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Responding to listeners disappointed by new ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service website

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Rajan Datar | 10:25 UK time, Friday, 22 April 2011

The new look for the ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service website has caught the attention of a number of you.

When a change is made to an established format, the new style can take a while to become familiar - so we wanted to know what was the thinking behind the changes that have been made.

There has been a lot of comment about the website in the Over to You postbag and also in comments to the blog which went into details about the changes that have been made.

Although we were unable to answer in detail all of the questions and comments, we asked one listener, Piet Boon from the Netherlands, to elaborate on why he feels the changes will not benefit the listeners.

Among the points he made was the observation that he uses the website to find out what is new and interesting on the World Service, and he feels that is what he missing most from the revamped site.

Piet feels that as the World Service is not a service which he would listen to 24 hours a day, rather he listens to specific programmes, so it is important for him to know about those programmes - and he feels the new website makes that more difficult.

Other listeners remarked on the difficulty in navigating through the website.

So we asked Kelly Shepherd, Managing Editor of Future Media at the World Service, to tell us more about the thinking behind the website.

Were the changes researched in advance for instance?

According to online polling, Kelly explained, listeners made it clear to the ´óÏó´«Ã½ that they wanted to be able to listen again to programmes, they wanted to be able to find the schedules and download the programmes.

However a listener noted that the headlines have gone from the home page - Kelly explained the site is working with the family of ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service and ´óÏó´«Ã½ sites, including ´óÏó´«Ã½News.com so that content can be placed in areas that audiences which may not know the titles will find them.

Kelly also explained that the programme index is now the front page, and programmes can be found by A-Z, or by genre, but whereas in the past listeners may have gone, for instance, to an arts genre, now they will go to a wider entertainment news on ´óÏó´«Ã½ News.com.

The content hasn't been lost, simply placed elsewhere.

Finally, another word on the subject of slang and colloquial language which we covered last week - 'colloquialisms are only the tip of the iceberg', according to a listener who contacted us from New Zealand, and who had several more comments on 'sins' of journalists in general and ´óÏó´«Ã½ journalists in particular.

Listen to the podcast for his detailed case. In the meantime, keep your emails, texts and tweets coming.

Rajan Datar is the presenter of Over To You

Over To You is your chance to have your say about the ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service and its programmes. Broadcast times can be found by clicking here.

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Comments

  • Comment number 1.


    It's no' lost. We jist cannae' find it.












    And it's always the last place ye look.......

  • Comment number 2.

    Can't find a place to post about the Witness programme - Charles & Diana. Apparently she was described as the future queen of England! Not the rest of the UK? This happens time after time on the beeb. No distinction is made about the different parts of the UK. Today I read that teachers will be striking because of pension changes. This only affects England & Wales.
    Maybe you should change your name to the EBC.

    Rant over.

  • Comment number 3.

    Having now heard this weeks programme, plus really exploring the new site, take this comment in conjunction what I said to the 7 April blog.

    "The new look for the ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service website has caught the attention of a number of you"
    Something of an understatement that. I've nothing against change, don't go along with "if it ain't broke why fix it" believing things can be improved but there's change and there's change.

    The new front page with the programme index is unappealing. It is clunky and visually unattractive. Those of us used to the site may grit out teeth and bear with it but I feel a lot of first time visitors will see it and go elsewhere.

    Kelly - "the site is working with the family of ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service and ´óÏó´«Ã½ sites, including ´óÏó´«Ã½News.com so that content can be placed in areas that audiences which may not know the titles will find them"
    So by placing in areas new audiences may find them means it costs us more effort?
    I have now found Today's schedule via 'Radio and TV Programmes'. Not that obvious and requires at least two clicks rather than one previously.
    Surely a site should be accessible and easier to use? Now it is like finding your way through a maze: dead ends and back tracking before eventually getting to the centre ...
    As for 'working with the family of ... ´óÏó´«Ã½ sites' what has been done to the ´óÏó´«Ã½ home page, ´óÏó´«Ã½.com? You used to be able to customise it but no more. Now it's got things I don't want and others I do want I can longer add.

    Kelly - "The content hasn't been lost, simply placed elsewhere"
    Some hasn't, true. Just we have go through that maze to find it.
    But some has been lost - the contact form on the homepage of every programme has gone has gone. Where there are broadcast times on a programme page it's only for the internet, and often incomplete. An index please of all broadcast times for all regional streams.

    Finally many of the links on the programme index and elsewhere (see my comment to 7 April) are still not working, or at least incorrect. Fix them please.

    I'm sure the ´óÏó´«Ã½ has the best of intentions with the revamp but please look at things again, and from the the point of view of us, the users, not just what seems best from your side.

  • Comment number 4.

    The chap who commented in the over to you interview had a very good point about drawing content to the page using rss feeds. While I would prefer a page thoughtfully crafted by experienced and knowledgeable editors, if that's not in the budget, much can be accomplished through automation. See news.google.com for a really good example.

  • Comment number 5.

    So to summarise:
    1. We've changed the site, it'll take getting used to
    2. We're not changing it back, regardless of what you say
    3. Although we've asked for opinions, we still think we're right
    4. We're going to ignore all opinions contrary to our own.

    Congratulations, you now have one listener less. World Service's loss is Radio 4 Extra's gain. You clearly don't care what the listeners think, and you clearly intend to stick with this dreadful new website despite everything the listeners have said.

    Farewell, world service, and thanks for all the fish.

  • Comment number 6.

    For all of my fellow listeners fed up with this farce about the new and exciting ´óÏó´«Ã½ website and the various cuts in programming, I simply invite you to go to to see what a real website looks like. Of course, I feel like a traitor after 40 years of listening to quality programming at the ´óÏó´«Ã½, but I was made redundant.

  • Comment number 7.

    My complaint is that I (too) often cannot find the right place, if there is a place, to deposit my comment. I find this very frustrating and a waste of my time.
    I have to pull up the blog commentators' list;
    I have to look at all the actual news story in order to see if there is a comment area at the bottom, and worst of all, when all is said and done, I usually end up without any identifiable place to deposit my comment at all.
    My proposed solution:
    In addition, to listing blog commentators and briefly what they cover. Why not also list in reverse i.e. topic and who blogs thereon e.g. Inflation rises 35% (Stephanopoulos) or Africa becomes the Unite States of Africa (Harding). Do you see what I mean?
    This reference area could go directly below the "All Blogs" area on the "BLOG" page.
    In other words, it would show whether there even exists a commentary portion to some news event that you have written about. Alternatively, or even in conjunction, you could insert beside each story (Blog Harding, or Blog Peston) so that readers would know immediately that there is a blog and where to go.

  • Comment number 8.

    In my comment (92) to the 'A New look for the World Service on the web' blog, 7 April, I mentioned the pop up survey about the new site I got. If anyone had not got that pop up and wants to give their comments and let them know what you think about the new site then the link for it is:


    Complete it and make your thoughts known !

  • Comment number 9.

    I guess there was no Over To You blog last week because of the long weekend and public holidays but there's still no podcast for last weeks programme, and that despite me mailing you about it at the beginning of the week. Is the podcast going to be available?
    Also there's still a glitch with this programmes entry on the new WS front page. Click on Over To You in Find A Radio Programme and it goes straight to here, the blog, and not to the Over To you programmes

  • Comment number 10.

    Thanks, Guy for the survey link. I went ahead and filled it out. Hopefully many of the others, who are unhappy about the website, will do so too.

  • Comment number 11.

    @Guy: I finally found the Over To You program of last week on the ´óÏó´«Ã½ iPlayer... took me a while to find it. So, still no podcast, but you can listen to the program streaming it from the iPlayer.

  • Comment number 12.

    Interesting to see how you have brushed the new website fiasco carefully under the carpet. If you don't talk about it on OVER TO YOU, the problem doesn't exist. And I guess the corollary to this is that we listeners don't really exist either. As one of your best commentators once said years ago: "Why don't I just shut up."

  • Comment number 13.

    The ´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service. May 10th. Topic: Hillary Clinton’s remarks (May 10) about the lack of democracy and human rights in China.
    One participant compared Hillary’s remarks to the pot calling the kettle black, a come-back which I fully supported.
    The British ´óÏó´«Ã½ program host almost tripped while rushing to US' defense. Had the host not heard about Abu Ghraib, the Guantanamo detainees, CIA renditions and torture.
    Hillary demonized China but could not seem to wedge the plank out of her own eye to see Israel, Bahrain, the Saudis and the United States itself. China’s record is not perfect; China admits its not perfect, but it is trying. The Chinese Minister for Foreign Affairs hasn't criticised America’s human rights abuses, its rigged elections, its use of depleted uranium & white phosphorus?
    I'm sick of the west imposing standards, but ignoring these standards while other countries are expected to live by American standards. The west can only see the world through its own dark lenses. As the ´óÏó´«Ã½ program was being broadcast, the news intruded that Greeks had again taken to the streets, another imposed situation caused by American derivatives and CDS gambling.
    While the program’s host and guests were indulging in the West’s democratic and human rights superiority, the American Civil Liberties Union was issuing a memorandum opposing legislation that would give Presidents of the United States EXPANDED WAR AUTHORITY, TO BE USED ON THEIR OWN INITIAITIVE - anywhere in the world irrespective of the Constitution and international law.
    ´óÏó´«Ã½ needs to challenge its guests, its call-ins; it needs to have sufficient intelligence and guts to take on the likes of Hilary Clinton.

  • Comment number 14.

    Dear ´óÏó´«Ã½,
    I adore the World Service. Living in the wastes of County Mayo I rely on the ´óÏó´«Ã½ to keep in touch with the UK and the world.
    I find it a pity that the 'basic' transmission is so repetitive and often well behind events. Perhaps a broader and more general program base might be better with more frequent updates - we don't all have the skill or wish to battle with the intricacies of your website.

  • Comment number 15.

    13 June 2011...I posted last week regarding problems with listening via my computer through the WS Home page "Listen Live" button. I also posted on several of the Facebook sites regarding same. I was happy to receive a response from the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Team asking for some info such as URL being used to listen, my location, times of day, and who my ISP is. I responded with the info as requested. I also saw some comments on the Newshour Facebook page.

    Unfortunately as of today, Monday 13 June 2011, nothing has been done to remedy this problem of constant interruption of the alleged "live stream." I wish there was some way I could send you a recording of what I have to put up with; 3 to five seconds audio, then from 3 up to 10 seconds dead air, then several seconds audio, etc., etc. I simply cannot make sense of what is happening.

    After trying to listen for more than two hours earlier today I finally gave up and accessed the Al Jazera English site and spent most of the day listening to them. So, until ´óÏó´«Ã½ can figure out and resolve the problem with your new website and so-called "iplayer," I will simply have to turn to Al Jazera. While they are certainly no ´óÏó´«Ã½ they cover many of the same topics and subjects, and they offer me a broad world view which is what I require. I hope to return to ´óÏó´«Ã½ in future to find the quality and consistency I admire and respect. Good Luck.
    James Tinsley-Arkansas, USA

  • Comment number 16.

    Read comment 141 on this ´óÏó´«Ã½ blog /blogs/overtoyou/2011/04/a_new_look_for_bbc_world_servi.html?postId=109399700 where I posted a reaction from the Controller in charge of the changes to the World Service website.

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