To ensure that people in the UK have access to more and better coverage of global issues across a range of media.
We are a member based organisation providing a range of benefits to our members including regular briefings with journalists and editors; training in social media, photography, shooting with a smartphone; access to our latest research tracking changes in the media landscape; advocacy to ensure that international stories and issues remain central to the UK media agenda.
Our members report improved access to media decision makers as a result of attending our briefings with journalists and editors. And a better understanding of how to pitch stories has helped to increase media coverage for our members and the issues that concern them.
We have influenced the BBC Charter to include a stronger commitment to global coverage and helped to shape the Channel 4 remit with an obligation to feature information and views from around the world.
Our member organisations report more media coverage of their stories and issues as a direct result of the contacts made with journalists through IBT.
Our members have developed practical skills, across multiple teams, changing how they engage with the media and the impact they have. We provide regular training in social media, photography and shooting and editing with a smartphone.
IBT members use our reports to help them plan their media strategies.
The Nerve is a new independent news outlet, launched by a group of former Observer staff, including the award-winning reporter Carole Cadwalladr, best known for her investigation of the Cambridge Analytica story. It’s part of a growing trend of small, independent news outlets that are challenging mainstream media.
Launched last September, The Nerve is funded by its subscribers and supporters, and is growing rapidly. We’re excited to be hosting this session with two of the founders. They’ll tell us more about the kind of stories they cover and how best to pitch to them.
Although their main focus is culture, politics and tech, they are keen to cover more international stories.