Most people love a good love story, and the readers of your community website are no exception. Are there any couples in your local community who have a particularly romantic tale to tell? Might they be willing to share their story with your website, as the man in the video above did with Karen Strunks for her Wake Green Park site?
Perhaps a local couple are arousing interest because of who they are, rather than how they met. You could find a juicy piece of celebrity gossip is happening right on your doorstep, as Simon and Sally Perry of Ventnor Blog did when Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart spent a New Year’s break on the Isle of Wight. Simon said that the site’s visitor figures went through the roof as not only locals but fans from further afield dropped in to find out what the Twilight stars were getting up to on their holidays. Simon and Sally capitalised on rumours that the couple were looking at buying a love-nest on the island to talk positively about it, telling the likes of People Magazine, “Well-known artists and musicians have found that they can live normal lives in Ventnor, away from the media glare, so others tend to follow suit by choosing our lovely town for their special getaways.”
The Cheeky Girls at Ireland West Airport Knock
Anthony Hickey of Mayo Today undoubtedly experienced the same phenomenon when he reported on Cheeky Girl Monica Irimia’s chance meeting with her now boyfriend, local nightclub manager Darren Geoghegan, who came to the rescue after a driver failed to collect her and her sister from Knock airport. Monica’s frequent visits to Darren’s home town of Tuam and obvious love of the area makes for a heartwarming story that’s as much about its setting in the beautiful West of Ireland as it is about Darren and Monica’s blossoming relationship.
Whilst I was enjoying a weekend break in Westport, County Mayo last month I took the chance to meet Anthony Hickey, the manager of the Mayo Today website, which has gone from strength to strength since it started just 5 months ago in February 2010. The blog actually grew from a Twitter account Anthony created for the area, @Mayo2Day:
From there I decided to set up my own local blog, Mayotoday.ie. It’s been very enjoyable and very successful.
Its focus has been very much keeping the county connected with local news and an upbeat outlook:
It’s local news basically, it’s a community news website and I put as many pictures on as I can…and local photographers, they’ve been very good to me, sending me photos. Community news in terms of just what’s happening locally in meetings, drama groups….I try to keep a positive slant on things.
'Family moment at Ballina Heritage Day'
Although the front page has news for the whole of Mayo, Anthony ensures the site works on a more localised level. Readers can filter down the news stream for just ‘Your Town’, thanks to the site’s use of categories, and there will often be a local town bulletin post, such as this June ‘Ballina Beat’. The website also includes lots of useful listings information that benefit residents, the businesses and in turn, Mayo Today itself:
I have dedicated pages. I have the local cinema listings, local arts, local museums, I update those listings weekly. And that’s been good because I’ve linked in with those people and their reaction has been very positive too and some have linked from their website to Mayo Today, which has been good for me.
I think that’s an interesting service that I can provide because ‘.tel’ is optimized for mobile phones and I think the mobile web is going to be very important. You can also get Mayo Today on your mobile phone. The local directories, it’s business community phone numbers. That’s going down pretty well too, there’s some interest in it. It’s something I can manage myself. Its cheap, doesn’t cost me much. No hosting cost and it’s very easy to update. Even I can do it.
Although Anthony has created a wonderfully useful and professional-looking website at minimal cost, the demands on his time for its upkeep means he is looking for a way to gain some sort of income from it.
That’s the problem, how do you monetize your website? Time-wise, it’s time consuming. I’ve tapped into a lot of PR agencies, a lot of community groups, the Local Authorities, I cover some Local Authority meetings myself and I have to write that up. I go to local events and festivals and do reports, take photos. You’re talking about certainly 7 days a week, can be 10 hours a day some days, if I want. And how I make a living out of that, that’s the question?
'Kenny donates Parliamentary Debates to Mayo County Library'
Despite there being no obvious answer, Anthony is positive that a solution to this well-discussed issue will present itself.
I think it’s something that’ll probably resolve itself, in time it’ll evolve. The answer will come as the site becomes more of a niche and gets a solid following and we’ll see how it goes from there, but as of now it’s a bit of a mystery alright.
Anthony is finding he’s started something of a trend in hyperlocal websites in Mayo, and sees some opportunity for Mayo Today to work with the smaller community sites that are emerging:
I’d like to link into community groups. I see a lot of smaller communities now are setting up their own community websites, like even down to parish level and little villages and towns and sports clubs. I’d like to link into those and possibly, maybe I could be a hub or a portal for a lot of those and introduce other people to those websites.
And where those websites don’t yet exist or are in need of a helping hand, Anthony is looking to offer his support:
I’ve learned a lot in the last year, in terms of using social media…maybe I could link into those websites, the people who run those websites, help them out and see what I can do there.
When I returned to the UK I had a clumsy first attempt at an audio slideshow from an evening I spent at Ballinrobe Races, which found its way onto Mayo Today’s dedicated Videos page of locally relevant online films.
You can listen to my recorded interview with Anthony below.
Crumlin Swimming Pool Opening Times on Drimnagh is Good
Do you have access to local timetables that you could publish on your website? Your readers would find it incredibly useful to access local opening times or travel information on their community website.
Do you live in an area that survives on just one or a handful of shops? Think about publishing their opening times. Everyone likes to know what bus or train to aim for, or that their trip out of the house won’t be a wasted journey, so see if you can include this information on your website and make it super-handy for local people!