Dear Friend,
It’s not hard to see that we are in unusual times. We are now weeks past the significant 2020 elections and on the edge of what looks like a second wave of a global pandemic. The split in our country, the struggles in our economy, and the approaching winter all suggest a future that will need strong resolve.
Yet what brings me to this post is something grander in scope and scale. What brings me to this post is the need for a reformation in our collective approach to news, journalism, and integrity in media.
Our society sits in stark contrast to a generation ago, where news media carried a level of integrity and trust in the public eye. Now, we live in the “fake news” environment, spurred on by digital media and social networking, where opinions and polarity draw attention and clicks, which draw revenue the outlets. No longer is the bar set at the height of moral and journalist integrity; it’s lowered even below the “if it bleeds, it leads” jest of just decades ago. It seems the only judgment passed by the media has to do with the bottom line, not on the outcomes and social responsibility of coverage.
This point could be explored in ad nauseam – and I believe some people have been on this same course of discovery and challenge in our culture.
Yet, I present to you a clarion call for my industry, of digital marketers, to stand above and beyond and commit to the overall integrity of digital media.
First, we will strive with unflinching poise to uphold the Professional Journalist Code of Ethics no matter what channel we produce content for.
Second, we will stand apart from organizations that fail to follow or admit failure to follow these same ethics. This means not linking to, commenting on, following or re-posting any of these sources. It means not engaging them to increase interactions, but simply unfollowing and not giving them our attention or clicks.
Thirdly, we will develop and advocate for objective truth in all media through proactive training and outreach, as well as through continually evolving professional standards within our own organizations.
These points sound simple, yet full reformation to these points is a world away from the online landscape of late 2020. I would encourage you to share this post with others and to adopt your own internal standards of content, online journalism, and media in your professional sphere.