Newsletter Articles

President’s Letter

The Azbee aura

by Roy Harris, National President; Senior Editor, CFO


Photo: Roy HarrisThe fax machines have stopped whirring, and anticipation is in the air. At least it is at my magazine, CFO in Boston, and 150 other publications around the country.

That’s because they’ve received ASBPE notices identifying them as winners of 2006 national or regional Azbee Awards of Excellence. What they still don’t know is how their winning work ranked at the top of the business-to-business world’s most extensive competition. Is a gold award in their future? Or will theirs be the honor of a silver or bronze?

But is all this attention to awards overdone?

Journalism prizes often are criticized because of the time spent looking backwards and preening for contest entries. Once the award is won, some winners are embarrassed to talk about it.Many others seem swept up by hubris.Who can disagree with critics who say that winners from any group — whether journalists, Oscar- or Tony winning actors, or Malcolm Baldridge recipients — sometimes go overboard as they hold their trophies aloft and thank seemingly everyone on the planet for making the honor possible. Don’t forget that kindergarten teacher.

The color of winning

But I see prizes like the Azbees as an extremely healthy influence on our business. And this period before the “color” of the final award is determined may be the healthiest time of all.

It is now that editors, reporters, and publishers think analytically about their best work, and how readers respond to it. Certainly, ASBPE judges aren’t ordinary readers. But they do seriously put themselves in the role of the publication’s “real” subscribers while they weigh how well such ideals as depth of research, fairness, and writing style have been met.

One need only examine the winners that will be on display at our National Editorial Conference next July 20­21 in Chicago, and featured on our Web site, to see that their quality is uniformly high.

Moving up a notch

As some of you know, I’ve been talking to winning newspaper journalists for a book I’m writing about the Pulitzer Prizes. At the rarified level of Pulitzer performance, too, I encounter awkwardness and embarrassment in talking about awards they won. I get beyond that quickly. These winners have no problem discussing the work that went into the journalism. And it’s the work, of course, that interests me most. The process of how the Pulitzers are decided is a secondary theme, for me and, I hope, for my readers.

So should it be with the Azbee winners. It is the work that matters. And it is now — while introspection is still shaded by a note of uncertainty, and before any embarrassment or self-congratulation kicks in — that editors concentrate mainly on what they can do to move an article, a photo spread, or the whole publication, from “among the best” to the very top. A few publications will manage to do just that next year.

I congratulate the Azbee winners, and encourage them to intensify their introspection. And to any contestants who may have little to show for your 2006 entries, I invite you to keep using the Azbees as a standard for measuring your own excellence.We at ASBPE are committed to making it a better standard each year.

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