A recent story in the Post has spurred a lot of online conversation about the tech scene in DC — story here
That story was criticized in Nick O’Neill’s Social Times blog, in a very good post located here.
Mitch Arnowitz, who has kept alive the Ad-Marketing listserv of the old Morino Institute, sent these links to that group. And a very interesting person responded — Shannon Henry, who used to cover tech in the tech boom days and afterwards at the Post. Even though she’s long gone and now in Denver, who better to comment on the Post’s take on technology, and business coverage in general? Here’s her take — what do you think?
Hi Mitch and all,
I covered Washington’s Internet and tech culture from 1995 to 2005 (from
1998 to 2005 for The Washington Post). I remember saying to my editors I thought
of tech as one of Washington’s more fascinating suburbs, but one that would
have national and international importance. That’s certainly become true.
As for positive press, let me suggest you look at it in a different way. What
you really want is press that is paying attention. Only positive press is a
sugar pill. It’s dangerous in that it isn’t real. If you want to be a
technology powerhouse, you have to be real. A newspaper that is paying attention will
cover the brilliance of the new start-up culture, but it will also report on
the companies that fail. Ideally, the region will become stronger through true
coverage and understanding of the good and the bad.
So the question is, is the press paying attention? Are reporters just
reacting to earnings reports and merger news, or are they delving deeper? Are they out
there talking to the techies and the CEOs in the trenches? Are non-Business
reporters focusing on how tech is affecting the fabric of Washington life? You
all know the answer better than I do. (I’m deep into another subject, food ,
and another city, Denver).
That census number mentioned, where DC is second to the Valley in terms of
tech population, shows the region’s gone beyond needing to prove it’s
amounted to something.
If the traditional media is not paying attention and misses the story (in
this case a very big story) it is clear the online press, including the bloggers
and list serve owners, will have the power to drive the conversation and be a
stronger force in covering the news in a faster and more interactive way.
I hope this debate continues, it’s worth bantering about.
Shannon Henry
[…] demonstrated the vitality of the local DC tech scene. (Despite what the Wash Post may say: http://cparente.wordpress.com/2008/02/27/is-somethin-lacking-in-the-dc-tech-scene-or-the-coverage/) And the power of social networking — it was pulled together with very little advance notice, […]