Commissioning Round for Arts and Religious Programmes

Similar documents
Commissioning Round for

Working with BBC Radio 4 Extra 2017/18

Style Guide January 2016

JOB DESCRIPTION FOR PICTURE EDITOR VISUAL JOURNALISM ARABIC SERVICE

BBC Bitesize Primary Music Animation Brief

Policy on the syndication of BBC on-demand content

BBC WORLD SERVICE JOB SPECIFICATION

The new BBC Scotland Channel: Proposed variation to Ofcom s Operating Licence for the BBC s public services. BBC Response

Delivering Quality First consultation. Submission to BBC Trust from BBC Audience Council for Scotland. December 2011

S4C Clips and Rushes Policy. July 2016

RTS PROGRAMME AWARDS 2017 CRITERIA

DATED day of (1) THE BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION

Style Guide September 2016

Wales. BBC in the nations

Media Examination Revision 2018

Operating licence for the BBC s UK Public Services

In accordance with the Trust s Syndication Policy for BBC on-demand content. 2

Styleguide All the music from across the BBC in one place. BBC Music Styleguide 2017 Page: 1

The BBC s services: audiences in Scotland

BBC Three. Part l: Key characteristics of the service

PROMAXBDA UK 2018 COMPETITION

BBC S RELEASE POLICY FOR SECONDARY TELEVISION AND COMMERCIAL VIDEO-ON-DEMAND PROGRAMMING IN THE UK

Channel 4 submission to the BBC Trust s review of BBC services for younger audiences

Service availability will be dependent on geographic coverage of DAB and digital television services 2

Original Content: Each of you will be required to provide a minimum of one field package. Packages can be spot news stories, or a feature

EDITORIAL POLICY GUIDANCE NOTE PROPS: : THE SUPPLY AND USE OF PROPS IN DRAMA, COMEDY AND ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAMMES

CREATIVE ENGLAND ishorts+ FUNNY GIRLS GUIDELINES

RESPONSE OF CHANNEL 5 BROADCASTING LTD TO OFCOM S CONSULTATION ON PROPOSED PROGRAMMING OBLIGATIONS FOR NEW CHANNEL 3 AND CHANNEL 5 LICENCES

GUIDELINES FOR APPLICANTS 2018 SUBMISSION DEADLINE

Young Choir of the Year Postal Entry Form

GUIDELINES FOR APPLICANTS 2016 SUBMISSION DEADLINE

Meeting of the BBC Board MINUTES. 23 November 2017 Broadcasting House, London

A GUIDE TO COMMISSIONED PROGRAMMES

AUDIENCE: ON DEMAND Maximising Audience; Platforms and Potential

BBC Radio 5 live Sports Extra

Australian Broadcasting Corporation Submission to the Senate Standing Committee on Environment, Communications and the Arts

The. Roadmap ENABLING CHANGE

BBC tariff range of indicative prices for the supply of commissioned television programmes

BBC Trust Service Review: Network Music Radio

Call for Embedded Opportunity: The British Library Sound Archive

Audio & Music multiplatform compliance guidelines

Download of classical music in the form of incidental music or signature tunes is permitted 4

BBC Radio: Podcasts for Youth Audiences

1: University Department with high profile material but protective of its relationship with speakers

Context The broadcast landscape

BBC Big Screen Submission Information 2006

Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy

Broadcasting Authority of Ireland Rule 27 Guidelines General Election Coverage

List of Crew/Cast. Presenters Special guests Contestants Crew

Documentary / Factual DATE:20/04/2015 VERSION NUMBER: 1.04

Tshown growth with channels in multiple languages being broadcast everyday and

TALENT TO WATCH PROGRAM

SUBMISSION FAQs Tropfest Australia 2019

Quality Of Manuscripts and Editorial Process

EIFF 2018: The Young & the Wild New Visions Short Film Competition

Job Pack: Film Programme Coordinator

General... 3 Eligibility... 3 Fees... 4 Dates... 4 Panda Award categories... 5 Submission process... 8 Submission materials... 9 Judging process...

SOMEDAY STORIES SERIES THREE Making change with film. Request for Proposals

Accreditation Guidelines. How to acknowledge support from Creative Scotland and the National Lottery.

EDITORIAL POLICY GUIDANCE TICKETING FOR BBC EVENTS AND PROGRAMMES

Contract Details, and Delivery Requirements

Life Sciences sales and marketing

RECOMMENDATION ITU-R BT

Channel Four Television Corporation. Code of Practice for Commissioning Programmes from Independent Producers

WJCT PUBLIC MEDIA TELEVISION RADIO DIGITAL EVENTS WJCT.ORG WJCT APP

Ofcom s second public service broadcasting review Phase 2: preparing for the digital future - Response from Nickelodeon UK

SUMMARY: THE 4-HOUR WORKWEEK...IN 30 MINUTES - A CONCISE SUMMARY OF TIMOTHY FERRISS'S BESTSELLING BOOK BY 30 MINUTE EXPERT SUMMARIES

The following slides are for use by the teacher in the classroom

The ABC and the changing media landscape

Student Booklet. A level Media Studies NEA. For submission in 20XX

Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Screen Australia s. Funding Australian Content on Small Screens : A Draft Blueprint

BBC Television Services Review

FREE TIME ELECTION BROADCASTS

143 rd Annual Westminster Kennel Club All Breed Dog Show Monday-Tuesday, Feb , 2019 / Piers 92/94 and at Madison Square Garden

The BBC s services: audiences in Northern Ireland

Leeds Inspired Light Night Commission 2014

This helpcard will show you how to update your programme s header which appears at the top of every form.

EDITORIAL SPECIFICATION FOR NON-SCRIPTED PRODUCTIONS

Seven launches Australia s first new commercial television network in four decades. And it s in digital high definition.

VIVO INDIAN PREMIER LEAGUE 2019 REGULATIONS FOR NEWS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS BROADCASTERS FOR AUDIO VISUAL BROADCASTING

BBC 6 Music: Service Review

Arqiva Launching a TV channel on Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT) Launching a TV channel on Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT)

Funny Factuals & Documentaries. Sponsorship Opportunity

USING LIVE PRODUCTION SERVERS TO ENHANCE TV ENTERTAINMENT

Guidelines for Reviewers

FREE TIME ELECTION BROADCASTS

BBC Distribution Policy June 2018

BBC Trust Review of the BBC s Speech Radio Services

THE AND MAIL. The #1 national news brand is your connection to Canada s most influential and responsive audience.

SIX BFI NETWORK TALENT EXECUTIVES APPOINTED TO REACH AND DEVELOP NEW FILMMAKERS NATIONWIDE

TCP Emerging Composers Partnership 2018 Application Packet

EDITORIAL POLICY GUIDELINES FOR BBC WORLD SERVICE GROUP ON EXTERNAL RELATIONSHIPS AND FUNDING

YOUNG CHOIR OF THE YEAR 2018 OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM and TERMS & CONDITIONS

Channel 4 Television End Credits guide for programmes on the Channel 4 portfolio of channels

The Publishing Landscape for Humanities and Social Sciences: Navigation tips for early

ORCHESTRA ASSISTANT AND MUSIC LIBRARIAN

MANOR ROAD PRIMARY SCHOOL

Formatting Your Thesis or Dissertation

THE AGE OF TELEVISION

OCTOBER 20, 2018 TORONTO, ONTARIO

Transcription:

Commissioning Round for 2019-20 Arts and Religious Programmes Timetable and Guidelines to making programmes for BBC World Service The Commissioning Timetable Monday 15 th October 2018 Commissioning Launch in the 4 th Floor Collaboration Area, New Broadcasting House. Guidelines will be published on http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/3hvsnfcdkwdtw0tffb81fbv/bbc-world-service Monday 15th October - Tuesday 13th November (1200 noon) Submissions for initial proposals into Proteus. At this stage Commissioning Editors only require THREE LINE DESCRIPTIONS. Please use the SHORT SYNOPSIS box only Monday 19 th November Pre-Offers Results published in Proteus. Tuesday 18th December (1200 noon) Final offers deadline to submit your proposals into Proteus. February 2018 Results will be published in Proteus. Contacts Mary Hockaday, Controller mary.hockaday@bbc.co.uk Steve Titherington, Senior Commissioning Editor steve.titherington@bbc.co.uk Simon Pitts, Commissioning Editor simon.pitts@bbc.co.uk Murray Holgate, Network Manager Murray.holgate@bbc.co.uk Anna Doble, Digital Editor Anna.doble@bbc.co.uk Vanessa Morris & Karen Howe, Commissioning Coordinators vanessamorris&karenhowe@bbc.co.uk 1

Guide Prices Heart and Soul 12 26 29 6K Witness 20 9 00 1.3K Sporting Witness 20 9 00 1.3K The Cultural Frontline 6 22 59 and 26 29 6.6K In the Studio 16 22 59 6.6K The Proteus system is used for the submission of offers. All proposals must be delivered in Proteus. We do not require hard copies of any proposals. BBC departments access PROTEUS via http://proteuslive.radio.bbc.co.uk/proteus-web/login.action Independent companies access PROTEUS via a portal: https://ext-proteus.external.bbc.co.uk/proteus-web/login.action Enter in: World Service Commissioning Round 2019-2020 Commissioning Year: 20192020 Commissioning Round: 1 2

World Service English The BBC World Service is a 24-7 network of news, current affairs and rich radio. News programmes include Newshour, The Newsroom, Outside Source and Newsday. Alongside this spine of News content we have programmes specializing in sport, business, science, culture, debate, human interest and analysis. With new investment, we have been able to add to the range and depth of programmes on the network and related digital content. We have a massive global audience (and an important audience in the UK) who all share a sense of curiosity about the world and a desire to connect with that world. Our audience is everywhere. Our surveys show the biggest single audiences are in the United States and Africa, but listeners find us on short-wave, FM, online and mobile in just about every country. That audience is increasing and we now reach more than 79 million people. Our audience is both discerning and demanding. They are also making a choice to listen to us. In most places there will be increasingly vibrant local media and access to other global media, so we have to be both appealing and relevant. The World Service schedule is flexible so we can adapt to breaking news, but we always try to ensure there s a broad range of topics and styles on the Network. Five minute news bulletins sit at the top of every hour and a two minute summary of world news at the bottom of every hour, so News is an ever present part of the Network. But increasingly we want to take people on a journey that offers much more in terms of a portrait of the world and how we live. We want programmes that stimulate thought, provoke discussion and offer solutions as well as show problems. We want to be a place where people who care about the world can understand it better in all aspects of life. Alongside the returning highly popular strand Heart and Soul we have launched newer programmes which continue to evolve the sound and approach of the Network - and culture is at the heart of it. All take a conversational, contemporary and global approach, but are as sharp and rigorous as ever. Radio and Digital Increasingly, we reach audiences via digital and social platforms. This document includes notes on how to make sure your content will thrive in this arena. We may want a separate podcast, online feature material, photographs, clips, quotes, facts and short form visuals, and we ll discuss with you how to promote your programme as a podcast. This is all designed to bring more audiences to your content. 3

What we are looking for? Our programmes are clever, conversational and inclusive. They should be effortlessly international and stand up to scrutiny from the people or country being discussed in the programme as well as being resonant for the widest audiences. Our mission is to connect, explain, inform and also to celebrate great listening and fantastic stories. We need to be funny as well as serious, to challenge preconceptions, and reveal a world which is exciting as well as sometimes frightening. We create a space for deeply personal views and experiences to be expressed freely. We will put all the resources necessary to make what we do together the very best it can be. We want great story-tellers to speak to the world. We love rich sound and a sense of place; being where our audience is. We seek engaging, challenging ideas led by the brightest narrators and production. And we welcome collaboration, bringing in fresh talent and simply trying something new. Be ambitious. 4

Slot Title: Heart and Soul Commissioner: Simon Pitts Duration: 26 29 TX: Weekend 90 CHARS As it appears on digital radios Personal approaches to faith and spirituality. SPOKEN BILLING A rip and read description of the programme. Heart and Soul explores personal experience of spirituality and faith from all of the traditions. OBJECTIVE CONTENT, FORMAT & STYLE How does this programme help the listener? Listeners gain knowledge of all the faiths. Exploration of the many ways faith influences our lives. Programmes also give context to current affairs. The design brief for programme makers. Most programmes are singles though there is scope to offer a two-three part mini-series. Programmes are typically documentary format but multilocation single-subject interview treatments are also welcome. Successful programmes feature strong personal stories rooted in community. Key is a strong sense of place with lavish sound pictures. Programmes also feature rigorous reporting with robust investigation into contentious issues and current ethical dilemmas. Programmes feature BBC branding at the intro, mid-points and ending and these are delivered by the presenter. Accompanying digital elements for our web and social channels are important to the success of each audio programme. Formats such as video, stills galleries and so on are essential. Our resources assist the creation of digital assets, and it s vital that these are as ambitious as the audio programme. Some programmes are part of collaborations across platforms, WS Language services and other BBC networks. PODCAST YES We will require a podcast version of your programme and may require an additional podcast-specific introduction. 5

Slot Title: Witness Commissioner: Steve Titherington Editor: Kirsty Reid Duration: 9 0 0 TX: Mon-Fri 90 CHARS As it appears on digital radios History told by the people who were there. SPOKEN BILLING A rip and read description of the programme. We hear from those who saw for themselves key events in history. DESCRIPTION A summary for partners. Extraordinary moments of time brought to life by those who were there. The story of our times told by the people who witnessed history being made. Revealing history through recollection and archive. OBJECTIVE How does this programme help the listener? To provide an historical perspective to events To bring you the human story. To provide a different perspective from live daily news. To provide a different texture from live daily news CONTENT, FORMAT & STYLE The design brief for programme makers. It has a less hurried, more carefully built approach than is usually possible with reportage and live news Use of archive material and actuality BBC branding and set-up It should be factual, and clear in style. The programme should work as a self-contained module as a stand-alone on the schedule and for use by re-broadcasters. Witness will now also form an integral and important part of Outlook as a presenter introduced final segment to the programme. Each episode may need to be adapted for podcast and digital use. PODCAST YES 6

Slot Title: Sporting Witness Commissioner: Steve Titherington Editor: Simon Watts Duration: 9 0 0 TX: Weekends 90 CHARS As it appears on digital radios Key events in sporting history brought to life by the people who were there. SPOKEN BILLING DESCRIPTION OBJECTIVE CONTENT, FORMAT & STYLE PODCAST A rip and read description of the programme. We hear from those who saw for themselves key events in Sporting history. A summary for partners. Key events in sporting history brought to life by the people who were there. The story of our times told by the people who witnessed sporting history being made, through recollection and archive. The inside and personal story of the key sporting moments that seized the world s attention. Using archive and personal recollections from the athletes themselves Sporting Witness usually concentrates on a single indepth interview and uses minimal links. This is a series that gets to the bottom of well-known sporting myths as well as tackling less familiar tales of inspiration and achievement. How does this programme help the listener? To provide a sporting historical perspective to events To bring you the human story. To provide a different perspective from live daily news. To provide a different texture from live daily news The design brief for programme makers. It has a less hurried, more carefully built approach than is usually possible with reportage and live news Use of archive material and actuality BBC branding and set-up It should be factual, and clear in style. The programme should work as a self-contained module as a stand-alone on the schedule and for use by re-broadcasters. Sporting Witness will now also form an integral and important part of Sportshour as a presenter introduced final segment to the programme. Each episode may need to be adapted to podcast and digital delivery. YES 7

Slot Title: Commissioner: Duration: TX: The Cultural Frontline Simon Pitts Two durations 22 59" and 26'29 Weekend 90 CHARACTERS Looking at our world through artists eyes. DESCRIPTION THE CULTURAL FRONTLINE is a youthful weekly programme meeting the creative artists in TV, film, performing and visual arts, design, the media and entertainment whose work and ideas are influencing our world. OBJECTIVE Vivid topical culture programming for non-specialist audiences. The latest from artists and their visceral, thoughtful, rebellious, dynamic and brilliant engagement with contemporary global culture. Strong sense of contemporary location with sound-rich, on-the-ground journalism. CONTENT, FORMAT AND STYLE For the second year we are inviting a limited number of ambitious and laterally creative bids for programming that builds on the regular weekly edition. We are looking for programming bursting with intellectual and empathetic curiosity, brimming with editorial purpose, and for guided storytelling led by richly-integrated local figures. Shortlisted bids will demonstrate stand-out editorial distinctiveness, ambition for barelycontainable shareability and will all be accessible to the widest general World Service English audiences, with strong interest for younger and female audiences. Offers may be for singles, pairs or trios. These do not need to be pitched as sequential TX - programmes and can be individually scheduled to go out across the next financial year. It will be very helpful to attach reporters or presenters with must-tell-you charisma, together with some named guests on offers. Accompanying 1-2 minute stand-alone digital stories for our web and social channels in such formats as video, FB Live, binaural sound and so on are an important part of the offer. Please consider the potential for collaborations with other programming on WS or other production units and do indicate your suggested TX dates and diary pegs. PODCAST YES We will require a podcast version of the programme. 8

Slot Title: Commissioner: In the Studio Simon Pitts Duration: 2 6 2 9 TX: Tuesday 90 CHARACTERS With the world s artistic elite as they make their work SPOKEN BILLING We meet the world s creative elite: artists of all kinds, designers, musicians and performers as they make their work OBJECTIVE In The Studio follows stars and cultural leaders. Programmes bring audiences into the minds of creative figures of all stripes: designers, visual artists, architects, film-makers and musicians as they make their work. This is luxury culture programming aimed the widest non-specialist audiences. Editions variously offer insights into the creative process, special behind-the-scenes access and late-career knowledge-transfer. CONTENT, FORMAT AND STYLE Programmes quickly become intimate with creative minds. Recorded over at least two sittings each programme gains the trust of its subjects leaders in their fields who talk freely about what they are working on while they are making it. With wit, humour and style, programmes capture influences, production complexities and contradictions, serendipitous discovery and more. IN THE STUDIO is intelligent, distinctive and warmly accessible radio. The strand is for the widest listenership: for general, female and young audiences. Key is the marriage of treatment and subject. The right presenters bring insight and accessibility and the strand showcases diverse, original and creative production styles. Tonally inclusive treatments may include reporter-led single editions, specialist/celebrity-led encounters, longitudinal production over months, and more. Programmes without an engaged narrator work less well than those led by a reporter or presenter. Examples of Previous Commissions include Jack Reacher novelist Lee Child as he writes in NYC, Hofesh Schechter in rehearsal, the music composer of Candy Crush creating a new game soundtrack, the David Simon-presented interviews with Kwame Kwei-Armah as he directs theatre, Joanna Lumley s programme with shoe designer Christian Louboutin, Canadian world champion ice-skaters Eric Radford and Meagan Duhamel on creating their routine for the 2018 Winter Olympics, Ai Weiwei in Berlin, Marlon James, Batman comic artist Frank Quitely and many more. This year we are looking to further develop the editorial ambition and welcome pitches featuring the world s creative elite in the widest lateral senses. IN THE STUDIO is never focussed on the end cultural product (eg. the finished book, the completed film or released album) and interviews always take place during the process of creative production. Programmes never feel as if they are PR-ed or promoting a release or product. 9

Each programme bid should indicate plans for related social and web content suitable for the BBC WSE Facebook account and webpages. PODCAST YES There is a forthcoming bespoke podcast series of In The Studio. We will require an adapted version of your programme and may ask for a separate additional introduction. 10

Titles and Descriptions It s not just the programmes that need to have a sense of excitement and the ability to create curiosity in our audience and potential audience. Whatever we publish - titles, billings, online descriptions etc. (known as metadata ) - have an effect on how the audience reacts to what we offer and how your programme performs on the web. Programme titles and descriptions should always be written in a way that encourages new audiences to listen to them, and ensures visibility and findability across the web - in podcast provider spaces (such as itunes), search engine results (such as Google) and other tech, such as voice-activated systems (such as Alexa). We need to have titles and programme descriptions five weeks before the transmission date. This ensures that both Press and Publicity have time to adequately promote the programme, and that these descriptions are ready in time for our automated systems. It can be difficult to update programme descriptions at some of their publication sites if the information arrives too close to transmission. Titles Titles should stand out in listings and schedules. They should be searchable, clickable and clear so the audience understands the topic of your programme. Poetic puns, word play or obscure cultural references should be avoided. They should be concise and succinct, and no more than eight words. Writing Programme Descriptions We need you to provide 2 different lengths of programme description (or information): 1 A short description - 90 characters (approx. 12 words), 1 A long description - 1800 characters (about 250 words). It is also important to provide different information for each part of a series if you are making more than one programme. Whatever the length, make these clear, useful and informative, and demonstrate the value of your programme. If these rules are followed then you can dramatically improve the chances of potential listeners both finding and listening to your programme. These are the rules: Writing for publication (Online or Press) is not the same as writing a radio script. Don't copy and paste the top of your script or the original proposal summary, to make do for your online text. It doesn t work for the reasons outlined below The first 8-10 words are the most important. Do not waste valuable character count with phrases such as "In this week's programme" as many digital devices will cut off after the first few words. Instead, encapsulate the subject matter efficiently and get to the point straightaway. Make these useful, relevant and interesting. Think about where the programme descriptions will appear (mobile 11

phones, on digital listings, in social media posts and other electronic programme guides, etc. See below ). Use images or metaphors instead of statistics e.g. 'the tongue of a blue whale is the size of an elephant' Decide on one tense and stick to it. Present tense is often best Explain acronyms and abbreviations Don t forget to spellcheck! Include keywords your audience would use to find your programme in Google or itunes. 80% of us find online content this way. Use strong words and short sentences. Tease and intrigue to illustrate the story, don't describe it. Darren weighs 57 stone - and he's only 13-years-old. He hasn t left his bed for over three years. Meet him at his home in Philadelphia. NOT: A quirky documentary delineating the everyday life of the world s most obese teenager. Provide context to make the subject matter more intriguing: The diabetes treatment insulin has been with us for 90 years, but in countries like Mali, insulin costs are as high as 40% of annual income. Why does the treatment cost so much and how can children in countries like Mali get access to it? Your writing should be true, accurate and unambiguous. Check that everything s 100% legally and editorially correct. Avoid: Using today, tomorrow, next week etc. The name of your presenter or guests in the first paragraph, unless they are A-listers that a global audience will recognise Lists of questions Radio-speak e.g. 'We discuss / find out more / take a sideways look at / send our roving reporter out to...' Lots of clauses and commas in sentences Over-flowery prose Clichés e.g. You could cut the atmosphere with a knife With this in mind you can expand the short description to the long version. But don t forget that the first eight to 10 words are still the most important whatever the length of the programme description. Here is an example of how this can work: Short How are Kazakhstan's gerbils preventing an outbreak of the bubonic plague among humans? Long 12

The underground world of Kazakhstan's great gerbils harbours a deadly secret - the bubonic plague. Instead of dying out with the Great Fire, the Black Death continues to thrive in groups of wild animals across Africa, Asia and the Americas. With the risk of cross-transmission and the apparent rise in human deaths from the plague, scientists need to find ways of controlling it. Infectious disease expert Mike Begon from the University of Liverpool explains how the unique transmission of the disease through gerbil populations can help predict plague outbreaks, and how work on an early warning system could help prevent future outbreaks in both wildlife and humans. To look at the wider implications of wildlife disease, animal epidemiologist Andrew Cunningham from the Zoological Society of London explains how plague and other illnesses can drive species to extinction. He also discusses how controlling global trade including the import of crates of bananas - could help stop wildlife diseases in their tracks Digital Assets In order to reach as many people as possible with your content, you need to think from early on about digital and social platforms. If you have pictures associated with your programme, great images will improve the visibility of your programme, extending its shelf life, and help reach a new, digital audience. It s much easier to source these at the time you make your programme, so plan ahead. These should be delivered with the programme information described above, and you should ensure these are rights-cleared before offering them. This usually means that either you have taken them yourself, or you have the written permission of the person who took them. This permission should include use on BBC websites and on social media accounts in perpetuity. If you are taking pictures of your contributors, please check they are happy with their picture appearing on the BBC site and BBC social media accounts. Think about how thumbstopping your images can be what will make an audience stop and click when they see your image? Take images of the locations and contributors and anything that tell the story of your programme visually. You can take these with your phone, but make sure the images are in focus, high resolution and carefully composed. Please don t use images of presenters or the programme team. Images should work in a landscape format, but also be square safe as many devices, including the new BBC Sounds app (more on that below), will crop to the central area of the image. You may also get a commission for a text feature piece from the BBC News site off the back of your programme several of our spin-off articles have had over 2m+ page impressions. We may talk to you about complementary engagement e.g. a Facebook live. 13

Video or visualized audio and graphics can also be an important part of reaching audiences and supporting your programme. The most important thing, if you get a commission, is to talk to us early about digital, social and short-form content so you are aware of our guidelines, templates and narrative style. You can contact the Digital Media team on Wsncamultimedia@bbc.co.uk If there are complexities with rights, especially around third party publication of the photographs, please consult vanessamorris&karenhowe@bbc.co.uk You should also discuss plans for any video with a senior producer from our digital team in advance. They can be contacted on Wsncamultimedia@bbc.co.uk 14

Where do these descriptions/pictures appear? Short descriptions appear in many places, including the Episode Guide on the BBC World Service website. 15

They also appear on BBC Sounds: On social media feeds and listings: Medium descriptions appear on podcast providers, such as isite. Long descriptions appear on the programme page on the World Service website: 16

And the BBC Search results page: And on Google search pages: 17

And pictures are used on all BBC World Service social media accounts: 18

BBC News website Magazine text features: And in Press and Publicity Information: Business Development publishes a monthly guide to the programmes on World Service and the long descriptions are essential for this. This guide goes to many of our most important partners and is well used, particularly in the US and Australasia. In addition the BBC Press Office will use the long descriptions as the basis for press releases which can generate interest from reviewers both in the UK press and online, and internationally. 19

BBC Sounds BBC Sounds is due to launch in October 2018. This will replace iplayerradio the way for audiences to listen live, catch up and discover radio programmes. You can find Sounds via the BBC radio homepage and is also available as an app via any App Store search for BBC Sounds. Sounds will collate programmes from across the radio networks 1. By genre e.g. Documentaries, Food & Drink and Science & Technology 2. And by curated collections Be Curious, Cliffhangers So there are even more ways that your programmes can be found and as these grabs show, images and descriptions are even more important. 20

How do I deliver the Programme Information? You should fill in the template shown below and send it to vanessamorris&karenhowe@bbc.co.uk at eight weeks before transmission. The template will be sent to you with the confirmation of commission. Short Description (90 characters / 12 words) Long Description (1800 characters / 250 words) 21

The Programme The World Service English schedule runs to a fixed time clock. This means that all programme slots at the same point in any hour have the same duration, although there can be some variation in this at the weekend and for special commissions. The World Service Clock 22

This is the standard World Service clock (shown above) with fixed times in each hour when programmes start and end, and also showing when trails and billboards are inserted. The standard hour starts with a 1 minute billboard which will trail what is going to follow on the network in 5 minutes time after the news. The news starts at 1 minute past and runs to 6 minutes past, but a post is inserted at 4 minutes past the hour that allows partner stations to leave the bulletin if they only wish to take 3 minutes of it. A post is just a short (2 second) pause that allows partner stations to leave in a way that sounds natural it is often preceded by a station ident. The post at 6 minutes past marks the end of the news bulletin and the start of the next programme. This programme then runs until 29 minutes past the hour when there is another post. There is then a one minute trail slot which ends on another post at 30 minutes past. At 30 minutes past the hour there is a 30 second slot for another billboard which will trail whatever is being broadcast in the back half of the hour. This ends with a post at 30 minutes and 30 seconds past the hour. A 2 minute news summary follows which ends on a post at 32 minutes and 30 seconds, after which the programme material in the back half of the hour is broadcast. This slot continues until 59 minutes past the hour when there is another post. The remaining minute of the hour is filled with trails and a prelude/station ident. This is the basic clock. At weekends when we are aiming for a more relaxed listen, some programmes have all the posts at the bottom of the hour removed and the trail slot, the billboard and the news summary are not broadcast. This allows a single programme item to run from 6 minutes past the hour to 50 or 59 minutes past the hour. This is often described as an un-clocked hour or unclocked 50 minutes The phrase un-clocked refers to the absence of the posts at the bottom of the hour. The posts at the top of the hour are almost never removed. To cope with this range of different programme lengths and whether or not there are posts at the bottom of the hour we have the following programme slot descriptions: Programmes of less than 30 minutes duration These programmes can have similar overall durations (if the billboard is included in the duration) so they are differentiated by the duration of the main body of the programme. They appear in either the front half or the back half of the hour. 23 minute (front half) 1 minute billboard at the top of the hour. 23 minute main programme. Please see clock diagram in the appendix. 23

The exact audio durations for the slots outlined above are 1 second shorter than the length of the available slot. So the audio durations are: Top Billboard 59 Programme 22 59 26 30 (back half ) 30 second billboard at 30 minutes the hour. 26 minute and 30 second main programme. Please see clock diagram in the appendix. The exact audio durations for the slots outlined above are 1 second shorter than the length of the available slot. So the audio durations are: Top Billboard 29 Programme 26 29 9 00 Pro grammes These programmes can appear in the front half of the hour or the back half, either between the 20 minute post and the 29 minute post or between the 50 minute post and the 59 minute post. They do not normally require a billboard. Again the exact audio duration is 1 second shorter than the length of the available slot. So the audio duration is: Programme 8 59 Managing the Clock Self-Contained Programmes World Service programmes should always be self-contained e.g. the presenter introduces the programme themselves and closes the programme there is no continuity as is common on other networks. This is to make sure all World Service programmes are lively and fresh and there is an immediate and direct relationship between the presenter and the audience the presenter is not a guest in someone else s room. This can appear daunting if you are used to having a continuity announcer to set up your programme for you, but it can be liberating. Both as producer and presenter you are much freer to establish the tone, pace and style of your programme at the very beginning of the programme, and it helps to bring the audience immediately to mind as the people you are talking to. There are no rules about how this should be done, but there are some guidelines that will help structure both the programme billboard(s) and the start and end of programmes and programme parts. 24

The first billboard... This is the billboard that starts the programme. In front-of-hour programmes and programmes longer than half an hour this will be at the top of the hour and will be a minute long. For back half programmes this will be 30. In either case these are the two most valuable times on the network and the presenter needs to tell the audience who they are, what station they re listening to and why they should stay listening for what follows the news. The billboard should be lively and conversational in style but not rushed don t try and cram everything in. Keeping the audience engaged in your programme through a 5 minute bulletin can feel like a big challenge. But you do have a whole minute to hook the audience. In that minute you need to share your passion with the audience and engage them with something from the programme that will make them curious, happy, puzzled etc. and impatient to hear more. As well as saying who you are and what the station is, there should be at least one clip from the programme, if possible the best excerpt from the programme, to drive their curiosity and give them a clear idea of what the programme is about. The minute can end with reiterating who you are, and that you ll be back in 5 minutes, or after the news. The same also applies to the shorter, bottom of the hour billboard. You need to say who you are, what the station is and what the programme that follows is about, and engage the audience s curiosity or emotions. It is obviously harder to get a clip into such a short duration, but if you do have a short money shot clip that needs little setting up, then use it, but a narrator-only billboard can also be very strong. The Programme Opening You cannot assume the listener has heard the billboard - so the programme needs to start as if the listener has only just started listening or only heard the news. Like the billboard, the start of the programme needs to be engaging, conversational and relaxed. You don t have to start with Hello, I m Jean Presenter and you re listening to the BBC World Service. Why not Is the world round? I'm Jean Presenter and for the BBC World Service, I'll be investigating.."? You need then to explain what the programme is about, why this matters, and how you re going to show them this matters. In other words there s no reason not to talk about the programme itself and what it is doing, while also telling the stories within the programme. This should include reminders of who the presenter is and the station. You can do this signposting as often as feels comfortable within the programme and we still don t do enough of it. Half the audience to WS English comes from partners, and we are losing attribution, and hence credit from the audience, for what we do. There should be at least one station ident within the body of the programme. The End of the Programme At the end of programme the presenter will close the programme. If it is a requirement to credit the producer and, in the case of an independent production, the production company as well this should be done in an informal and conversational manner in keeping with the style of the programme. There is no obligation for in-house productions to credit producers and editors and it is not the WS style to do so. If it's a series, trail ahead to the next part. Do this in a way that fits into the flow of the preceding programme. 25

Podcasts BBC World Service English is very serious about podcasting. We aim to create the world s favourite podcasts and to become one of the market leaders, with a podcast collection that inspires, entertains and informs - great podcasts, amazing audio, new audiences. We currently reach hundreds of thousands of extra listeners every week through our podcasts and we aim to increase that further. Central to our WSE Podcast Strategy is reaching new and underserved audiences around the world. Podcast listeners tend to be younger than more traditional broadcast audiences and they might otherwise not hear/see/read our content. We aim to increase download figures each year. We could have the best podcast ever made but if nobody knows about it, no one will hear it. Descriptions, publicity and marketing are vital. In some cases, we will ask for extra audio or presenter links to help trail our podcasts. For some strands, we may ask for podcast-specific descriptions. The majority of our podcasts are heard via podcast apps and the descriptions need to be enticing, punchy and powerful enough to sell the podcast in the best possible way. They need to be short and to the point and the first few words are vital. In most cases, the name of the reporter or presenter is not relevant the description should be about why this particular podcast needs to be heard. There may also be changes in the way the programme needs to be constructed for podcast listening. Requirements will be clearly indicated in the TX confirmation email. Due to a change in the way we may be starting our podcasts, we might require bespoke additional introductions to your podcast, which will act as short billboards. We may also ask for internal branding to be changed or removed to fit with podcast requirements. Again, this will be clearly indicated. It can be delivered in the same way as the TX version, with a separate file name indicating that it is for podcasting. There are a number of rights restrictions applying to podcasts particularly around the use of commercial music. You can find the guidelines below. Be aware that if any music is not cleared for use in podcasts it will have to be edited out. Guide to using music and other extracts in Podcasts Commercial recordings can be included in audio podcasts subject to the following: The maximum duration for any commercial recording of jazz or classical music used in a podcast is 60 seconds clean. The maximum duration for all other commercial recordings is 30 seconds clean. The commercial recording/s must have been part of the original broadcast programme. (Commercial recordings that have not been part of the broadcast cannot be included in a podcast). Podcasts which are about music and/or routinely feature music as part of the core content of the podcast must be restricted to the UK. 26

Note: 'Clean' means without voiceover or other sound. Therefore durations can be longer than 30 (or 60) seconds where there is voiceover, but the "clean" element must not exceed 30 (or 60) seconds. You should only use a max of 30 (or 60) seconds clean from any one commercial recording/track in one podcast episode. There are particular restrictions on the use of particular commercial music in podcasts. Any queries about the use of music in BBC podcasts please contact Chris Hutchinson in the Music Copyright team on x67126. Use of specially composed and library music: All podcasts can feature specially composed and library music (e.g. beds, jingles and stings), with no restriction on duration. Use of extracts of books, films and plays: If you were cleared under Fair Dealing to include such a clip in the original broadcast for the purpose of criticism and review, and it was also cleared to make this available via BBC iplayer, then you can include it in the podcast. As for a broadcast, these clips must: Be kept as short as possible - just enough to make the point. Be properly acknowledged - give the title of the work and the author (production company or studio for a film clip and, ideally, the director). Have previously been made available to the public. bbcworldservice.com Programme pages on the website are set up automatically. If you are an in-house producer you will be able to update your programme pages yourself. If you are an independent producer the programme information you have sent to us will be used by the World Service online team to make your programme page. Rights All rights for music, presenters or copyright material need to be cleared for your programme before it can be broadcast. If you are an independent producer this is part of the contract you make with the BBC when you agree to produce the programme. What rights need to be cleared are explained in the contract. If you are an in-house producer you must ensure that all underlying rights are cleared before broadcast. You can take advice on this from your own Talent Rights advisors. Editorial Guidelines If you are an independent producer and need to consult the BBC s editorial guidelines they can be found here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/guidelines/editorialguidelines/ It is essential that all 27

material contained within a programme adheres to these guidelines and advice should be sought at the earliest stage possible. Confirmation of Commission This will be emailed to you by the Commissioning team when your programme has been commissioned and has been given a preliminary slot in our schedules. Contains working title, slot, programme duration, proposed TX dates and contact details. These details are subject to change. TX Confirmation This will be emailed to you five weeks in advance of TX, when the programme is scheduled. This will confirm transmission placings, programme title, duration, details of opening and closing announcements and whether or not a billboard is required. The email will also come with all necessary documents (e.g. Ofcom Compliance Form, if necessary, Presentation Details) and will include details of how to complete and where to then send the documents. TX amendment This will be sent to you if a change has been made to the scheduling, transmission or delivery arrangements for a programme after the TX Confirmation has been sent. How and where should I deliver my programme? Programmes should be delivered to the WSE Channel Management team as audio files* via VCS Highlander\VCS Dira Transfers. If you are working outside of the BBC network you can use a BBC provided MediaShuttle account which must be set up in advance. Precise details should be discussed and agreed with Channel Management at least one week before the delivery deadline, which will be given on your TX Confirmation email. You can contact the team on (020 361) 40342 or email wsenglishchannelmanagementteam@bbc.co.uk. (*Audio files should be either.wav or.flac, and should be 2-channel stereo, 48kHz, 16bit) What is the delivery deadline? Deadlines vary and can be found on your programme's Transmission Confirmation email sent five weeks before transmission. Programmes that are commissioned less than 5 weeks before transmission should agree a delivery date with their commissioner when they are commissioned. Listening copies should be delivered 2 weeks before transmission date. TX versions of documentaries and dramas should be delivered five days before broadcast. Those programmes with content relevant to a specific day should arrive before 12:00 on the day of TX for. For programmes containing material relevant to a specific week the deadline is 16:00 on the day before TX. These may vary for independent productions. 28

Presentation Details If your programme is self-contained, we do not require presentation details. If it is not selfcontained and you require us to voice additional continuity announcements or a billboard, please fill in a Pres Details template (which you can download from here) http://jportal.bbc.co.uk/compliance/globalnews/templates/) and send it to: WSENGLISHchannelmanagementteam@bbc.co.uk. OFCOM Compliance Form All recorded programmes must have a compliance form. They cannot be broadcast without one. For internal BBC users, this should be submitted using the Jportal Global News Compliance site here: http://jportal.bbc.co.uk/compliance/globalnews/pages/default.aspx If you need any help using this system or are not able to access it, please contact WS English Channel Management on x02 40342 (020 361 40342) If you re an independent production company, you will be sent a blank compliance form template (attached to your TX Confirmation email). Please fill this in and send it to vanessamorris&karenhowe@bbc.co.uk. When and where is the programme going out? Your programme will be broadcast on various WS channels, often appearing three or four times on each during the course of its run. Details of these exact times and channels are available on request but we will send you details of the first and last placings on the Tx confirmation. Contact Numbers Murray Holgate, Network Manager 020 361 40340 Vanessa Morris & Karen Howe, Commissioning Coordinators 020 361 40333 Channel Management 020 361 40342 Paul Blythe, Presentation Manager 020 361 40339 29