Large printouts of proposed site changes sit on
CBC.ca editorial director Jonathan Dube's desk at CBC
headquarters in downtown Toronto. Just prior to its tenth
birthday on July 4, the award-winning website will receive a
makeover. Dube says the new design will be modern, lively and put
more emphasis on exclusive features. A new "Canada and the World"
page will be integrated into the redesigned website. "It will
give us a lot more flexibility," Dube says, "and the navigation
will be a lot more useful."
Although the
redesign process was well underway by the time Dube arrived from
Seattle in July 2005, he's given a lot of input since accepting
the newly created position. In order to keep up with the daily
workings of the website, the American online journalist has
become a chronic BlackBerry user. In fact, he says, he's often
found himself so immersed in his tiny handheld screen that he
ends up on the wrong floor of the CBC building. He also admits to
getting in trouble with his wife, Rebecca Cook Dube, on more than
one occasion for using his BlackBerry at the dinner
table.

"I may have once or twice threatened to
kidnap the BlackBerry," Cook Dube jokes, "or drop it from a great
height, or otherwise do bodily harm to the thing." She says Dube
tends to focus intensely on his tasks, "Which is great in a lot
of ways but can make it challenging to grab his attention when I
want it." But Cook Dube says she benefits too because he's just
as dedicated to other things, like planning their vacations or
designing her personal website.
"I don't know
where he gets all his energy from," Cook Dube says, "but he's the
type of person who's happiest when he's figuring out solutions,
coming up with innovative new ideas and juggling a million
different things at once." Dube more or less agrees, saying, "I
don't know what else I'd want to do right now - I love
it."
It's an old love affair. "Jon has always
been really interested in online journalism," Cook Dube says,
"even back when it was barely a blip on most people's radar
screens."
Dube, who grew up in New York City,
brings more to CBC.ca than his master's degree in journalism from
the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He also
brings a long history in the online news industry. He is founder
and publisher of CyberJournalist.net, an online resource for
journalists, and has worked as a national producer at
ABCNews.com. When hurricane Bonnie hit in 1998, Dube, who was
working for The Charlotte Observer at the
time, used a blog to cover the breaking news - something news
sites had never done before.
At the Poynter
Institute in St. Petersburg, Florida, Dube also taught online
storytelling and collaboration skills as a visiting instructor
from 2000 to 2003, and he still writes a column on web tips for
the school. He also did a stint at The New York
Times, has written freelance pieces for the
Columbia Journalism Review and The
Washington Monthly, and won a number of awards for his
online work.
CBC.ca senior director Sue Gardner
says Dube wasn't the first person she thought of when she began
to look for someone to fill the editorial director position. "I
started on a hunt to hire someone," she recalls, "and it took me
about eight months. My first instinct, obviously, was to look
around Canada." But online journalism is a young discipline and
hasn't had a chance to develop a deep pool of talent, and Gardner
figures she can count on one hand the number of Canadians that
could fill the role. "I know them all," she says, "and I talked
to them about it."
Gardner says one difficulty
is that CBC.ca has one of the country's largest online news
teams, so it would have been a steep climb for anyone coming from
modestly sized Canadian sites. She also considered bringing in
someone with a background in print or broadcast, but she felt she
already had a large enough talent pool at CBC. "What I needed,"
she concludes, "was someone with a strong online background and
good craft skills."
Dube heard about the
opening through a friend in Halifax who had been a former CBC
employee. He'd already met some other CBC people through his
involvement with the Online News Association (a Bethesda,
Maryland-based association for journalists who produce news on
the Internet and other digital platforms), and done some training
sessions with CBC staff on convergence and online
writing.
Gardner was delighted when Dube
expressed interest. "He was exactly what I was looking for," she
says. "We'll sit in meetings and he can say, 'Well we did this at
MSNBC,' or, 'We tried this and ended up going down some other
road,' or, 'I know folks at CNN who can do X or Y or
Z.'"
Dube arrived in July 2005 to take over
responsibilities for all CBC.ca editorial programming, including
news, arts and sports sections, and he has made a number of
online content changes already. One took effect just in time for
the January 23 federal election. Riding
Talk, a series of moderated forums for each riding
throughout Canada, allowed voters to discuss local issues
directly affecting them. Over ten thousand comments from across
the country were published. An online version of "Reality Check,"
an election segment on The National, was
also created. It examined what candidates said and tried to take
viewers beyond the spin. CBC.ca also provided live analysis
during the debates. "They took a detailed look at everything
candidates were promising," says Dube. "They added up what all
the promises were, what all the spending was, and tried to
compare what they were promising and what they
weren't."
Dube also introduced an early version
of the coming redesign for CBC.ca's winter Olympics coverage in
Torino, Italy. The new Olympics site not only proved to be
popular, it's also up for a prize in the Excellence in News,
Information category at the Canadian New Media
Awards.
These changes might be clicking with
the website's audience. According to a report released by
ComScore Media Matrix, CBC.ca was the most popular media site in
February 2006, with over five million visitors at home and work.
CTV.ca came in second place with three million
visitors.
Based on the company's own WebTrends
traffic logging software, on the January 23 election, the site
had 1,329,500 unique visitors. It was the first time the site had
broken the one million mark in a single twenty-four-hour period.
It then broke its own record twice after that, with 1,381,076
unique visitors the day after the election, and 1,549,054 unique
visitors on during the Torino Olympics on February
22.
Catering to its online audience has become
a priority for CBC as the Internet becomes the preferred way to
consume daily news. A national segmentation study conducted in
2004 by WashingtonPost.com in collaboration with
Nielsen//NetRatings and Scarborough Research found that
forty-seven per cent of respondents had increased significantly
their usage of online media for news and information over a
twelve-month period. The poll also found that sixty per cent of
users accessed online resources daily. The top reason for their
preference was "24-hour availability, ability to multi-task while
browsing, breaking news, easy ability to search and free
access."
According to Statistics Canada, "Of
the nearly 6.7 million households with a regular [Internet] user
from home in 2003, an estimated 4.4 million (65 per cent) had a
high-speed link to the Internet through either a cable or
telephone connection." This two-thirds penetration gave news
providers the market they needed to invest in fancier websites.
"It used to be that you were designing things knowing that the
majority of people were going to be accessing it Monday to
Friday, while they were at work where they have the best Internet
access," says Joyce Smith, assistant professor at Ryerson
University's School of Journalism, "but that's not true any more.
They can do it at home as well." Also, users can now routinely
handle larger files, which means media outlets can design
interactive material, stream videos and generally produce higher
quality website for a larger audience.
Online
news sites have come a long way since they were first created.
Smith says that although most major news organizations have had a
web presence for some time, it wasn't until the late 1990s that
breaking news became a part of it. Before then, newspapers simply
posted online replicas of stories that had appeared in the paper.
"So there's the point at which people had sites up," she says,
"but then a point at which they started to morph into breaking
news sites with actual dedicated staff."
Dube
has dedicated himself to thinking about the transformation of
news dissemination for the past decade. Cook Dube says that when
she met her future husband at The Charlotte
Observer in 1997, his passion for online journalism
was already obvious. "I remember thinking," she says, "'Gee, he
sure is enthusiastic about this online stuff, I wonder if it will
really go anywhere?'"
"Now, of course," she
concludes, "journalism is all about online, and here we are in
Toronto! What can I say, he was ahead of his
time."