2020
DOI: 10.1177/1329878x20961569
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Out-of-the-box versus in-house tools: how are they affecting data journalism in Australia?

Abstract: The proliferation of data journalism has enabled newsrooms to deploy technologies for both mundane and more sophisticated workplace tasks. To bypass long-term investment in developing data skills, out-of-the-box software solutions are commonly used. Newsrooms today are partially dependent on third-party platforms to build interactive and visual stories – but the business models of platforms are predisposed to changes, frequently inducing losses of stories. This article combines in-depth interviews and an ancil… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Despite their approaches, they yet feel unprepared to take advantage of data journalism in its full capacity. Limitations to their functioning include a lack of training, specialized personnel, and money, echoing other studies' findings (de-Lima-Santos et al 2020;Jamil 2019). On the other hand, they advocate by bringing more data from, by, and for these communities that are often marginalized by the authorities and the mainstream media.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Despite their approaches, they yet feel unprepared to take advantage of data journalism in its full capacity. Limitations to their functioning include a lack of training, specialized personnel, and money, echoing other studies' findings (de-Lima-Santos et al 2020;Jamil 2019). On the other hand, they advocate by bringing more data from, by, and for these communities that are often marginalized by the authorities and the mainstream media.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…On the other hand, data journalism is perceived as a commercial opportunity to innovate and "create a distinctive online offering" (Usher, 2016, p. 142) that, in the past, was considered a complicated endeavor that required extensive time, knowledge, and skills. Data journalism has evolved and expanded due to today's wealth of information (Loosen, 2021;Loosen et al, 2020) and the evolving infrastructure of technological tools (de-Lima-Santos et al, 2020). These developments have attracted significant attention not just across the journalism industry but also within scholarship.…”
Section: Transformation: Bringing Dynamic Capabilities and New Corporate Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the primacy of data to reporting on these extraordinary ‘acute events’, studies conducted shortly before the COVID pandemic seemed to indicate that the practice of data journalism was in decline following an earlier period of enthusiasm, with the exception of a small number of organisations who had established in-house teams with the skills and workload dedicated to this work (Wright and Doyle, 2019). Among those data journalists, the use of automated visualisation tools was relatively popular with a tendency towards mixed in-house development and commercial software uses in public service media and commercial software in private news outlets (de-Lima-Santos et al, 2020).…”
Section: Situating the Pandemic In Digital Journalismmentioning
confidence: 99%