Lessons from the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

Dale and I were in Melbourne this week to facilitate an internal conference for the Australian Broadcasting Corp. Internal, yes - but blogged by the ABC and open to further comment here. Our role was to inform, incite and moderate conversations about the future of the ABC, which is Australia’s government-funded public broadcaster.

It was an inspiring couple of days - there was a genuine eagerness to adjust ABC practices and structures to reflect changing consumer behaviors, and to re-imagine the ABC and how it serves and strengthens Australian society.

That’s a powerful and provocative mission - to serve and strengthen society - and one I would say could apply to commercial as well as public media in this era of fragmented media consumption and creation by empowered individuals.

Participants in the ABC conference came up with this impressive set of next-step actions - and I suspect these will resonate elsewhere:

  • Develop a skills and passion database to apply internal talent and passions to new ABC projects
  • 360-degree commissioning (new projects should be assigned and planned for all platforms)
  • Design & implement an internal cultural change programme
  • Establish a new content structure with cross-platform commissioning
  • More mobile, more flexible work opportunities
  • Setup RSS feed of internal news on Intranet
  • Intranet becomes Wiki (knowledge transfer)
  • Reward good ideas (maybe a $bonus - loud applause!)
  • Encourage people to take 5% of time to read/contribute to wiki
  • Encourage more staff activities/networking/staff webblogs
  • Refocus divisions around content rather than platforms
  • Better engage with Local communities - local, local, local
  • Dedicate 25% of all time and resources to producing creativity and innovation
  • Create an internal talent agency
  • Make sure media is on most relevant platform
  • Improve internal organisation of content and archives
  • Crack silos
  • Cross platform commisioning
  • Ensure audience is capable of using new technology
  • Seperate content & technology
  • Ensuring staff are skilled and informed

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About the Author

Andrew Nachison

Andrew Nachison
Andrew is co-founder and CEO of iFOCOS, the media think tank and futures lab that organizes the We Media conferences, awards and global membership community. He's also a partner at the seven26group, the business design-innovation firm that publishes WeMedia.com. He's a former journalist and now a media, culture and technology analyst. He's been quoted by The New York Times, Reuters, Bloomberg, Businessweek and other publications, and has appeared on CNN, The BBC, PBS NewsHour (USA) and other broadcasts. He's a widely engaged speaker, advisor and consultant to commercial and non-profit companies worldwide. He's on the boards of the World Editor's Forum and NewsTrust. Connect with Andrew via: LinkedIn | Facebook | Plaxo | Twitter. DOWNLOAD A HI_REZ PHOTO

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