Deadline: 2-Nov-20
Are you a young professional or a team looking for some innovative approaches to the challenges you face in your day-to-day work? Are you a web developer who enjoys playing with online gadgets to keep people aware and informed? Are you passionate about finding ways to bridge media and technology? If yes, then USAID’s Balkan Media Assistance Program (BMAP) is for you!
This program is implemented by Internews in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) for participation in the third Media Innovation Lab, slated for November 17-20, 2020.
The Media Innovation Lab is an annual event that provides a creative, collaborative space where media professionals, designers, technologists, and others can come together to develop localized tools and projects that will help tackle challenges facing digital media across the Balkan region. This year’s Innovation Lab theme will be: Reporting Ethically During a Pandemic.
During the four days of the Lab, five selected projects will have the opportunity to work intensively on developing their ideas for innovative projects related to the Lab theme with the guidance of top-notch regional mentors. Three projects will receive seed funding. All documents, materials and sessions will be in English, which will be the working language of the Media Innovation Lab.
The Media Innovation Lab will gather lead experts in the field and provide different perspectives, teach new skills, and inspire participants to tackle new challenges! On the last day, participants will present their projects to a jury for a chance to receive seed funding of up to $5,000 USD to further develop their prototypes and ideas after the event into full-fledged tools and projects that can be rolled out for use by media across the region.
What should a Project Proposal look like?
Project ideas should use innovative digital technologies and applications to find exciting ways to tackle challenges dealing with the Lab theme: Reporting Ethically During a Pandemic. The ideas can take different shapes and forms, for example:
- Mobile apps;
- Webinars or short, interactive educational formats for mobile and web use;
- Social media campaigns;
- Small-scale creative e-learning trainings/workshops;
- Training solutions for fast paced environments;
- Projects can take on issues such as, but not limited to:
- Digital storytelling;
- Tackling challenges of remote work (tools, apps);
- Challenges of reporting during a pandemic;
- Telling difficult stories through creative arts;
- Introducing innovation into journalism during a pandemic;
- New approaches to debunking fake news;
- Creating science-based data sets for reporting;
- Podcasting and audio storytelling;
- Data visualization;
- Reaching new audiences (youth, diaspora, new internet users, etc.);
- MoJo – Mobile Journalism.
However, these are only some examples – be creative! When applicants are thinking about the project idea, keep the potential audience in mind, and also remember that it will need to be done quickly (ideally within 3-6 months) and within the $5,000 USD limit. All proposed pilot concepts, ideas and final products should be designed for free and open use.
Eligibility Criteria
- The program encourages teams of individuals, freelancers, and professionals who are passionate about media, such as journalists, editors, NGO representatives, IT developers, and designers to come up with innovative ideas.
- The program strongly encourages partnerships with media outlets or media organizations for joint applications, and to include young and creative professionals in each team.
- Applicants can apply as an individual or as a part of a team of no more than five people.
- If applicants are an individual with an idea, the program encourages applying!
- The program is looking for individuals and teams that bridge nationalities, specialties, and sectors: USAID’s BMAP actively encourages partnerships across borders of all kinds.
- Also think about potential partnership with non-media people non-traditional actors (e.g., private business entities, NGOs, social influencers, digital rights activists).
- Applicants need to be gender balanced.
- The formal applicant should be a resident or a media outlet or a NGO registered in BiH, Serbia, Montenegro, North Macedonia or Kosovo, but individual team members don’t have to be employees of these organizations and outlets.
Selection Process
The applicant should submit the completed Application Form (Attachment 1) by the deadline listed above. A selection committee will evaluate all received applications and select the top five applicants to participate in the Media Innovation Lab. Project ideas will be evaluated on:
- Clarity of vision;
- Applicability to the theme of the event;
- Feasibility of implementation within the available budget and a reasonable time frame;
- Diversity of partners involved;
- Cross-sectoral approach;
- Potential for impact; and
- Usefulness for a broad range of media outlets across the region.
The selection committee will also take into account applicants’ professional history, quality of past work, and motivation to actively *strengthen cross-border connections following the event
For more information, visit https://balkansmedia.org/bs/innovation-lab/3rd-media-innovation-lab-reporting-ethically-during-pandemic