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Startup Breaking Tweets is "Hyperlocal Gone Global"

By David Weir | Jun 25, 2009

One good thing about Twitter’s spare U.I., limited functionality, and chaotic stream of content is that it creates a great opportunity for entrepreneurs to step into the vacuum. One example is Breaking Tweets, which was launched earlier this year by Craig Kanalley, a graduate student at DePaul University in Chicago, online editor of DePaulia, the student newspaper, and a freelance writer/blogger.

The site’s main goals are “to help people enhance their worldview or perspective of global events;” and “to increase dialogue about international news and make the world smaller through conversation and interaction, both on this site and on Twitter.”

Breaking Tweets has been drawing deserved attention with its coverage of the rebellion in Iran. By identifying those inside Iran who historically had been posting to Twitter, the service was able to separate reliable sources out from the noisy crowd of people Tweeting, RTing, and just shouting.

After ingesting the real-time information flow, Kanalley provides context for events breaking over Twitter, adding in links to traditional news media sources and some thoughtful analysis.  The site’s philosophy is “hyperlocal gone global.”

But on the business side of the equation, I wondered how Kanalley and his band of volunteer student editors were going to be able to monetize their company. He and I discussed this via email yesterday and here is what he told me:

  • I’m just beginning to experiment with revenue streams.  So far, I’ve yet to find any solid ways to make money, and the primary goal for the time being is to keep posting fresh and interesting content and increase traffic over time.
  • Our primary revenue source is Google Ads at this time. We just launched a sponsorship program within the last month, but so far it has been slow to get off the ground.  It’s been a challenge to promote this without being in the readers’ face too much or spamming on the Twitter account, as our primary goal is to serve the public and provide information.
  • We are accepting donations via PayPal.
  • We do sell ads but so far no one has bought any.
  • The Google Ads actually aren’t doing very well. We’re working to improve SEO and our tagging so they match better with the content.  It’s a work in progress.
  • No other sources of revenue right now.  Definitely interested in any revenue streams out there and I continue to look into options and ask business professionals for advice.
  • I haven’t approached anyone in the VC community or angels. I actually don’t have any familiarity with this process — my background is in journalism not in business so I’m trying to learn on the fly.

What Kanalley is doing with Breaking Tweets is what journalistic entrepreneurs have always done — starting with the journalism. This is how, for example, Rolling Stone magazine started out. Developing an effective business plan followed the journalism by a few years.

There is no reason this can’t work in today’s media world for an idea as fresh and promising as Kanalley’s, as long as he can keep his effort going until the cavalry show up. That would be the guys bearing a business model.

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Research proves that we'll practically sign anything

    CNET News - 257 days 12 hours 18 minutes ago

    Piece of research at DePaul University shows that students were prepared to carelessly sign agreements that "administered electric shocks to fellow participants

  • Twitter goes tertiary

    Crikey - 83 days 7 hours 42 minutes ago

    DePaul University in the US will be starting what it calls "the first college-level journalism course focused solely on Twitter". Is that really something to brag about? Surprisingly, yes, says Gawker , who got a sneak-peak at the syllabus

  • A prof asks her reporting students: Why are you sticking with journalism?

    Poynter Online - 265 days 12 hours 35 minutes ago

    Chicago Sun-Times Some of the answers that DePaul University journalism teacher Laura Washington got: * "It is an art form. Just like there are starving artists, we are starving journalists." * "I'm a news junkie. I'm nosy. I love information." * "I think we want to be journalists because it's who we are, as people." > "Students want...

  • Google News @ Twitter: A Mere Trickle of Tweets

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    A while back, Google News opened a Twitter account, and after monitoring it for a while, I have to raise the question, “Why?” It’s hard to divine any useful function this tiny little Tweet stream is yet providing to Google, its news partners, or even to Twitter users. Here, for example, are the (approximate) load times for its most recent...

  • Some at NYT unhappy about staff meetings "getting the tweetment"

    Poynter Online - 193 days 17 hours 15 minutes ago

    Ann Arbor News More than 200 News employees will receive severance packages and legal paperwork in the mail at their homes in the next couple of days. The severance packages will include one week of pay for every year of service and some extended medical benefits. New York ObserverMetro editor Jodi Rudoren doesn't believe Times staffers should...

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