s happening on my own.

  • Dugg!!.
    A lot of news break in Forums too. Say, DP.

  • Thanks a lot for this great info. I will use some of these tips to build an official news blog for myself and others.

  • Excellent post! I stumbled it!

  • fantastic post! I will have to check out google alerts. I have heard a fair few people talking about it now.

  • Maki - Tremendously useful post! Thanks for all of your time and effort putting this one together.

  • @Thomas

    Google Alerts is awesome =]

  • It’s one amazing article! You summarised just about everything we are using in our work. :)
    However… nothing’s more efficient than a custom-built (and trimmed) crawler/bot of your own. The possibilities are ENDLESS. Much more expensive though. :)
    Regards.

  • Wow - now I see why it’s been over a week since your last update. You are insanely thorough!

    I used to work for a news blog (MasterNewMedia) and you’re dead on. The only thing I’d really caution people on is you really really have to make an editorial plan before you start, because it is super easy to get side-tracked.

  • @??? ?? -

    …?

    =P

  • I don’t plan on doing a news blog but this article was of interest to my anyway as I do like to keep up with the latest business trends. I use Google alerts and really like the fact that you can get them instantly. Thank you for a comprehensive list.

  • sorry dude, but telling people to write about what everybody else is writing about just propagates the “bloggers aren’t journalists” issue - you forgot the real number one: find your voice. so before your readers run off to collect rss feeds and rewrite the same old shit, perhaps they should focus on making it worth reading…why on earth would i click away from a solid nytimes piece to read some random bloggers 200 word version? because it came up in his google alert? his rss reader? please…

  • @daveyola

    First of all, I didn’t tell people to write what everyone else is writing about. Nor did I suggest that people simply ‘rewrite the same old shit’ so you’re inaccurately re-framing my message You’re probably a new visitor who has never read or seen anything else on this website before. If you did you probably wouldn’t think that way.

    Read the article carefully and you’ll see that you’re just choosing to view the article in the most simplistic manner possible. A news blog by definition is to report news on a range of specific topics. That is indisputable. I’m not talking about personal or opinion blogs. This article is about news blogs. Got that clear?

    How you want to do add your own spin or voice to the news article in order to make it unique is entirely up to you.

    This is just simple, common sense.

    You can just drop a quote and write a few lines if your goal is to score some ad money from search traffic. Of course, if you want to differentiate yourself from the rest of the pack, you need to add value to the piece by including your own opinion on it or perhaps some other information not found on other sites. Reporting the same news as everyone and having your own voice is not mutually exclusive.

    Secondly, some of the info sources like social bookmarking and social news provide access to content not widely covered by online newspapers. Nor are academic journals or niche-specific reports examined in detail by more sound bite-y mainstream media. There’s your chance to add value. There’s your chance to stand out from the rest.

    @ Chris O’Byrne

    Yes I do have a news blog and I do intend to create more of them. They’ll fun to maintain especially if you’re interested in the topic.

    @ Lenis

    Thanks for the blogbridge recommendation… I’ll check it out!

    @ Marc

    Thanks for the stumble!

    @ Stephanie, Michael Martine and Thomas

    Yeah Google Alerts are terrific. Extremely easy to setup as well.

    @ Vinod

    Yup, DP and other forums do have some good info, once in a while…

    @ Trisha

    I wrote about how editorial calendars can increase your readership. :)

    @ Everyone else

    Thanks for your comments!

  • waaaaaaaaaa

    “bloggers aren’t journalists”

    we are police, firemen, soldiers, doctors, parents…..

    our take on the news is what really counts. while limbaugh spins to the right and franken to the left the facts of the matter are felt by us

    the historical record has evolved to actually include us on the bottom of the food chain

  • I really loved your post! My website deals precisely with news -with a really unique twist ;) - and I will definitely be using some of your tips.

    Thanks!

    Raul
    theTrollShow.com

  • Maki, a very good resource list that I can use in the future. This is an article that I absolutely must bookmark. Thank you for providing the many ways in which a blog can provide ‘current’ news.

    I definitely think that using news sites like BBC, FOX, SKY etc…is good, but it is always important to cross reference information to ensure limited bias for those bloggers who do not want to be seen taking sides or providing inaccurate information.

    Thanks again,
    Fabien

  • Exhaustive list. Thanks

  • Wow … Great article! Very impressive.

    About the only suggestion I would make is to include Zuula (zuula.com) in your list of tools for tracking what’s going on in the blogosphere. With one site, you get access to results from ten different blog search engines.

    And Zuula’s also a great web search tool, as well. Google, Yahoo, Live, and lots of other web search engines, all under one hood. It’ kind-of an “secret weapon” among information researchers.

  • Maki, this is good stuff. I know you complained about not being inspired to write stuff as often as others, but man, good things come to those who wait. Nice post!

  • Fantastic blog and first time on here, signed up, bookmarked and I’ll be back for more! Google Alerts. now theres a new one on me! =0>

    Cheers!
    Lewis

  • Really great stuff, best blog I’ve been on in a LONG time! Nice 1!!!

  • Hi Maki,

    I think news blogs have a good chance of attracting a nice readership if, like you say, “you add value to the piece by including your own opinion on it or perhaps some other information not found on other sites. Reporting the same news as everyone and having your own voice is not mutually exclusive.”

    I think most days, the “mainstream media” is guilty of just that, not putting their own “spin” on things.

    Gosh, just sit down in front of your tv and watch the latenight news… no matter what channel you watch, you will basicaly get the same thing on every channel.

    O.k, i understand that their job is to report the news… but honestly, who “follows” the same channel for the news ancher… I know i watch the same channel for the special reports by my favorite journalists, not the “news reader”.

    Regards, Pete

  • Nicely done. Excellent list of resources.

    I have used Google Alerts since day 1…and it has proven to make blog marketing so much easier.

    Joseph Ratliff

  • I liked the idea of subscribing to RSS feeds on Delicious for “tags of interest”.

    I knew you could do this but it just struck me that this would be very effective.

  • Just what I needed! Thanks!

  • Good information.. I also have news blog and I can it is easy to maintain News Blogs rather than Tech blogs.

  • Hi and many thanks for your Blog Template; my own particular blog is designed as a news blog. It’s only started but you can see my general idea at http://www.worldwide-infomedia-services.com which brings me nicely to a question.

    Your post layout has an adsense block in the top left of the main content column. What I’m looking to do is on an occasional basis include the words of a song or recipe.

    As you may appreciate the first few verses of a song or the ingredients for a recipe would wrap around the ad block and really would not be visible appealing without an introduction the layout of either a song or a recipe would not look right.

    So question; is there anyway I can remove the adsense block from the main column of the post page on an irregular basis. For those of us doing news blogs I think this would be beneficial when we have small or unusual posts to make.

    Many thanks for any help offered

  • This is by no means a great article to read and have many,many great resources. My question is: for majority bloggers, who at most spend a few hours a day on blogging? What are the most importance resources? What is the most efficient way to run a successful blog?

  • As always loved your post. Haven’t dropped a comment in a while and wanted to let you know how much I appreciate your consistently insightful content.

  • Wow, Maki, you’ve outdone yourself. This is a classic. A thorough and immensely useful compendium. Many thanks. .. and you’re right a news blog is one of the easiest to make a success of, if you’re willing to do the work. As always choose your USP first, but then all you have to do is manage the flood of possible inputs.

  • Hey this is a quite complete article about useful resources you can use that definitely will help anyone succeed building a news blog. Thanks for the info.

    Javier
    http://www.takeoffzone.com

  • Excellent post, very informative thanks for the help.

  • Valerie on March 16th, 2008

    Maki, this is a FANTASTIC article. I am an online entrepreneur and have been using Google Alerts for some time(Previoulsy, I was using a service called Moreover). Quite frankly, I have more than enough ‘Sources’ for my various topics. However, aside from hiring writers, my question now is how do I get my Blog properties to display and update the stories AUTOMATICALLY without human intervention? Please write about this subject in your next article.

  • You’ve out done yourself again. My favorite was #8. It’s important for any blogger to keep in touch with the media they can be a big help when needed the most. Thanks for your invaluable article.

    Keep them coming!

  • This is almost a complete list but just like some commenters above, some bloggers do not know how to deliver news in their blogs, that is why I do not rely on blogrolls for updates. Unfortunately, some blogs have rumors and personal comments instead of real news. So I guess we still have to be aware about it.

    I use Google Alerts to give some ideas about my next post though.

    If I may add, Yahoo’s front page has awesome and live news carefully delivered by the “right” people.

    Thanks.

  • I have been looking for this kind of information. I found this article through del.icio.ous. Great tip to go trough sites by RSS feeds. Thanks!

  • Hi Maki,

    Thanks a lot for this post. The information here is very helpful. While mine is not exactly a news blog, it’s a compilation of blog posts and it functions very similarly to one.

    Cheers!

  • Great collection here! I’ve used Google Alerts with pretty decent success, and I’m glad you mentioned organizing your RSS feeds - I currently have waaaaaaaay too many, so I only check them 2-3x/week each. I will look into the methods you mentioned.

    Thank you!

    http://www.joyfuldigesting.com/

  • Nice piece Maki. As usual, well written and current. Found it on your FriendFeed. Tks for subscribing to mine. I noticed this morning. Keep it up!. You’re setting a great example for a lot of people.
    Charlie

  • These type of blogs are great! Keeping informed is what it’s all about. The more you can learn, perhaps the more that you can earn.

  • This is a good post. I have a celebrity news site that I think can benifit from you ideas.
    stanley
    http://www.hideNsneek.com

  • Cool compilation! Certainly helps me alot as a newbie to blogging.

  • I hadn’t considered starting a blog like this but, you have inspired me once more. I have a few other blogs to clean up and then I think I will strongly consider a news blog. Thanks for another great post!

  • I agree with the first comment, this IS amazingly comprehensive content here, and plenty of resources given to make a “go” of the whole news blog idea.

    My blog is a little different ( http://danielmcgonagle.name) however this post gave me some ideas for a news blog that I may incorporate into my business.

    Thanks,

    Dan

  • Kaushik on March 17th, 2008

    In News Aggregators section (#5) you can include my favorite site http:/smashingfeeds.om

  • My newsblog has just got off the ground and I’m still trying to find my feet. This post has certainly given me some ideas and I’ll be working them in over the next week or so.

    Leaving aside the big professional sites what’s your favourite news blog?

    Kevin

  • It sounds like you’re advocating rewriting news articles that have already been written about on other blogs or rewritting articles from news sources. I’m not sure I see the point and in most cases, news articles from sources such as AP or any other news information source are copyrighted and it’s against the law to rewrite those articles, even if you write them in your own words, unless you someone are writing your personal commentary on the subject and using the sources for information.

    Am I missing something here?

  • Thanks for your comments. As I said I’m just getting off the ground and I’m still trying to find out what works, what doesn’t; what’s acceptable and what isn’t.

    News, can your copyright news? I’m not to sure. Say for example I’m writing something about the Irish Prime Minister and that the item has appeared on TV; has been written about on the paper, and has been discussed on various sites. Is it breaking copyright for me to give my own spin on what is going on? Doubtful.

    What I would agree is breach of copyright is where I take an article, cut and paste it into my blog and not give credit where credit is due.

    I feel like a child at the moment growing up, I’m trying to find my own voice among all the distractions out there in cyber-space.

    Part of finding your own voice is having someone to look up to as a role model - not to blindly imitate - these role models can help you discover the real ‘you,’ that’s part of the reason I was asking what were your favourite news blogs.

    Once more Hammer thank you for your post it is forcing me to think.

  • What importance would you place on the upcoming/back pages of social news sites? On the one hand that is the place to find breaking news, before it goes through a long (and sometimes unsuccessful) process of becoming popular. On the other hand, there is a lot of junk to filter through. What are your thoughts?

  • most reporting is done off of the associated press newswire and press releases.

    is cnn infringing on a copyright when they tell us important news from AP or al jezerra or the bbc

    HammerUncut,

    I think your forgetting that the process of retelling stories is how society passes on knowledge

    like learning from the mistakes of others is similar to your idea(ventibate) of venting publicly, which can help others cope with stress. something i have first hand experience with

  • Kevin, the problem is that unless you actually witnessed the event you are writing about, or did the interviews of the witnesses yourself, then you will need to rely on news articles. If you look at any news source, like the Associated Press or even local TV news websites, you’ll find a copyright statement at the bottom of any news article that says something similar to this. “© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.” I’d like to draw your attention to the word “rewritten”.

    Like I said, if you are writing a post about a news story and you are offering your own opinions and not just rewriting something that has already been written about in the news sources, then it would be commentary and perfectly legal. But if you are offering commentary on the news, you aren’t running a news blog.

    Of course the other option would be to run a site like Fark.com or MetaFilter.com in which case you’d be providing links to news articles and not actually writing the news. Or, I guess you could hire reporters and go into the news business. ;-)

  • Hammer,

    I am not at all sure how my post sounds like I’m only advocating the rewriting of news articles that have already been written about on other blogs.

    Just for the record: NO, I am NOT advocating that.

    That’s just ridiculous.

    I am recommending that one REPORT on news by writing one’s original take on it, while citing the source. This is by no means a violation of copyright because you are not plagiarizing a news source without credit.

    At no point in my article did I suggest that one steal content. No I didn’t recommend that at all.

    News sites and magazines are only one of the factors I’ve listed. I’ve specifically recommending that one participate in the ongoing conversation in the niche by monitoring other blogs via meme-trackers as well.

    But if you are offering commentary on the news, you aren’t running a news blog.

    I’m afraid we’re dealing with semantics here. Please take a look at these blogs: Techcrunch, Engadget or Boing Boing. This is what I’m advocating.

    Blogs that report on current events, topics, happenings by attributing other sources (blogs/newspapers/wire services) and adding original commentary. Most people call them ‘news blogs’. If you dislike the term, call them whatever you wish.

    I hope this is clear enough.

    Just to copy and paste another comment I’ve left to another reader… this might help with your query as well:

    “First of all, I didn’t tell people to write what everyone else is writing about. Nor did I suggest that people simply ‘rewrite the same old shit’ so you’re inaccurately re-framing my message You’re probably a new visitor who has never read or seen anything else on this website before. If you did you probably wouldn’t think that way.

    Read the article carefully and you’ll see that you’re just choosing to view the article in the most simplistic manner possible. A news blog by definition is to report news on a range of specific topics. That is indisputable. I’m not talking about personal or opinion blogs. This article is about news blogs. Got that clear?

    How you want to do add your own spin or voice to the news article in order to make it unique is entirely up to you.

    This is just simple, common sense.

    You can just drop a quote and write a few lines if your goal is to score some ad money from search traffic. Of course, if you want to differentiate yourself from the rest of the pack, you need to add value to the piece by including your own opinion on it or perhaps some other information not found on other sites. Reporting the same news as everyone and having your own voice is not mutually exclusive.

    Secondly, some of the info sources like social bookmarking and social news provide access to content not widely covered by online newspapers. Nor are academic journals or niche-specific reports examined in detail by more sound bite-y mainstream media. There’s your chance to add value. There’s your chance to stand out from the rest.”

  • Chris on March 18th, 2008

    I love this post! Great one… it’s incredible how you are able to publish really comprehensive and useful content at dosh dosh.

  • This is amazingly helpful! Lot’s of good stuff in here to add to my punch list. Thanks!

  • I have started my blog as a partly news blog, source is enough but … how to trace or update them everyday? Cost too much time supposed to be… you can see my blog:

    http://www.colorfulmars.com

  • Hello, Maki.
    Would you mind us to show some good news sites which aren’t old but have some success with traffic?

    By the way, thanks for the nice post.

  • I’m not affiliated with them in any way, but Voxant is a service that allows you to syndicate news video on your site, and you get paid per impression I believe…the way you/they make money is there is a short advert with the news.

  • I love your post… however I find old reliable sources like CNN to be of great use to me… and live video feeds, of course.

  • Alexa on March 21st, 2008

    Thanks for so many resources!!! I’m sorry if it’s an inappropriate question: Can you actually post a paragraphs from for instance BBC? Do you put BBC as source in the end of the post or do you have to put it as : BBC reports/says: “…”. Thank you very much!

  • Hi Mike,

    You’re welcome! Techcrunch.com and BoingBoing.net are good examples of news blogs… they do have a lot of traffic and are considered successful.

    Linda,

    Thanks for the Voxant recommendation!

    Alexa

    Yes, its fine to quote a paragraph of text from BBC or other news sources. You can put the source credit link at the bottom of your article or just do it the way you suggested (BBC Says etc). Both will work fine. Hope this helps!

  • Maki,

    Yep. These sites are certainly great, but they were born very long time ago and had their chance while blogoshpere didn’t have much competition. I’m more interested in blogs which, for example, begin their life half a year ago and have a lot of traffic already.
    Can you show such examples too?

  • This is one of those articles that makes me wonder what the hell I’ve been doing for the last few months!!

    Great work, I now have several open tabs to work through.

    Thanks..

  • This is very informative and comprehensive. Time to restrategize a couple of blogs. I just finished reading your post on TeachingSells.

  • great list. thank you. i found some interesting things to try.

  • Social bookmarking websites have been one of the most valuable resources that I’ve used to be able to keep up with breaking news that would have been very difficult to do without them.

  • This is a very comprehensive list of sources people with high post blogs can use. I think that using news services and clipping portions of their content but giving a personal opinion on top of that will make a site stand out more than just copy and paste. Thanks for the great list Maki.

  • We just launched a new aggregator that constantly analyzes popular keywords in all the news headlines. Popular news topics naturally bubble up the top of the news page … we display a hot topic cloud for the ever evolving “collective intelligence” of the top news editors. Here’s the link:

    http://www.newsflashr.com

  • Just so people know, there is a fee that you have to pay PR Newswire if you want to be able to use their best news content [not talking about the press releases.]

  • Nicely put together post. The hardest part about these types of sites is you dont get a break! Always writing and updating.

  • Trully comprehensive and helpful post. Lots of good and useful information. I’m pretty much taking most of my post ideas from social bookmarking sites and news aggregators…

  • I am newbie to blogging. This is one of the best sites I have seen about making money. I still learning about making money using blogger.
    Thank you for your good information.
    I will come back to read more articles from your site again.

  • Hello
    At the moment i still learning how to make good income from internet, searching for great tips and advice to help me successful.
    I found your articles very help me to get an idea about how to make money online.
    Thanks once again.
    JBiggs :)

  • Great advice!

  • Very interesting article. I have sort of a local news blog/mashup (http://elginite.org), and mainly I’m just concerned about spreading some ideas around the town, but I get pretty good traffic. I’d never considered some of the news sources you mentioned though.

    One thing I do use are feeds generated by Google News, but it misses a lot of stories. I’ve considered using feeds directly from some of the local news sites, but like you said, there’s too much stuff that’s irrelevant.

Links to this Article
Leave a Comment