The New Work of Composing

conclusions

Ultimately, the hyperlocal approach isn’t just about people typing in their zip codes and receiving aggregated local content but rather contributing content in the form of stories, photos, videos, etc. Users want personalized content, but they also want control over their media, control over the way their stories, locations, and neighborhoods are represented. They want in on the action.

layers of zoom: where are you now?

picture featuring layers of zoom

The connections users make with one another in social media are typically based on proximity, either social or physical because users are no longer residing in online spaces and then moving offline but rather moving between the two in a myriad of ways, most significantly creating web presences online for their geophysical location as a way to further construct and represent their collective identities.

yelp and the metropolitan focus

Picture of yelp.com home page

Hyperlocal content does not necessarily mean focusing on smaller areas and excluding metropolitan areas like New York or Dallas. As a matter of fact, many sites I discuss throughout this webtext have the bulk of their content geared toward major cities rather than small towns. Recommendation site yelp asks users to share their local knowledge of businesses and organizations ranging from restaurants to churches.

relevance and the pothole paradox

slide defining hyperlocal relevance

When focusing on hyperlocal content, the relevance of the information becomes paramount in order to avoid what Steven Johnson (2007) called the “pothole paradox.” The idea is that the pothole in front of your home or apartment is a big deal to you, but your friends a few blocks over couldn’t care less.

outside.in

 

 

picture of outside.in home page

According to co-creator Steven B. Johnson (2006), outside.in is “an attempt to collectively build the geographic Web, neighborhood by neighborhood” (n.p.). Johnson explained that the purpose of outside.in is to unite the various voices emerging from hyperlocal bloggers, review sites, city government sites, and traditional media while grounding the information geographically.

place blogging and hyperlocal journalism

Hyperlocal picture example from Chicago Tribune

The digital neighborhood, in the case of place bloggers, begins within a literal neighborhood and moves outward. And like many digital neighborhoods, place bloggers often focus on what journalists call hyperlocal content.