“It’s New to Us”: Exploring Authentic Innovation in Local News Settings
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3104870Utgivelsesdato
2024Metadata
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Sammendrag
Many local newsrooms across the globe have been forced to re‐assess (and re‐assert) their value and
function during a period of intense digital disruption. “Innovate or die” has become an accepted mantra as
governments, policymakers, and academics focus on shifting, for example, traditional newspapers into the
digital era to maintain their perceived relevance. This article argues the need to understand and learn from
the experiences of traditional commercial local news providers who have been encouraged to consider
innovative solutions for their businesses. The article adopts a pooled case comparison approach, drawing on
data from two separate studies examining media innovation in Norway and Australia. We outline three
specific themes that appear to shape localized innovation practices: there is ambivalence or challenge to
innovation discourse; introduced innovations are done so incrementally and re‐contextualised to adapt to a
local setting; and there is an authentic approach to innovation that prioritizes change aligning with local
journalism’s social and community values.