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Thursday, July 24, 2025

Polaris Bank Trains 500 Journalists On Emerging Digital Journalism Skills

NO fewer than 500 journalists from within and outside Nigeria have undergone training in emerging digi­tal journalism skills, cour­tesy of Polaris Bank.

Management of the bank said the gesture was aimed at equipping the journalists with the skills and knowledge needed to adapt to evolving media trends.

Held in Victoria Island, Lagos, the training had as its theme “Empowering Journalists in the Digital Age: Storytelling, Tools & Transformation.”

The bank in a statement issued on Sunday in Lagos, said the training was de­signed to help media pro­fessionals thrive in today’s fast-evolving journalism landscape.

In his welcome address, Rasheed Bolarinwa, Head of Brand Management and Corporate Communica­tions at Polaris Bank, high­lighted the institution’s longstanding commitment to media education.

He noted that the bank had been investing in such initiatives for over 12 years and remained a leading advocate of digital capacity building in the Nigerian media industry.

According to Bolarin­wa, enhancing journalists’ skills benefits society at large.

Citing a Chinese prov­erb, he explained that Polaris Bank believed in teaching people to fish rather than simply giving them fish—an approach that informed the execu­tive management’s annual support for the seminar.

The training featured sessions by two seasoned journalists: MrTaiwoObe, Founder and Director of The Journalism Clinic, and MrAbayomiAdisa, a senior journalist with the BBC.

Obe reminded partici­pants of journalism’s core mission—to provide citi­zens with the information they needed to make in­formed decisions about their lives, communities, and governments.

He traced the evolution of journalism since the early 2000s, particularly the rise of mobile journal­ism (MoJo), which enabled journalists to capture, produce, and disseminate news content in real-time.

Referencing Reuters’ 2007 introduction of the MoJo Toolkit—which in­cluded the Nokia N95, a small tripod, compact wireless keyboard, solar charger, and external mi­crophone, he explained how mobile tools acceler­ated news delivery.

Obe encouraged jour­nalists to explore free digital applications avail­able on platforms like the Google Play Store.

He said these tools al­lowed reporters to go be­yond traditional text by in­corporating audio, video, and interactive graphics into their storytelling.

He also noted the in­creasing use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Nige­rian newsrooms, espe­cially for tasks such as copy editing, content il­lustration, strategy, and ad targeting—boosting both efficiency and creativity.

Obe further advised journalists to repurpose data from their stories into various formats such as guidebooks, archival materials, issue analyses, Q&As, and even books.

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