The innovation team, R.I.P.

“You might be forgiven for suspecting that news companies are more interested in appearing innovative than actually doing something new.”

For years, innovation teams always got the short end of the stick: the responsibility for the future of the organization, but without the power to achieve it. Worse, without strategic direction from the top and shackled by innovation processes that end in a management conference room, these teams were set up to fail. You might be forgiven for suspecting that news companies are more interested in appearing innovative than actually doing something new.

Working on “innovation” inside a newsroom can be a thankless job, not the least because it tends to be driven by the deceptive whims of the tech industry. There’s a long list of tech trends that arrived under the banner of “revolutionizing the news” only to whimper out in a pile of burned money: chatbots, blockchains, 5G, live audio, the creator economy, web3, etc. (The jury is still out on AI and the metaverse.)

A reckoning is overdue. There are a lot of big, systemic problems in this industry that won’t be solved by tech. And as long as the media industry is keen on outsourcing its own futures to California, it won’t be able to build its place in them.

Maybe we can start killing the innovation team in 2023 and instead take responsibility for the future of this industry. At the very least, there’s a need for a different kind of strategic unit in media organizations — one that can go beyond mere innovation and towards actual change.

Johannes Klingebiel is a designer and researcher at the Media Lab Bayern in Germany.

For years, innovation teams always got the short end of the stick: the responsibility for the future of the organization, but without the power to achieve it. Worse, without strategic direction from the top and shackled by innovation processes that end in a management conference room, these teams were set up to fail. You might be forgiven for suspecting that news companies are more interested in appearing innovative than actually doing something new.

Working on “innovation” inside a newsroom can be a thankless job, not the least because it tends to be driven by the deceptive whims of the tech industry. There’s a long list of tech trends that arrived under the banner of “revolutionizing the news” only to whimper out in a pile of burned money: chatbots, blockchains, 5G, live audio, the creator economy, web3, etc. (The jury is still out on AI and the metaverse.)

A reckoning is overdue. There are a lot of big, systemic problems in this industry that won’t be solved by tech. And as long as the media industry is keen on outsourcing its own futures to California, it won’t be able to build its place in them.

Maybe we can start killing the innovation team in 2023 and instead take responsibility for the future of this industry. At the very least, there’s a need for a different kind of strategic unit in media organizations — one that can go beyond mere innovation and towards actual change.

Johannes Klingebiel is a designer and researcher at the Media Lab Bayern in Germany.

Nicholas Thompson   The year AI actually changes the media business

Hillary Frey   Death to the labor-intensive memo for prospective hires

Joshua P. Darr   Local to live, wire to wither

Christoph Mergerson   The rot at the core of the news business

Anita Varma   Journalism prioritizes the basic need for survival

Paul Cheung   More news organizations will realize they are in the business of impact, not eyeballs

Amethyst J. Davis   The slight of the great contraction

Snigdha Sur   Newsrooms get nimble in a recession

Joanne McNeil   Facebook and the media kiss and make up

Walter Frick   Journalists wake up to the power of prediction markets

Laxmi Parthasarathy   Unlocking the silent demand for international journalism

Shanté Cosme   The answer to “quiet quitting” is radical empathy

Kirstin McCudden   We’ll codify protection of journalism and newsgathering

Ryan Kellett   Airline-like loyalty programs try to tie down news readers

Barbara Raab   More journalism funders will take more risks

Eric Holthaus   As social media fragments, marginalized voices gain more power

Jessica Maddox   Journalists keep getting manipulated by internet culture

Anna Nirmala   News organizations get new structures

Josh Schwartz   The AI spammers are coming

David Cohn   AI made this prediction

Felicitas Carrique and Becca Aaronson   News product goes from trend to standard

Nicholas Diakopoulos   Journalists productively harness generative AI tools

Daniel Trielli   Trust in news will continue to fall. Just look at Brazil.

Mary Walter-Brown and Tristan Loper   Mission-driven metrics become our North Star

Janet Haven   ChatGPT and the future of trust 

Errin Haines   Journalists on the campaign trail mend trust with the public

Sarah Alvarez   Dream bigger or lose out

Jenna Weiss-Berman   The economic downturn benefits the podcasting industry. (No, really!)

Dominic-Madori Davis   Everyone finally realizes the need for diverse voices in tech reporting

Jennifer Brandel   AI couldn’t care less. Journalists will care more. 

Brian Moritz   Rebuilding the news bundle

Dannagal G. Young   Stop rewarding elite performances of identity threat

Julia Beizer   News fatigue shows us a clear path forward

Sue Schardt   Toward a new poetics of journalism

Surya Mattu   Data journalists learn from photojournalists

Matt Rasnic   More newsroom workers turn to organized labor

Mael Vallejo   More threats to press freedom across the Americas

Mauricio Cabrera   It’s no longer about audiences, it’s about communities

Danielle K. Brown and Kathleen Searles   DEI efforts must consider mental health and online abuse

Alex Sujong Laughlin   Credit where it’s due

Johannes Klingebiel   The innovation team, R.I.P.

Alex Perry   New paths to transparency without Twitter

Dana Lacey   Tech will screw publishers over

Leezel Tanglao   Community partnerships drive better reporting

Peter Bale   Rising costs force more digital innovation

Simon Galperin   Philanthropy stops investing in corporate media

Laura E. Davis   The year we embrace the robots — and ourselves

Kavya Sukumar   Belling the cat: The rise of independent fact-checking at scale

Jarrad Henderson   Video editing will help people understand the media they consume

A.J. Bauer   Covering the right wrong

Tamar Charney   Flux is the new stability

Ayala Panievsky   It’s time for PR for journalism

Sumi Aggarwal   Smart newsrooms will prioritize board development

Michael W. Wagner   The backlash against pro-democracy reporting is coming

Elizabeth Bramson-Boudreau   More of the same

Bill Grueskin   Local news will come to rely on AI

Brian Stelter   Finding new ways to reach news avoiders

Kerri Hoffman   Podcasting goes local

Ståle Grut   Your newsroom experiences a Midjourney-gate, too

Jessica Clark   Open discourse retrenches

John Davidow   A year of intergenerational learning

Gina Chua   The traditional story structure gets deconstructed

Nikki Usher   This is the year of the RSS reader. (Really!)

Anthony Nadler   Confronting media gerrymandering

David Skok   Renewed interest in human-powered reporting

Victor Pickard   The year journalism and capitalism finally divorce

Tre'vell Anderson   Continued culpability in anti-trans campaigns

Esther Kezia Thorpe   Subscription pressures force product innovation

Janelle Salanga   Journalists work from a place of harm reduction

Martina Efeyini   Talk to Gen Z. They’re the experts of Gen Z.

Molly de Aguiar and Mandy Van Deven   Narrative change trend brings new money to journalism

Sarabeth Berman   Nonprofit local news shows that it can scale

Alexandra Svokos   Working harder to reach audiences where they are

Mariana Moura Santos   A woman who speaks is a woman who changes the world

Ryan Gantz   “I’m sorry, but I’m a large language model”

Don Day   The news about the news is bad. I’m optimistic.

Parker Molloy   We’ll reach new heights of moral panic

Khushbu Shah   Global reporting will suffer

Ben Werdmuller   The internet is up for grabs again

Taylor Lorenz   The “creator economy” will be astroturfed

Christina Shih   Shared values move from nice-to-haves to essentials

Gordon Crovitz   The year advertisers stop funding misinformation

Joe Amditis   AI throws a lifeline to local publishers

Elite Truong   In platform collapse, an opportunity for community

Megan Lucero and Shirish Kulkarni   The future of journalism is not you

Sue Robinson   Engagement journalism will have to confront a tougher reality

Kaitlyn Wells   We’ll prioritize media literacy for children

Michael Schudson   Journalism gets more and more difficult

Cassandra Etienne   Local news fellowships will help fight newsroom inequities

Upasna Gautam   Technology that performs at the speed of news

Joni Deutsch   Podcast collaboration — not competition — breeds excellence

Gabe Schneider   Well-funded journalism leaders stop making disparate pay

Andrew Donohue   We’ll find out whether journalism can, indeed, save democracy

Sam Gregory   Synthetic media forces us to understand how media gets made

Priyanjana Bengani   Partisan local news networks will collaborate

Karina Montoya   More reporters on the antitrust beat

Bill Adair   The year of the fact-check (no, really!)

Jaden Amos   TikTok personality journalists continue to rise

Francesco Zaffarano   There is no end of “social media”

Mario García   More newsrooms go mobile-first

Kathy Lu   We need emotionally agile newsroom leaders

Cindy Royal   Yes, journalists should learn to code, but…

Jacob L. Nelson   Despite it all, people will still want to be journalists

Eric Thurm   Journalists think of themselves as workers

Rodney Gibbs   Recalibrating how we work apart

Larry Ryckman   We’ll work together with our competitors

Anika Anand   Independent news businesses lead the way on healthy work cultures

Jim Friedlich   Local journalism steps up to the challenge of civic coverage

Cari Nazeer and Emily Goligoski   News organizations step up their support for caregivers

Ariel Zirulnick   Journalism doubles down on user needs

Tim Carmody   Newsletter writers need a new ethics

Masuma Ahuja   Journalism starts working for and with its communities

Burt Herman   The year AI truly arrives — and with it the reckoning

Sue Cross   Thinking and acting collectively to save the news

Rachel Glickhouse   Humanizing newsrooms will be a badge of honor

S. Mitra Kalita   “Everything sucks. Good luck to you.”

Alexandra Borchardt   The year of the climate journalism strategy

Emma Carew Grovum   The year to resist forgetting about diversity

Moreno Cruz Osório   Brazilian journalism turns wounds into action

Basile Simon   Towards supporting criminal accountability

Amy Schmitz Weiss   Journalism education faces a crossroads

Juleyka Lantigua   Newsrooms recognize women of color as the canaries in the coal mine

Jennifer Choi and Jonathan Jackson   Funders finally bet on next-generation news entrepreneurs

Delano Massey   The industry shakes its imposter syndrome

Raney Aronson-Rath   Journalists will band together to fight intimidation

Zizi Papacharissi   Platforms are over

Jody Brannon   We’ll embrace policy remedies

Sam Guzik   AI will start fact-checking. We may not like the results.

Susan Chira   Equipping local journalism

Sarah Stonbely   Growth in public funding for news and information at the state and local levels

J. Siguru Wahutu   American journalism reckons with its colonialist tendencies

Cory Bergman   The AI content flood

Andrew Losowsky   Journalism realizes the replacement for Twitter is not a new Twitter

Al Lucca   Digital news design gets interesting again

Eric Nuzum   A focus on people instead of power

Pia Frey   Publishers start polling their users at scale

Alan Henry   A reckoning with why trust in news is so low

Ryan Nave   Citizen journalism, but make it equitable

Jakob Moll   Journalism startups will think beyond English

Mar Cabra   The inevitable mental health revolution

Jonas Kaiser   Rejecting the “free speech” frame

Julia Angwin   Democracies will get serious about saving journalism

Stefanie Murray   The year U.S. media stops screwing around and becomes pro-democracy

Doris Truong   Workers demand to be paid what the job is worth

An Xiao Mina   Journalism in a time of permacrisis

Jesse Holcomb   Buffeted, whipped, bullied, pulled

Emily Nonko   Incarcerated reporters get more bylines

Wilson Liévano   Diaspora journalism takes the next step

Richard Tofel   The press might get better at vetting presidential candidates

Jim VandeHei   There is no “peak newsletter”

Nicholas Jackson   There will be launches — and we’ll keep doing the work

Valérie Bélair-Gagnon   Well-being will become a core tenet of journalism

Sarah Marshall   A web channel strategy won’t be enough

Eric Ulken   Generative AI brings wrongness at scale

Kaitlin C. Miller   Harassment in journalism won’t get better, but we’ll talk about it more openly

Peter Sterne   AI enters the newsroom

Lisa Heyamoto   The independent news industry gets a roadmap to sustainability