2 in 3 children worldwide have no access to the internet


We claim the internet is ubiquitous, but only in certain parts of the world. A report by UNICEF and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) says 2.2 billion or two thirds of children and young people aged 25 years or less do not have internet access at home. Here are other findings:

  1. Globally, only 33 percent of children and young people have internet access at home.
  2. A significant gap exists between high and low-income countries. High income countries have 87 percent coverage while low income countries have 6 percent.
  3. Only 5 percent of children and young people in West and Central Africa have internet access at home compared to 33 percent global average.

Proposed solution to this problem:

UNICEF and ITU have joined forces to launch Giga, an ambitious global intitiative to connect every school to the internet. Learn more about Giga here.

Writing for page views: Tips from Steve Rubel


As a young copy editor working for New Delhi-based Patriot two decades ago, I never imagined a day when machines would take over the unique powers of a copy editor. We ruled over reporters, decided content and our headlines woke readers up every morning.

Fast forward twenty years- journalists write for machines that give overrides to word choices and remind them that some words get better page views. These translate into  greater job security and a better bottomline.  Machines select  headlines, insert slugs and feed searches that attract readers. Writers are told to use the word fashion instead of style as search engines rank fashion higher.

Amid this changing media landscape, hearing  Steve Rubel last week was refreshing. Rubel is EVP, Global Strategy for Edelman, the world’s largest independent PR company. He was speaking at my alma mater, the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communications.

According to Rubel, thankfully, three things still exist:

  1. Our time and attention are finite
  2. We love good stories- stories bind us as a culture
  3. Content is king

Rubel introduced Edelman’s new concept named “Transmedia Storytelling: The Media Cloverleaf” that will help PR practitioners keep stories alive for a longer time.  This is an inter-connected model that involves traditional media, hybrid, social media and company-owned media. According to Rubel, it is now an Anglo model being used in the U.S. and some parts of Europe. However,  some of its concepts are applicable in other geographies too. 

Rubel asks practitioners to create content that is visual and worth sharing and video, infographics and slideshows are very important. Writing needs a lot of advanced planning these days. So, before crafting a story, find out how, where and when the story should be told. Here’s a PowerPoint that describes key points from Rubel’s talk.