Here’s an interesting article from Editor and Publisher, for all you Vermont media types who tell me you read my blog.

Joe Strupp does an informative survey of pitfalls for newspapers to avoid online.

Lesson One? Blogs can backfire.

At The Roanoke (Va.) Times, editors noted thatreaders are not always that interested in what their fellow readers aresaying, at least not on a regular basis. Online Editor John Jackson setup 10 online columns by local residents in 2003, finding maybe threegot any real reaction. “They weren’t writing about things that a wholelot of people were interested in,” he says, citing a graphic artist whodescribed life in that job. “One guy wrote about stuff he saw on theside of the road, and he would hand-write it and we would scan it in.”

This reminds me of the RH/TA Reader Roundtable experiment. And of our own Jazz Mafia blog. It’s more difficult than you might think to train people to blog. And to figure out what’s interesting. Hard to know what will work until you try it!

UPDATE: Here’s a few thoughts on how CNN is getting online news right

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Seven Days’ deputy publisher and co-owner Cathy Resmer is a writer, editor and advocate for local journalism. She works in the paper’s Burlington office and lives vicariously through the reporters while raising money to pay them. Cathy started at...