How BBC London is experimenting with social media to cover the Tube strike

London Underground sign, Westminster, London
Image by jamesmellor via Flickr

If you’re based in London you probably know the disruption and frustration caused when there is a strike on the Tube – especially more so as the strikes are often timed to cause maximum impact on journeys to and from work. If you are based out of London you probably care less. But for all people the current strike that started today is a good example of how broadcasters are using social media both as an information source but also as a broadcast medium.

BBC London News (@BBCLondonNews) has been using Twitter for some time as a source information, comment and research for pieces. Most notably through certain reporters such as Matt Cooke (@MattCooke_UK) who have built a presence on Twitter. This is a common use of social media among news organisations, and we wrote last year about the benefits (and challenges) of user-generated news. But with this Tube Strike, BBC London News are doing some things different and truly experimenting with social media.

The are of course doing the basics – they are using and promoting the #TubeStrike hashtag, and reporters such as Cooke are sharing information, photos and retweeting other comments about the strike. They are sourcing photos through social media and sourcing stories and information about the strikes and the impact on commuters the same way.

Perhaps more exciting, however, is how they are then presenting this information back to people and how they are using social media to broadcast information and news about the strike.

The BBC is experimenting with social media to map and report on the tube strike and the impact it is having: the London Tube Strike Map. As with other such maps, they are plotting information shared on Twitter using the #TubeStrike hashtag, and they are also including audioboos with the same tag. But where they are leveraging the reach and power of the BBC is to combine these social media sources with more traditional sources – you can submit information by text, email and by filling in a form on the site too.

This is a simple tool but can be an effective one and its use will become more obvious as we enter the second day of the strikes and more content is added. What BBC London is doing is experimenting with different ways of both sourcing and then presenting information and news. It is using social media in the way that many of its viewers are doing and providing them a real service. We already know that many people will be using Twitter as a search engine to find out information about how their journey to work is being affected by the strike. BBC London is bringing this information together in one place and, perhaps critically, combining it with information it sources from other places.

Organisations like the BBC should be experimenting with social media where there is a clear benefit for their audience of doing this. If it works and attracts a sizeable and relevant audience then they can develop these tools and experiments to enhance the news and travel coverage they currently provide. With the London Tube Strike Map they are moving beyond sourcing information and research through social media, to using it as an integral part of their reporting and information provision. If the experiment works it could provide a model for how news organisations can provide such information in the future.

View the London Tube Strike Map


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6 Comments

  1. Letsgosocial.nl » Blog Archive » Metrostaking? De BBC brengt het in kaart:

    [...] Freshnetworks brengt een aardige social media case naar aanleiding van de huidige metrostaking in Londen. Forensen in Londen weten er alles van: regelmatige stakingen in de metro, niet zelden tijdens in de spits. De BBC is momenteel aan het experimenteren met de meest recente staking, die maandag begon. Op Twitter (@BBCLondonNews} doen ze om te beginnen het voor de hand liggende. Zo gebruiken en promoten ze de #TubeStrike hashtag, en verslaggevers delen informatie, en foto’s en retweeten comments van anderen over de staking. Maar spannender is hoe ze sommige informatie, online via netwerken verkregen, publiceren en hoe ze social media gebruiken om informatie te verspreiden. De BBC experimenteert namelijk met de London Tube Strike Map. Ze plotten informatie afkomstig van Twitteraars op die kaart, gebruik makende van de hash tag #TubeStrike, inclusief audio. Maar het is vooral de aanvuling met traditionele online tools (je kunt zelf informatie toevoegen met tekst, email of via een online invulscherm) die de kracht en potentie van de BBC laat zien. Wat BBC doet is, net als vele anderen, social media als content bron gebruiken. Vervolgens wordt die content geordend, aangevuld met andere bronnen en op een nieuwe manier gepresenteerd. Een model voor de toekomst? In elk geval aardig om een voorbeeld aan te nemen voor organisaties als de ANWB (file update) en het KNMI. AKPC_IDS += "1526,"; [...]

  2. Vicki:

    It would be helpful if the BBC London Live broadcast hadnt crashed mid morning however..!

  3. stilografico » Blog Archive » BBC London News sta usando i Social Media per seguire al meglio le notizie sullo sciopero della metro:

    [...] approfondisci: How BBC London is experimenting with social media to cover the Tube strike [...]

  4. Jimmy Tidey:

    It’s positive that the BBC didn’t feel the need to build it’s own map.
    All part of their new strategy to link away from the site more I presume…

  5. FreshNetworks Blog: Top five posts in September | Social media agency London | FreshNetworks blog:

    [...] 1. How BBC London is experimenting with social media to cover the Tube strike [...]

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