about  /   archives  /   contact  /   subscribe  /   twitter    
Share this entry
Make this entry better

What are we missing? Is there a key link we skipped, or a part of the story we got wrong?

Let us know — we’re counting on you to help Encyclo get better.

Put Encyclo on your site
Embed this Encyclo entry in your blog or webpage by copying this code into your HTML:

Key links:
Primary website:
lanacion.com.ar
Primary Twitter:
@lanacioncom

Editor’s Note: Encyclo has not been regularly updated since August 2014, so information posted here is likely to be out of date and may be no longer accurate. It’s best used as a snapshot of the media landscape at that point in time.

La Nación is Argentina’s second largest newspaper. When it comes to innovation, it is also one of Latin America’s leading news outlets.

The daily is part of an argentine media conglomerate, S.A. La Nación, with participation in U.S. media. In March, 2012, one of its subsidiaries – US Hispanic Media Inc.- became the controlling shareholder of Impremedia, the major hispanic news and information company in the U.S.

With a circulation of XXXX, La Nación also has a growing audience on the web: its site attracts 7,6 million unique visitors every month. Those numbers have been cause and effect of a series of projects carried by the organization in order to strengthen its digital presence.  Its comprehensive strategy relies on the use of new technologies to attract readers (and interact with them) and to improve their reporting.

Innovative approaches

In 2007, lanacion.com became Argentina’s first news organization allowing comments on their stories. Two years later, the newspaper developed a system to rate its readers based on their participation. As a result, the registered users get “medals” (gold, silver and bronze) according to variables such as the average of daily comments and positive votes per comment.

The use of social media tools was another  way to foster the interaction with its audiences. In 2009, the newspaper started encouraging its reporters and editors to use  platforms like Twitter;  now, it has more than 30 official channels on that social network and 160 journalists tweeting (with a combined audience of 500,000 followers). The news reporting also includes a network of 54 blogs, covering topics like gay issues, tango and crime.

Content, not only distribution, has been improved by technology at La Nación. In 2010, the newspaper started a project on data visualization led by reporters with little knowledge of programming but with a great in learning about it. Journalists, graphic designers and computer scientists worked together to understand how the tools work and how they could be use for reporting. After long sessions  of workshops and online courses (after office hours), the team started with its first project: an report on Argentina’s Subsidies System for Transportation.

The investigation discovered that the subsidies (gas and cash) grew dramatically (up to $34 billion) during the past ten years, and it revealed the 20 companies that received more money from this system. The series of articles was published in La Nación’s printed version and on its website, where it is possible to access a visualization of the data.

Getting the data posed the biggest challenge, since Argentina doesn’t have a law that allows citizens access public documents, like Freedom of Information Act in the U.S. All the information used in this investigation had to be converted from PDF’s documents to CSV and Excel files and didn’t stop when the articles were published. The data has been updated every month and it is free (and downloadable) for the anyone who wants it.

Make data available is another goal of La Nacion. In march 2012, the newspaper launched an open data platform which makes official documents accessible and ready to be “reused” by the audience of lanacion.com.

Founded as La Nación Argentina in 1870, the newspaper changed its name to the actual one in 1945.

Peers, allies, & competitors:
Clarín
Recent Nieman Lab coverage:
May 11, 2023 / Laura Hazard Owen
Google is changing up search. What does that mean for news publishers? — At its annual I/O conference on Wednesday, Google announced a slew of “experiments” and changes that are coming to search. It’s early days. But if these changes are rolled out widely, they’ll be t...
May 10, 2023 / Sarah Scire
The Athletic’s live audio rooms bring sports talk radio into this century — A curious media hole forms in the wake of a big sports game. After the final whistle, people are craving content about what they just watched, but many reporters are busy interviewing coaches and players and writing thei...
May 9, 2023 / Hanaa' Tameez
In Spain, a new data-powered news outlet aims to increase accountability reporting — In March, Spain passed a gender quotas law aimed at raising the number of women in leadership roles across the country. Among other requirements, the law calls requires political parties to put forward equal numbers of m...
May 8, 2023 / Joshua Benton
Get amped up for this piece on the twisted journey of Google’s AMP, its ersatz savior of news on phones — If you’ve got the attention span for 6,340 words about an outré web component framework — and don’t lie, you do — I suggest you check out this piece by David Pierce just out at The Verge. Okay, let me se...
May 8, 2023 / Sophie Culpepper
Can AI help local newsrooms streamline their newsletters? ARLnow tests the waters — Scott Brodbeck, the founder of Virginia-based media company Local News Now, had wanted to launch an additional newsletter for a while. One of his sites, ARLnow, already has an automated daily afternoon newsletter that in...

Recently around the web, from Mediagazer:

Primary author: Antonio Jiménez. Main text last updated: June 12, 2014.
Make this entry better
How could this entry improve? What's missing, unclear, or wrong?
Name (optional)
Email (optional)
Explore: Time
Time logo

Time is the United States’ oldest and largest newsmagazine. It is owned by the media conglomerate Time Warner. Time was founded in 1923 by Henry Luce and Briton Hadden. It is the flagship publication of Time Inc., the magazine unit of Time Warner and the world’s largest magazine publisher with 95 brands. Time brings in only…

Put Encyclo on your site
Embed this Encyclo entry in your blog or webpage by copying this code into your HTML:

Encyclo is made possible by a grant from the Knight Foundation.
The Nieman Journalism Lab is a collaborative attempt to figure out how quality journalism can survive and thrive in the Internet age.
Some rights reserved. Copyright information »