Education
parity is goal of new trade magazine foundation
Trade
magazine editors
say it's time to end the blind spot
to b2b journalism
in college classrooms.
Journalism
students typically find abundant career
opportunities in business-to-business or “trade” publications
upon graduation, yet the curricula of college
journalism programs have historically been
weighted heavily toward the consumer
side of the profession. It's with this
education
gap in mind that the American Society of
Business Publication Editors has
launched a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt foundation
to channel contributions from publishers,
associations, and business-to-business
(b2b) editorial professionals into a broad-based
effort to create educational parity. The
new foundation also seeks to create a series
of continuing-education workshops aimed
at maintaining professional trade editors'
mastery of new-media communication platforms,
including Web video, audio and video podcasts,
webinars, blogs, and social media environments
“Business-to-business
editors and reporters are doing world-class
journalism today,” says
Robert Freedman, president of the ASBPE
Foundation. “They're breaking stories
and introducing innovative ideas that impact
entire industries. With its new foundation,
ASBPE is laying the groundwork for an increase
in emphasis on this side of the profession
so journalism students have an accurate
picture of the kind of quality work being
done in the trades today. "At the same time,
b2b editors face very different professional
challenges than
their consumer publication peers,” Freedman
says. “Unlike consumer journalists,
trade journalists must communicate information
to an audience of industry experts whose
knowledge of a subject matter is as much
as or greater than theirs. And like their
consumer peers, trade journalists hold
as sacrosanct the goals of objectivity
and impartiality when it comes to their
reporting and editing. Yet the kinds of
pressure they can face from advertisers,
readers, and industry sources don't always
fit nicely into the consumer publication
paradigm emphasized in the college classroom.”
More
than two dozen institutions and individuals
have contributed to the foundation since
its launch at the
ASBPE National Editorial Conference in
Kansas City, Mo., July 24. Among the
goals of the foundation is
to
endow a university chair — the
ASBPE Professor of Business-to-Business
Journalism — to
develop and teach a defined course of
study that prepares students for the special
challenges of b2b editing and reporting.
Other goals include
the funding of graduate and undergraduate
scholarships to students
interested in pursuing careers in business-to-business
journalism, and the hosting of on-site
training programs for editors and reporters
already working in the profession.
“The business press is one of the
most valuable and little-known industries
that supports
global business,” says Don Pazour,
president and CEO of Access Intelligence,
a b2b communications company in Rockville,
Md., and one of the foundation's founding
donors. “Its strength lies in the
professional journalists and editors that
report on and analyze their industries.
Access Intelligence supports the ASBPE
Foundation because of its special focus
on business press editors, the foundation
of our profession.”
Visit
the ASBPE Foundation web site for more
information or to make a tax-deductible
donation online.
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