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{"id":115,"date":"2009-05-11T02:22:00","date_gmt":"2009-05-11T06:22:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/marissa-mayer-testimony-before-the-senate-on-the-future-of-online-journalism\/"},"modified":"2009-05-11T02:22:00","modified_gmt":"2009-05-11T06:22:00","slug":"marissa-mayer-testimony-before-the-senate-on-the-future-of-online-journalism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/marissa-mayer-testimony-before-the-senate-on-the-future-of-online-journalism\/","title":{"rendered":"Marissa Mayer testimony before the senate on the future of online journalism:"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Chairman Kerry, Ranking Member Ensign, and members of the Subcommittee.<br \/>Thank you for inviting me to contribute to this discussion. My name is Marissa Mayer, and I work as vice<br \/>President of Search and User Experience at Google. I manage Google&#8217;s efforts in search &#8212; including Web<br \/>Search and Google News &#8212; and I also guide user interaction design across Google&#8217;s products. In addition, I<br \/>Co-chair the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy. In both roles, I&#8217;ve<br \/>Reflected on the intersections of journalism and technology and I will speak to that this afternoon.<br \/>In my testimony today, I would like to cover three main points:<br \/>First, I&#8217;d like to discuss how Web search acts as a conduit for journalism by connecting individuals to the<br \/>News stories they are seeking.<br \/>Second, I&#8217;ll address our commitment to create economic opportunity for publishers and to provide tools to<br \/>Create more engaging presentations of their content.<br \/>And finally, I&#8217;ll talk about how the very structure of the Web itself represents some challenges to, but also<br \/>Opportunities for, the future of journalism.<br \/>Search: a conduit for online publishing<br \/>Every day, millions of people search the Web for relevant answers to their questions. In response, search<br \/>Engines strive to connect each user with the right results, and those results can come in any number of<br \/>Different forms: a Web page, an image, a video, a map, or a news story \u2013 something of particular relevance<br \/>To today&#8217;s hearing. In each of those cases, search engines play the role of connecting users with high-quality<br \/>Content &#8212; often journalistic &#8212; ultimately sending traffic to the publisher&#8217;s Website. Google is one such search<br \/>Engine that people use to find answers online.<br \/>Another service we offer is Google News, our specialized service that&#8217;s designed specifically for users who<br \/>are looking for news articles. Stories on Google News are selected and ranked by computers based on the<br \/>Freshness, location, relevance, and diversity of their content. As a result, these stories are sorted without<br \/>Regard to political viewpoint or ideology, and users can choose from a wide variety of perspectives on any<br \/>Given story. We offer links to several articles covering a topic so that users can choose to read the story<br \/>From the publishers and sources they prefer.<br \/>Both Google search and Google News connect users to answers and information as quickly as possible. We<br \/>Show people just enough information to invite them to read more &#8212; the headline, a line or two of text, and a<br \/>Link to the news publisher&#8217;s Website. A user clicks on the headline of interest and is taken directly to the site<br \/>that published the story.<br \/>Together, Google News and Google search provide a valuable free service to online newspapers specifically<br \/>by sending interested readers to their sites at a rate of more than 1 billion clicks per month. Newspapers use<br \/>that Web traffic to increase their readership and generate additional revenue.<br \/>2<br \/>In terms of publications appearing in search indexes, we believe they have the right to control their content.<br \/>That&#8217;s why we allow site owners to choose whether or not Google can index their sites. Using what&#8217;s<br \/>called a \u201crobots.txt\u201d file, which has been an industry standard for many years, a publisher can block its Web<br \/>content from any search engine&#8217;s crawl. As a result, that site will not show up in Web search results.<br \/>Effective use of &#8220;robots.txt&#8221; and other metatags gives publishers control over how their content is searched at<br \/>a number of levels by allowing publishers to restrict: search across the entire site, individual directories,<br \/>pages of a specific type, or individual pages only. So, while we think inclusion in a search engine can drive a<br \/>lot of beneficial traffic, our policy first and foremost is to respect the wishes of content owners.<br \/>Creating economic opportunity for publishers<br \/>Because our mission is to organize the world&#8217;s information and make it universally accessible and useful,<br \/>high-quality content is incredibly important to Google. Our most basic goal is to connect users with highquality<br \/>and reliable information. Credible, factual, trustworthy content &#8212; that is, journalism &#8212; is critical to the<br \/>millions of users who search for news stories on Google.<br \/>Google connects Internet users to journalists&#8217; work while at the same time helping journalists generate<br \/>income to support their work, and providing tools to make news more compelling to readers and viewers.<br \/>Most importantly from an economic perspective, once readers arrive at publication sites, our Google<br \/>AdSense advertising platform helps publishers generate revenue from their content. By providing relevant<br \/>ads and improving the connection between advertisers and our users, Google AdSense creates billions of<br \/>dollars in annual revenue for publishers. In fact, in 2008, that figure exceeded $5 billion in revenue for<br \/>AdSense publishers. Users get more useful ads, and these more relevant ads generate higher returns for<br \/>advertisers and publishers. We recently launched interest-based advertising, which we believe will be<br \/>particularly helpful to publishers as it takes into account each individual user&#8217;s interests in the hopes of<br \/>making advertisements even more relevant.<br \/>In addition to providing revenue opportunities, Google also offers many tools for sharing information that are<br \/>being used by newspapers. For example, the Los Angeles Times Website last year followed the path of<br \/>Southern California wildfires using Google Maps at the site. Google Image Search brings the Life<br \/>Magazine photo archive to light for a whole new generation of readers. National Geographic and The<br \/>Holocaust Memorial Museum have created interactive educational content layers in Google Earth. And<br \/>NASA has partnered with us to allow anyone to virtually travel the stars in Google Sky. Our Web<br \/>technologies are powerful information tools, and we hope to continue to empower content creation through<br \/>them.<br \/>The structure of the Web and its impact on publishers<br \/>The structure of the Web itself requires the presentation of news in a way that&#8217;s fundamentally different from<br \/>its offline predecessor. The Web has caused some parts of the news to be presented more easily and<br \/>effectively. For example, Web pages can link to voluminous supporting materials without worrying about<br \/>column inches. In addition, the always-on, always-updating nature of the Web means that real-time news<br \/>updates can appear throughout the day without being tied to print production deadlines. However, other<br \/>aspects are more challenging, particularly in regard to how users arrive at a news story, and how authority<br \/>on a particular topic is established. I&#8217;d like to offer a few observations on what I call the &#8220;atomic unit of<br \/>consumption&#8221; for online news, the prospect of creating living stories online, as well as a few simple steps<br \/>online publishers can take to keep readers engaged.<br \/>The atomic unit of consumption<br \/>The atomic unit of consumption for existing media is almost always disrupted by emerging media. For<br \/>example, digital music caused consumers to think about their purchases as individual songs rather than as<br \/>full albums. Digital and on-demand video has caused people to view variable-length clips when it is<br \/>convenient for them, rather than fixed-length programs on a fixed broadcast schedule. Similarly, the structure<br \/>of the Web has caused the atomic unit of consumption for news to migrate from the full newspaper to the<br \/>individual article. As with music and video, many people still consume physical newspapers in their original<br \/>full-length format. But with online news, a reader is much more likely to arrive at a single article. While these<br \/>individual articles could be accessed from a newspaper&#8217;s homepage, readers often click directly to a<br \/>particular article via a search engine or another Website.<br \/>Changing the basic unit of content consumption is a challenge, but also an opportunity. Treating the article<br \/>as the atomic unit of consumption online has several powerful consequences. When producing an article for<br \/>online news, the publisher must assume that a reader may be viewing this article on its own, independent of<br \/>the rest of the publication. To make an article effective in a standalone setting requires providing sufficient<br \/>context for first-time readers, while clearly calling out the latest information for those following a story over<br \/>time. It also requires a different approach to monetization: each individual article should be self-sustaining.<br \/>These types of changes will require innovation and experimentation in how news is delivered online, and<br \/>how advertising can support it.<br \/>The living story<br \/>The Web by definition changes and updates constantly throughout the day. Because of its ability to operate<br \/>in real-time, it offers an opportunity for news publishers to publish on changing and evolving stories as they<br \/>happen. Web addresses (known as URLs &#8212; uniform resource locators such as http:\/\/www.google.com) were<br \/>designed to refer to unique pieces of content, and those URLs were intended to persist over time. Today, in<br \/>online news, publishers frequently publish several articles on the same topic, sometimes with identical or<br \/>closely related content, each at their own URL. The result is parallel Web pages that compete against each<br \/>other in terms of authority, and in terms of placement in links and search results.<br \/>Consider instead how the authoritativeness of news articles might grow if an evolving story were published<br \/>under a permanent, single URL as a living, changing, updating entity. We see this practice today in<br \/>Wikipedia&#8217;s entries and in the topic pages at NYTimes.com. The result is a single authoritative page with a<br \/>consistent reference point that gains clout and a following of users over time.<br \/>Keeping users engaged<br \/>A much smaller but important factor for online newspapers to consider in today&#8217;s digital age is the<br \/>fundamental design and presentation of their content. Publishers should not discount the simple and<br \/>effective navigational elements the Web can offer. When a reader finishes an article online, it is the<br \/>publication&#8217;s responsibility to answer the reader who asks, &#8220;What should I do next?&#8221; Click on a related article<br \/>or advertisement? Post a comment? Read earlier stories on the topic? Much like Amazon.com suggests<br \/>related products and YouTube makes it easy to play another video, publications should provide obvious and<br \/>engaging next steps for users. Today, there are still many publications that don&#8217;t fully take advantage of the<br \/>numerous tools that keep their readers engaged and on their site.<br \/>Conclusion<br \/>Chairman Kerry, Ranking Member Ensign, and members of the Subcommittee, thank you for having me here<br \/>today to participate in this important discussion.<br \/>Preserving robust and independent journalism at the national and local levels is an important goal for the<br \/>United States. Google is doing its part by driving significant traffic to online news publishers, by helping them<br \/>generate revenue through advertising, and by providing tools and platforms enabling them to reach millions<br \/>of people.<br \/>There are certainly many challenges to face in adapting the long tradition of journalism to the online world. I<br \/>am hopeful, though, that innovation will help preserve journalism and its vital function in our society.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Chairman Kerry, Ranking Member Ensign, and members of the Subcommittee.Thank you for inviting me to contribute to this discussion. My name is Marissa Mayer, and I work as vicePresident of Search and User Experience at Google. I manage Google&#8217;s efforts in search &#8212; including WebSearch and Google News &#8212; and I also guide user interaction [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-115","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-copywriting"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/115","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=115"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/115\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=115"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=115"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.searchenginegenie.com\/copywriting-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=115"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}