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 BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content

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Narl
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First Team


Managing: Blackpool, CSKA Moscow, MV Croatia

Posts: 1076
Location: Belfast, Northern Ireland

20110125
PostBBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content

Quote:
BBC to cut online budget by 25%



BBC Online's budget will be cut by £34m by 2013-14


The BBC is to cut about 200 websites as it reduces the amount of money it spends on its online output.
The changes, which will see BBC Online's budget cut by £34m, will also result in the loss of up to 360 posts over the next two years.
Among the sites to close include teen services Switch and Blast and community site 606.
The plans are part of the BBC's cost-cutting measures to make 20% savings as a result of the licence fee settlement.
The BBC says the changes are intended to make its website more distinctive and reduce competition with commercial websites.
Skills website RAW and documentary website Video Nation will also be closed under the reorganisation. Community site h2g2 will also be disposed of.
Other reductions include the replacement of the majority of programme websites with automated content and the automation of bespoke digital radio sites 1Xtra, 5 live sports extra, 6 Music and Radio 7.

'Refocusing priorities'
There will be fewer news blogs while standalone forums, communities and message-boards will be reduced and replaced with integrated social tools.
There will also be a reduction in the overall amount of sports news, live sport and showbusiness news, but also more culture and arts coverage on the news website.

Local sites will additionally no longer publish non-news features content.
About 180 websites are expected to close ahead of schedule later this year. The overall changes will be made by February 2013-14.
BBC director general Mark Thompson said: "BBC Online is a huge success, but our vast portfolio of websites means we sometimes fall short of expectation.
"A refocusing on our editorial priorities, a commitment to the highest quality standards, and a more streamlined and collegiate way of working will help us transform BBC Online for the future."
He acknowledged the changes would be "painful" but insisted BBC Online "lies at the heart" of the corporation's digital future.



Analysis


The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) condemned the move.



"The attack on BBC jobs and online services shows the BBC's contempt for hard-working staff. It makes no sense to cut back the BBC website as increasing numbers of people rely on the internet," said NUJ secretary Jeremy Dear.
"The NUJ will not stand by idly if members are forced out of their jobs," he added.
As part of the BBC's Putting Quality First strategy, BBC Online will form 10 distinctive areas: News, Sport, Weather, CBeebies, CBBC, Knowledge & Learning, Radio & Music, TV & iPlayer, Homepage and Search.
'Better service'
Roly Keating, the BBC's director of archive content, said the website had "grown like Topsy", adding "we just don't need" the sites that are to be closed.
He said the BBC's online offering would become easier to navigate.
Erik Huggers, the BBC's Director of Future Media and Technology, said the corporation had created a single, united strategy, making "a better service for audiences".
Editorial focus would be on high-quality news, clearer local sites on news, sport, weather and travel and creative spaces for children.
The iPlayer will also be reshaped, bringing together programming and programming information with archive content.
The BBC also published a list of things it would not do in future.
These commitments include not to launch a social networking site, publish local listings, run online-only music sessions or pay for exclusive online sports rights.
The corporation also said it wanted to double the number of referrals to external websites to 22 million each month by 2013/14.
The BBC has previously come under fire from other media organisations for the wide-ranging nature of its output.
In 2009, James Murdoch accused it of a "land grab" in a struggling media market and said its news operation was "throttling" competition.
The current BBC Online budget is £137m.
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BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content :: Comments

Whaaaaaaat?! I love reading people's posts on 606, it will be missed Sad
Re: BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content
Post on 2011-01-25, 16:49 by HatterAlex
Agree, 606 rules! Found this site online http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/save-bbc-606-sports-forum.html
sign up and spread the word!
Re: BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content
Post on 2011-01-25, 17:31 by Pringers
This is terrible news - and will be definitely signing that petition! Smile
I've signed the petition now Smile
Re: BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content
Post on 2011-01-25, 17:42 by Pringers
Same here Wink
Signed the petition too, cheers for the post Hatter Smile
Re: BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content
Post on 2011-01-26, 11:01 by the deeb
the BBC would do better to stop wasting money on sending out presenters to cover events that already have 'correspondents' there.

Take Radio 5 coverage of the Australian Open. Jonathan Overrend has been covering tennis for years, and its pretty good at it. He goes to most of the tournaments. He's in Melbourne now.

So what do Radio 5 do? They send out Vassos out to cover the event. Why?? Evil or Very Mad

He's there for 2-3 weeks, and will claim expenses for the hotel and food etc. What's that cost?

When they had the US election, they sent out Peter Allan Twisted Evil .

Why? They already have correspondents out there covering what's going on. What will sending out him, add for the listener? Its Radio for god's sake. It makes no difference whether your interviewee is there with you or not

BBC TV does the same thing. Drives me insane.

As for 606, is the devils creation and one of the worst thing that's come into football. It's the main reason managers are getting sacked every 5 minutes, and is just full of 'johnny-come-latelys' who want to whinge when their team doesn't win a game.

Before that, you could go down the pub and rant with your mates. The only people who heard you were your mates and next day, it didn't really matter. But putting your inane bleatings online, stays there forever. We concentrate on the negative comments, rather than any positive ones. The easiest thing in the world is to state what's wrong with something. How are you going to put it right? That's the difficult bit. Few have answers to that one, do they?


Blimey, I've got it about me this morning. Time to get on the phones
Re: BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content
Post on 2011-01-26, 19:21 by Sheepy
Blackburn 606 is full of plonkers.
 

BBC to cut 606 as it reduces online content

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