When people say things like :
"Major news outlets won't leave #Twittter for #Mastodon because they won't have the same reach..."
..they may be right.. but truth is, not one major #news org has tried to run their own #fediverse instance and post their articles across both networks...yet.
So while the Twitter numbers are obviously larger, there are no real "reach" metrics to compare.
..maybe it's a good time for #NPR and #NewYorkTimes to fug around and find out...
@sharearea True. All assumptions at the moment.
Besides, even if their reach is lower in the #fediverse, they have to admit that there are people they are reaching for the ‘first time’ in the fediverse, or those who stopped using Twitter and were part of their reach. Don't they want to reach them again?
In addition, it is not like they have to manually post. They have tools. If it is lacking, they can tell the developers to support the fediverse. Or, tell their in-house devs to add a plugin or something. So, in the end, one tool posting to multiple networks, like how it was in the 2000s (remember #PingFM).
They can even just set up an #Atom or #RSS #feed. Or, if they're using #WordPress or #Drupal, install a fediverse plugin. After setting it up, announce it, and forget about it. If their news is worthy, it will be reshared.
I think the problem is, they are still thinking in the old way: most users + ads + algorithms. They've forgotten the power of #WordOfMouth, and in the digital landscape, that's reshare/reboost/retoot.
I myself, even though I don't follow major news bots, I see news shared by real people, because for them, it's worth sharing.
@youronlyone you say," Or, tell their in-house devs to add a plugin or something," but I think you overlook just how difficult a thing like that can really be.
In fact, I suspect it's a major roadblock to news orgs coming to #Fediverse.
Not only do these outfits have potentially very complicated, customized, maybe outdated, maybe outsourced systems handling their posting, all of that being hard enough to modify, but news today is notoriously struggling with resources without devoting even more to this one.
AND THEN you get the administrative issues of workflow. Even if internal devs manage to hack Fediverse support into their systems, now they have to explain it to their line management, business back offices, maybe even having to get salespeople to explain to sponsors how the tools are posting to somewhere new, to calm concerns.
And then legal...
It's no simple thing to just tell someone to write a plug in, in a professional news environment.
Again: resource limitations. If a news room only has $10,000 to spare and they think it would cost $20,000 to join the Fediverse, then it's not even a choice. They can't no matter how much they'd like to.
They aren't limiting themselves. The real world limitations of resources impose the limit on them.
I don't mean to repeat myself, but I don't think you did understand my point after all, as I was referring to a stark reality that can't be reasoned away, no matter the preferences.