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The API ExperienceReports and feedback from API seminars and important API events![]()
Tribute to Ed Arnold.
The American Press Institute mourns the death of close friend and newspaper design expert Edmund C. Arnold last week in Roanoke, Va. Arnold was 93. Long acknowledged as the "father of newspaper design," Arnold made his first API appearance as an industry educator in 1959. Click here for more information and links to further infortmation and tributes. Not Just Another Seminar The "API Experience," created 60 years ago, is a common bond, developed and nurtured through API's one-of-a-kind learning experience. Many alums tell us their time at API was the best professional experience of their lives. Within the span of a few days to a week, strangers find themselves sharing experiences, gaining insights, discarding "conventional wisdom," creating strategies and developing friendships that will last a lifetime. This is the API Experience. (MORE) Read more about the lessons learned by attending API's seminars: Over a period of more than 25 years, Arnold dedicated his time to giving future generations of designers the tools to move beyond the accepted boundaries of newspaper design and in the process became the most frequent API discussion leader, with 208 appearances at API seminars. For more tributes and memories of Edmund C. Arnold, please check out the following links:
Next 17 >> of 42 Articles. Old School: How lessons from the past can inspire leadership for the futureBy Lisa Rabasca | Wednesday, January 11, 2006 Historical authors Robin Gerber and Peter Henriques will lead discussions on "Revolutionary Leadership" in a daylong session for API's seminar for City and Metro Editors in February.
Well aisle be: How wedding site theknot.com harnesses its brand By API Staff | Monday, April 11, 2005 David Liu, founder of the popular wedding site TheKnot.com, speaks to members of API's Reaching Young Audiences seminar about how brands can demonstrate strong local reach, the future of blogs and why his audience spends 14 hours on TheKnot.com during their first week.
For diverse Hispanic market, a wide range of answers ... and questions By Lisa Rabasca | Tuesday, February 01, 2005
As Hispanic markets change, the need to understand how remains the same By Lisa Rabasca | Friday, January 14, 2005 After an evening listening to Cuban music and touring Little Havana and other Hispanic communities in Miami-Dade County, newspaper executives at API’s Reaching Latino Audiences seminar were warned that the Hispanic market is constantly evolving.
Structure, training, compensation help can boost classifieds teams By David P. Marino-Nachison | Wednesday, December 01, 2004 Personnel management is a big part of classifieds sales managers' jobs, from putting the right people in to the right jobs, to helping them build customer relationships and set priorities.
API’s Circulation Execs Take a Page from National Geographic By Lisa Rabasca | Friday, November 12, 2004 Attendees of API’s Circulations Executives seminar drew lessons from the National Geographic Society's approaches to growing and retaining its audience.
Everything you wanted to know about the Electoral College but were afraid to ask By Chad Capellman | Thursday, October 14, 2004 Michael White, nicknamed "The Dean of the Electoral College," offers some surprising insights about how poorly informed state officials can be about their roles in the electoral process.
Can you hear me now? Partnership for Readership seminar attendees practice listening with the help of a blindfold. By API Staff | Wednesday, October 13, 2004 Members of API’s “Partnership for Readership” seminar learned how to provide honest communication, hone their active listening skills and deliver meaningful feedback – all hallmarks of a successful partnership – blindfolded while maneuvering through a maze.
Media execs learn to navigate the changing media landscape By Lisa Rabasca | Friday, June 25, 2004 Media company executives received advice on contending with two major challenges—increased competition and the changing relationship between consumers and the media—during this year’s API Publishers’ Forum: Near and Far Horizons, the Road Ahead for Media Organizations.
Capably coping with consumer demand could be music to media executives' ears Entertainment, convergence, government and military voices included in 2004 API Publishers Forum By Chad Capellman | Thursday, June 17, 2004 API's 2004 Publishers Forum, titled “Near and Far Horizons, the Road Ahead for Media Organizations” opened up by providing the media executives in attendance lessons for thriving in the digital age from an unconventional source.
The need to keep revisiting history Reflecting on leadership lessons from the battlefields of Gettysburg By David Kraemer | Thursday, May 27, 2004 From the organic Army of the Potomac, trusting in its second tier of commanders, willing to take risks, disobeying orders to fortuitous ends, to the top-down aristocracy of the Confederates, headstrong, failing to follow directions, convinced of their own infallibility, we squeezed drops of truth we hope can be applied to newsrooms across the country.
Lessons Learned at API’s Executive Marketing Seminar How USA TODAY leverages its brand By Lisa Rabasca | Wednesday, May 19, 2004
Intrigue Leads to Success at Three “Outlying” Reynolds Center Business Journalism Workshop Locations By Jodi Schneider | Monday, May 10, 2004 I've long been a supporter of business journalism education and enjoy passing on my hard-earned business journalism knowledge gleaned as both a reporter and then an editor in a half dozen newsrooms.
Moving forward, designers get to set the rules By Dale Peskin | Wednesday, February 25, 2004 Dale Peskin, co-director of The Media Center and a former newspaper designer, spoke about the future of design in an ever-evolving media landscape. "The good news," says Peskin, "is designers get to set the rules, and make the changes. If there is any point in time, in the history of newspapers where the voice of designers can be heard in changing things, it's now. ... You're going to have an ear, because publishers are scared to death."
Copy editors: act as the readers' advocate By Curt Hazlett | Thursday, January 29, 2004 Copy editors these days have a bigger role than ever in making stories better, so here are four habits to avoid when delving into copy.
For Peck, it's never politics as usual Commercial Appeal Editor discusses ways to bring innovation to newspapers' election coverage By Chad Capellman | Thursday, January 22, 2004 On the heels of Monday night's Iowa Caucuses, Chris Peck - Editor of the Commercial Appeal in Memphis, Tenn. spoke with attendees of API's City and Metro Editors seminar about the challenges they face with their own election coverage. (includes audio)
Targeting Gen X (and younger) in Big D Laura Gordon gives new meaning to phrase 'Quick launch' By API Staff | Thursday, January 15, 2004 Laura Gordon, Managing Director of New Product Development of The Dallas Morning News and the Publisher of Quick, spoke at API about launching the free tabloid in just 12 days. (includes audio)
Nine quick fixes Advice for newspaper executives who need results right now By Ed Baron | Wednesday, December 03, 2003 Ed Baron offers lessons learned by the more than 1,200 people who have attended API's Executive Development Program.
Reynolds Center holds inaugural business journalism workshops By Kevin Sweeney | Sunday, November 23, 2003 Journalists interested in covering business converged on Harrisburg, Pa., Minneapolis, and San Jose, Calif., in November to participate in first-of-their-kind workshops geared to meeting the growing challenges of financial journalism.
Audio from API's Publishers’ Forum on Ethics and Responsibility By Chad Capellman | Thursday, October 02, 2003 Comments from participants in API's first Publishers’ Forum on Ethics and Responsibilities:
» Jim Crutchfield, President & Publisher, Akron Beacon Journal
To run, or run from, a story: Publishers tackle tough questions By Joyce Gemperlein | Thursday, October 02, 2003 Journalists attending API’s first Publishers’ Forum on Ethics and Responsibility reacted to a hypothetical situation in which a newspaper reporter in a conservative, religious town writes a story about oral sex among middle and high school students.
Josephson's ethics tune getting more play after scandals By Joyce Gemperlein | Thursday, October 02, 2003 Ethicist, provocateur and list-maker Michael Josephson has never been more in vogue. He’s been cajoling and scaring people straight about ethics since 1985. One of his favorite audiences has been the newspaper industry.
The sweet science of teaching brevity and sensitivity By Steve Buttry | Wednesday, July 16, 2003 Steve Buttry, a Director of Tailored Programs at API, shares some of the lessons he learned after attending API’s first “Train the Trainer” seminar. This article was originally sent to a list-serv of seminar attendees.
Anti-diversity postcard campaign misses mark, says ASNE president By Chad Capellman | Friday, June 27, 2003 ASNE president Peter Bhatia reacts to receiving hundreds of postcards that claim the group's diversity programs "bear some of the responsibility for the Jayson Blair scandal at the New York Times."
Josephson tells attendees 'Hire for character, train for skills' By Joyce Gemperlein | Thursday, June 26, 2003 Michael Josephson, founder of the Josephson Institute of Ethics closed the API/ASNE Newsroom Reporting and Editing Standards seminar with his thought as the only non-journalist in attendance.
Next 17 >> of 42 Articles.
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