Curation Revolution
90
Curation is the next web revolution.
Follow
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith onto Curation Revolution
Scoop.it!

Likes & Dislikes About New Scoop.it UI

Likes & Dislikes About New Scoop.it UI | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

A Few Days Later....

** Instead of erasing I will add to this thread so anyone who is curious can see the entire conversation. Guillaume and Scoop.it passed an important test with flying colors. They MUST continue to evolve their magical tool or its success will kill it. We, the rabid fan base, need to be heard. Both goals were achieved. Scoop.it recovered cherish features and connection to power users and the community was restored recovering any lost trust. My 3 concerns were successfully resolved:


* Loss of the leaderboard - http://www.scoop.it/leaderboard/users  (thanks to Stewart Marshal) is resolved.

* Loss of Daily Counts By Topic - True to his word Guillaume recovered this feature within hours of reading our thread. Daily counts have been added to the topic billboard.

* Not feelng valued or heard - Guillaume was eloquent and full of grace even when I wasn't, the true test of great customer service.

Well done Scoop.it! Well done Scoop.it Powerusers! Well done Scoop.it Community. Thanks to all.

Marty



***** Wow, what a fun day. If you want to see a great example of real time customer service and branding in the dgital age read the comments on this post. Appreciate Guilliaume, Robin, Michele, Stewart's magical leaderboard link and Brian's input. You guys rock so much I tossed a post up on my ScentTrial Marketing blog with my comments (in blue) for what may be the first near real time customer service branding operation ever (lol).

http://scenttrail.blogspot.com/2012/07/likes-and-dislikes-about-new-scoopit-ui.html

Great comments all. Thanks. Marty


***** Note: I started this thread before sunrise Wednesday a day after Scoop.it's UI Changes. I haven't heard from anyone on the Scoop.it team, but some of the most followed and talented curators I know, trust and follow have weighed in with frustration and the kind of frustration not being included creates. I was more optimistic this morning than now at midnight, but that is the nature of most days (lol). I hope Marc's team responds soon with some desire to connect with the community that is trying to help Scoop.it become a critical tool, a magic wand with staying power. After 12 years of Interent marketing and almost 30 of marketing for companies including P&G and M&M/Mars I know that the best way to create real brand PAIN is arrogance combined with being deaf to feedback. I hope, and pray since that seems appropriate before going to sleep, Scoop.it has a better day tomorrow :). The most recent post on this thread is at the bottom. Marty

AM. Wednesday
Scoop.it is a favorite curation tool. It has rapidly become my social media hub, the place I organize the rest of my social media curation. This week Scoop.it changed their UI and won some important battles and lost a few. Here is a recap:

Winners

* UI - The new User Interface is more visual and engaging another example of visuals beating textuals and well done.

* Presentation Layer - The Scoop.it magazine format didn't change so what the customer of your curation sees remains the same also well done since changes there could rock the boat.

* SEO Layer - Scoop.it has real SEO strength. I've owned absolute #1 on Curation Revolution for over a year and you thankfully haven't changed anything there (that I can see on a quick pass). Kudos to understanding SEO as well as you do! The SEO advantage of a platform is lost on many, many are selfish about its benefits (FB and Twitter) and you aren't either SEO Stupid or selfish. KUDOS!

* Tool Layout - The functional layout of tools such as the Rescoop button is better, more clear and more visual. Harder now to get one button confused with another.


Overall I would say the behind the curtain admin experience improved with these changes.

Losers

* Trending Topics - No Visitor Counts On My Profile Anymore


Thought this was resolved, but it is not. The number is aggregate and what we need, and used to have, is today's visitor numbers by topic. That number helps manage across the 10 different topics I curate. Without knowing what is trending I might step on my own curation or not know when something is a laggard and I need to move on. Wish you would bring back the Today visitor count.


* Leaderboard - Don't See My Curator Set Anymore, Those With Visitor Numbers Around Me


http://www.scoop.it/leaderboard/users (thanks to Stewart Marshal for finding this magic link so we can all visit old friends)


One of the most motivating things was to see my immediate curation set, curators above and below my current viewer numbers. When you first launched I could see the top of the stack and that was DEMOTIVATING. Seeing how many visitors Robin or Michele have before I woke up can be intimidating and made my curation efforts feel small. I know that is goofystupid, but the human mind works in strange ways espcially regarding numbers. I used the leaderboard as a form of feedback loop too. If my day was down in viewers I checked to see if others in my set were down too. Sometimes the answer to that question was yes such as on a holiday weekend and sometimes I was lagging behind and needed to get going. I thought one of the most intelligent gamification move was showing me the views of the curators above and below as that helped motivate me to get moving without a sense of intimidation or the futility of it all. Removing that feedback has us back to the same place as when you started since My Community now shows the top of the Scoop.it stack (not where I am by far) and so it feels like the community is for uber-curators like Robin and Michele and not the little guys (like me LOL). Hope you can bring back one of the most intelligent leaderboards I've ever seen.


Summary
The fact this post is weighted toward losers is only because it takes more explanation to cover dislikes NOT because the new UI is more negative than positive. The new UI is net positive for sure, but the real time analytics and leaderboard encouragement have been harmed. Hope you can build back since my curation will be less effective and less motivated.

***** Midnight Wednesday
Robin and Michele have both checked in now and they are NOT happy. If Susan weighs in soon that it the trifecta of several of Scoop.it's top curators. I think Scoop.it is learning a tough but valuable lesson. When you create a community curation tool YOU don't own it - WE DO.

Believe me I know how confusing this can be. Sitting in your offices watching your traffic counts esclate is heady stuff, but don't be fooled. The only place Scoop.it exists is in the hearts and minds of people like Robin, Michele, Susan and me. If you make such sweeping changes without consulting the top of the stack, your power users, then the message to me is beyond clear - I matter not at all.

I pay for Scoop.it myself. My company has offered but I don't want a conflict if I leave to ride a bicycle across Canada in a year (I left my last job to ride a bicycle across America raising almost $30K for cancer research :). I view Scoop.it as important and valuable enough to pay for it myself. The $1,000 I pay you PALES in comparison to my most valuable treasure - my time. I can make more money, but making more time is impossible. As a cancer survivor when you disrespect my time, Robin's time and Michele's time you have done the equivelant of slapped me (and them) hard across the face.

I've been punched in the face before (http://scenttrail.blogspot.com/2008/06/punched-in-face.html ) and it smarts and I got over it. This slap seems more painful because I'm so invested in something that apparently doesn't give a hoot about me :(. I pay you money I would otherwise donate to cancer research. I give you my most valuable non-renewable resource - my time. How is it Robin, Michele, me and others have no say, no membership worth consideration and care?

Come on Marc and Guillaume you are better than this, your team is better than this and we the users of this magic wand you've created deserve better than this. We live in a time of magic wands. The surest way to lose our hearts and minds is to slap us across the face. I would do less of that starting with NOW. I recommend creating an advisory group made up of the Robins and Micheles to help guide actions like the one you took a few days ago, guide future community revisions better going forward.

Marty


Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, July 19, 2012 9:03 PM
Guillaume,
FYI, I just did something I've never done before - I drove a link into my profile page because it is a thing of magazine-like beauty. Figuring out how to get what I wanted in the window took a little figuring (largest image), but now I have it tuned AND I'm changing several aspects of my curation to support your new UI including:

* Shorter headlines as shorter works better in that space below the image (they work better anyway so your new UI helps do the right thing.
* Better visuals and in that 400 x 200 range. At first I was having trouble getting the image positioned where I wanted. Kept testing and found the sweet spot.
* Changed my titles to create an umbrella since now that I can see my Scoop.it sections like a magazine it makes sense to treat each section like a subsection of a larger idea (in my case Revolution).

Two things I wish I could do:

* Wish I could move boxes or create a more clear hierarchy by changing the size of 2 to 4 boxes. When everything is equal in size and the default order is yours then I can't react to the feedback loops I'm getting. This slows down my thinking of my Profile as the master magazine and the subsections, the revolutions, as pliable blocks capable of responding to what I see and what the community tells me. Today I had Mobile Revolution blow up. If I could have moved it to top left I would have pushed traffic to the profile in the hopes of helping it blow up bigger (lol).

* I tied two scoops about Facebook together today by physically moving them. Problem is that doesn't last past the next update. These two scoops form an A and B version of an "article" and need to move together across time. Curation will split them and I have to use tags to pull them back together and I haven't figured out how to use the tags yet (though I suspect there is real power in there). This ability to tie scoops together into linked groups kind of like you can do with a PowerPoint presentation or with a graphics program would help create the threads within the subsections such as:

* Apple or Android within Mobile Revolution.
* Storytelling within Curation Revolution.

These threads form the magazine within the magazine and may, at some point, earn their way out of the subsection to become a section of their own. I would use analytics to know when such a move would increase reach not split it into too many disparate pieces.

Great job with bringing back our beloved features and with this new UI. The benefits are amazing and we are just getting started. Thanks for fixing the issues with your CDN too (those can be a pain, been there, done that). Marty
gdecugis's comment, July 23, 2012 5:33 PM
Hi Marty. Thanks for the update on the post and the details on how you're using the new UI. I love the fact you're kind of "hacking" it to create additional meaning :-) Great food for thoughts for the team. I'm getting the first suggestion but the second one is unclear to me. Couldn't you do that by linking one post to the other using the permalink?
Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, July 24, 2012 12:56 AM
Guillaume,
Instead of setting the world record for words in a comment box I posted my thoughts to ScentTrail Marketing: http://scenttrail.blogspot.com/2012/07/internet-marketing-secrets-taxonomy-seo.html .

I got into some things I've been thinking about HARD since your new UI. As a Ecommerce Director I always had trouble creating smooth transitions between content and commerce. Facebook is having much the same issue. I think Scoop.it's magazine approach could bridge the commerce / content Rubicon. Shared those thoughts as best as I could this late. Hope they help use see a piece of what I see since ye who solves this particular problem and makes it easy for content and commerce to play together stands to make a few bucks (lol). Night, Marty
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

SEO's Terminal Entropy - New Media Leaders

SEO's Terminal Entropy - New Media Leaders | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
SEO as we've known and practiced it is terminally ill because of the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics. Entropy is killing SEO and that is as it should be.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Written in response to Is SEO Dying? Yes It Is http://www.digitalgossips.com/2013/05/is-seo-dying-yes-it-is.html by Munaz Anjum (@munazanjum) this post is an answer to a friend's question.


J. Nolfo (@JNolfo) asked if I thought SEO was dead or dying. The short answer is YES, but I did add a sixth force to the five SEO Killers Anjum noted:

* Mobile.
* Tech.
* Google.
* Social.
* Us.


The Master Blaster controlling force, I argue in the linked post on @NewMediaLeaderz is E N T R O P Y.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Color Is MASTER of Us ALL: Colors and Conversion

Color Is MASTER of Us ALL: Colors and Conversion | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Color has a powerful psychological influence on the human brain. Learn how others have harnessed it and how you can do the same.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Color Is MASTER of Us All Infographics:

Color and Conversion (here on Curation Revolution)

Color Cordination (http://sco.lt/7FcZ4T on Design Revoluiton)

Color Preference By Gender (http://sco.lt/6pO773 On BI Revolution)

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Lies, Damn Lies, Statistics and the Movies

Lies, Damn Lies, Statistics and the Movies | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
You probably read the recent NYT post about a new method for analyzing script success? Hulk smashes it.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Can We Predict The Future
I believe in our ability to predict the future at least as far as a website is concerned. Websites are like tiny plays with less improv than you might think. After enough math is run through the pipe you know where the water is going and how to make it dance.

This article argues the application of sabermetrics to the movies is an absurd affront and they might be right. What movie to make has many more movie parts than what a visitor to a website needs to see to convert.

In his Foundation Series Asimov created the idea of "Psycho-History". Society was so mathematically advanced it could determine the future in aggregate. I think a web's future can be determined too, again in aggregate. An individual may rogue out, but "VISITORS" as a class are predictable.

My story and sticking to it with the help of my favorite quant (Melinda Thielbar @Mthielbar ). Fascinating article on the other side here though.

No comment yet.
Rescooped by Martin (Marty) Smith from Birth Of The Cool
Scoop.it!

Is Your Website EPIC? Here's How Your Website Can Become A Hero's Journey

Is Your Website EPIC? Here's How Your Website Can Become A Hero's Journey | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

Most Internet marketers agree. Your website must be heroic, a quest of and for greatness. But how can your marketing make customers heroes? Here's How:

Ways To Make Your Customers Heroes Online

* Gamification (nothing like social kudos to reinforce a heroic journey).

* Curate and Use UGC (User Generated Content). 

* Contests (who has the best Tough Mudder Pinterest board etc...).

* Leaderboards (part of gamification, but a constant reminder that a game is going on NOW). 

 

Website design tips and several examples of "heroic" websites are included. If you know of great heroic online experiences please share so we can curate in.  

Elsie Barone's curator insight, May 16, 2:36 PM

Very Good Information;

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Twitter Rocks TV: Partnership with Fox, ESPN [Good News, Bad News]

Twitter Rocks TV: Partnership with Fox, ESPN [Good News, Bad News] | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Los Angeles Times
Fox, Twitter team up to promote TV shows, sell ads
Los Angeles Times
On Tuesday, ESPN and Twitter plan to announce they are expanding their partnership.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Live Events & Social Media
Love this quote:

"Social media is a fantastic complement to compelling, live television content," said Toby Byrne, president of advertising for Fox Broadcasting Co. "Not only is it a great marketing tool for us ... [it also] opens up additional ways for us to connect brands with our audience."

Duh! This new partnership is a victory and a defeat. Victory because it signals brands are getting social media. Defeat because the new partnership seeks to make social media just another push network.

Let's hope people smart enough to realize social media can rock live events also understand "live event" means there are threads that should be followed instead of simply pushing more disconnected ads at us.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Internet Marketing: End of Zero Sum - New Media Leaders

Internet Marketing: End of Zero Sum - New Media Leaders | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

There is a "new altruism" meme growing in Internet marketing. The old notion of winning at someone else's expense seems outdated in a world of plenty, in a world where we buy from those we LOVE. 

And there are so many more ways to get to know and love the companies and products we invite into our lives. I wrote this post for New Media Leaders to explore the leading edge of our Internet marketing's "new altruism".  

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Weighing In On Semantic Web via @DavidAmerland [Great Conversation Happening NOW]

Weighing In On Semantic Web via @DavidAmerland  [Great Conversation Happening NOW] | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
How Semantic Search Will Be A Game Changer For Real Estate

Semantic search is the way the web is headed. Trust and credibility will be bigger factors in…
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Semantic Web & Future Of Everything
Great conversation going on via my friend @DavidAmerland's Google plus page about the future of the web. If you an Internet marketer words like "semantic" and "web" make you sit up and listen very, very carefully :). 

I won't repeat my extensive RANT here, but Semantic Web and the predictive analytics that go hand in hand is a favorite topic.  

David Amerland's comment, May 8, 11:58 AM
As always Marty you manage to add several more layers of value to whatever's on the table. Stunning!
Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, May 8, 11:17 PM
Thanks David nicest thing anyone has said to me all week :). Much appreciated. Marty
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Scoopit and Content Marketing Analysis

Analysis of two years of Scoopit use to curate and create content marketing.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Had fun creating a series of charts showing how each content marketing feed created on Scoop.it make a contribution to a tapestry of content marketing.

Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com's curator insight, May 5, 8:46 AM

Thanks Marty for sharing.


SHARING is a key part of this web social economy we are living in right now. It started with content, (message boards, blogs) and now has moved on to cars (Zipcar), bikes (Citi Bike) and beds (AirBnB). 


We are becoming more connected than ever before and OUR online profiles, that WE and OTHERS create about US is driving this sharing economy.


Marty, I know you and I have never met in person but via Scoop.it and social sharing we are connected. Interesting how business is changing.

Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, May 5, 7:29 PM
Agree Brian. When SHARING is at the core many things change such as: competition, how we scale, how we make money and how and what we support.

In a social sharing time we compete in a more collaborative way where rising tides lift all boats. I was shocked to be in a meeting the other day where someone was pithing the idea of unilateral zero sum benefit. Shocked because everyone I work with get it - that doing the right thing is increasingly the right thing to do. I wasn't going to convince this particular manager that WE are stronger than I or ME, but most of us are getting it and that is one of the things driving Scoop.it's success :).M
Susan Daniels's curator insight, May 19, 11:17 AM

I've had such a wonderful time bring new traffic to my site and meeting new friends on Scoop.it. I am pleased to share this slide presentation with you from Martin Marty Smith. I believe you will find it informative.


Warmly,

Susan Daniels

http://crazydreamersdo.com

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

SEO Writing Tip - How To Avoid STOP Words

SEO Writing Tip - How To Avoid STOP Words | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

Better SEO Writing

Just Scooped a great #infographic about SEO Writing that didn't mention some of my favorite tips or anything about "stop words" so I added 5 tips to the Scoop and wrote a quick ScentTrail Marketing post about Stop Words:

15 SEO Writing Tips (10 Infographic, 5 from me)

SEO Writing - Eliminate Stop Words (ScentTrail Marketing)

 

There is great news about the elimination of stop words. When you tune your writing to use shorter sentences, smaller paragraphs and reduces stop words your copy reads faster and so becomes more engaging. Win Win.



Kathy Lenard's curator insight, May 1, 11:26 PM

I sometime write long sentences; so when I saw these tips about the elimination of STOP words, I had to Scoop this.

Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, May 2, 7:36 AM
Thanks for the Rescoop Kathy. Shortening your sentences, more Hemingway than Faulkner, can have positive impacts on SEO and visitor engagement. Marty
Rescooped by Martin (Marty) Smith from MarketingHits
Scoop.it!

What Influences a Purchase Decision #infographic [+ Marty Note]

What Influences a Purchase Decision #infographic [+ Marty Note] | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
There are many things that compels us to buy things. Some of these things we don’t even think about cause we are psychologically drawn towards them.

Via Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

The Five Senses of E-Commerce
Great Infographic reinforcing the 5 Senses of Ecommerce:
* Free Shipping (out and back).

* Social Shopping.

* Great Nonverbals (easy navigation, clear communication, good cart).

* Great internal search (merchandised and faceted).

* When in doubt SELL EVERYTHING. 

If you believe in the last bullet then easy navigation and great internal search are a must. When I was a Director of E-commerce we started to increase conversion at the cart and worked our way forward. 

These days with social so LARGE and IN CHARGE I might start with the product page and move in both directions after test showed the new product page design was beating control by a fair margin. 

Product Pages Based On Predictive Analytics
If you have the courage creating your product page on the fly based on behaviors and cookie plants would be a cool test. Here's How....

1. Create 10 components for your product page such as picture, zoom, features copy, reviews, social shopping icons, people who bought X also bought Y merchandising, cross sale area and a video. 

2. Create an algorithm based on three touches: cookie data (from where on what keyword), first click and new vs. returning. 

3. Create personas for 3 to 5 major customer archetypes. 

4. Develop an A and a B product page configurations for each persona limiting to no more than 5 elements. 

5. Fire your product page A / B test based on your algorithm.

 

6. Rinse and repeat until your product page conversion doubles for your most important persona. 

 


Martine Boucher's curator insight, April 30, 2:00 PM

What Influences a Purchase Decision? #infographic

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Google Authorship MATTERS new Study Proves [@jeffalytics Study]

Google Authorship MATTERS new Study Proves [@jeffalytics Study] | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Google Plus impacts search and Google Authorship Sweetens the deal. Learn how it all works in this comprehensive 3 week study that isolates the impact of G+
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Impact of Google Authorship Study
Amazing, comprehensive study from @Jeffalytics on the impact of Google authorship. Their conclusions that YOU are becoming more important than any single website you contribute to is one important conclusion. There are many more including if you aren't using Google Authorship tags expect to be beaten to a pulp.

Another implication is BRAND your writers in addition to your website. The value of branded writers is you can apply their author rank anywhere and at any time for an immediate impact on SEO.  

Great conclusions at the bottom.
http://www.jeffalytics.com/google-plus-search-authorship/  

I followed up this Scoop with a brief post on ScentTrail Marketing sharing my best resource to LEARN about Google authorship and a handful of content strategy implications:
http://scenttrail.blogspot.com/2013/04/google-authorship-matters-jeffalytics.html 

Also wrote about the study on Google Plus and received one comment about the study's flaws. The study may have flaws, but it is helpful to do what I need to do - get the tags added. The over, what we stand to gain, is so much greater than the under, the cost of tagging, you would think adding authorship tags is a no brainer. Not so much as it turns out (lol).

Here is the Google Plus conversation:
https://plus.google.com/102639884404823294558/posts/45ZBpspdjK

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Scoopit and the Lean Content Movement - Atlantic BT

Scoopit and the Lean Content Movement - Atlantic BT | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Not only is there a new sheriff in town, content marketing, but there is a rapidly evolving new movement too. How can you create "lean content"? Read on.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Had fun writing this piece on how Guillaume, Marc and the @Scoopit team are creating the Lean Content Movement and what that means to we lucky few Internet marketeers. 

Ken Morrison's comment, April 27, 8:20 AM
I enjoyed this article Marty. The Circus analogy was a concrete example that I will remember for a while. Well Done.
Martin (Marty) Smith's comment, May 1, 9:04 AM
Thanks Martine for Rescoop. Marty
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

I Scoop Therefore I am: 3 Reasons To LOVE Scoopit

I Scoop Therefore I am: 3 Reasons To LOVE Scoopit | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

I Scoop Therefore I am. 3 reasons to love Scoop.it for your company, brands or personal brand. 

Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

3 More Reasons @Scoopit ROCKS

Speaking to Andrea of Top Of Mind PR the other day about two of my favorite things - @CureCancerStart and Scoopit - I realized something. I realized how far my content curation and creation has traveled in such a short time. 

I found 3 more reasons I love Scoop.it during our call:


1. Community
Scoop.it is a community of rock star curators willing to share, teach and interact. If I've traveled some distance in my ability to create and curate content then it is because of lessons learned from Robin Good, Michele Smorgan and Karen Dietz. 

2. Real Time Fast Feedback
Scoop.it's analytics are amazing and instructive. You have to be able to wield a machete since the data is BIG, but hidden inside the forest is amazing content marketing truth. Another big reason I've learned to be a better curator and content creator is thanks to Scoop.it's analytics. 

 

3. Benefits of the Commons
I wrote about the Commons Revolution recently (http://www.atlanticbt.com/blog/the-commons-revolution/ ) and I've created a Scoop.it feed dedicated to the idea of the commons (http://www.scoop.it/t/commons-revolution ). I just witnessed an example as my Scoop.it feed outranks my Atlanticbt.com/blog post. 

The idea of the commons is WE contribute so the commons can return that contribution BECAUSE any commons will be more likely to become a hub than any website. Commons scale User Generated Content and they ping Google constantly. 

Scoop.it has more than 43,000 inbound links because they have thousands of contributors all hoping to drive social traffic into their piece of the commons. 

Other social nets look like commons but don't walk the talk. They don't pay back the contributors preferring to keep the benefits mostly to themselves. When using one of these pseudo-commons tools YOU must extract value and send it to yourself. 

Scoop.it and Slideshare are real commons built to help their contributors. KUDOS to the Scoop.it team, a nicer group of genius menshes you will never meet. 

 

Giuseppe Mauriello's comment, April 24, 2:29 PM
LOL...Great curation is more other!
PascaleMMM's comment, April 24, 6:36 PM
Great Scoop Marty ! You re right
Therese Torris's comment, April 25, 4:49 AM
Right on, Marty !
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Save The World Marketing Is Here!

Embrace Save The World Marketing 
In a social mobile and connected time for profit companies should learn emotional storytelling from nonprofits. Nonprofits should learn viral marketing and SEO from their for profit cousins. 

Save The World Marketing is a "new altruism" that is sweeping across social media. Companies and brands that embrace Save The World marketing create an emotional connection with customers via authentic stories and social media.

Every enterprise is saving the world in some interesting way. Telling that story or finding partners who can help tell a company's "save the world" story should be a top priority for senior managers and small to medium sized businesses (SMBs). 

Yu Ji's curator insight, Today, 6:37 AM

To some extent, it pointed the changes happened today in marketing and how to cope with such changes.

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Surprise Is Still the Most Powerful Marketing Tool - HBR

Surprise Is Still the Most Powerful Marketing Tool - HBR | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Big Data's great, but it can rob your brand of serendipity.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

HBR makes a conclusive case for why SURPRISE creates the most effective marketing. Surprise is another way of saying exceeding expectations and I AGREE.

The warning shot is if we market ONLY to what we see in our data we become increasingly predictable. We KPI surprise OUT of our thinking and marketing.

Great article on how to build positive surprise into your marketing process and thinking.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

41 New Google+ Features Plus New Photos App

41 New Google+ Features Plus New Photos App | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Economic Times Google boosts photo offerings to rival Facebook Economic Times SAN FRANCISCO: Google is digging deeper into its technology toolkit to turn its social networking service into a more formidable threat to Facebook, sprucing up its photo...
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Google Header Eats Los Angeles

Yes the Google+ Header just got bigger along with 41 other feature improvements to the leading search engine's social network. Recognizing that the most popular content on Facebook is pictures, Google+ boosted its ability to compete. Here is a quote from the Economic Times post:

"But the most compelling new attraction may be a new photo-management tool that promises to test how much control people want to cede to computers. It will also further blur the lines between a real moment in time and augmented reality."

Susan Daniels's curator insight, May 19, 11:13 AM

Just noticed the bigger header yesterday. Google is fast becoming my social network of choice. They just keep adding more and more features that I find absolutely delightful.

James LaCorte's curator insight, May 20, 3:38 PM

I have tested some of the changes out. I like the look and feel. They need to work on getting the masses over there, even if it is for the communities.

I do think a little better documentation is needed. 

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Advertisers Like PPC, Organic and Social Not So Much | Marketingland

Advertisers Like PPC, Organic and Social Not So Much | Marketingland | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Study: Organic Posting Is Most Popular Social Media Tactic, But Not The Most ...
Marketing Land
More than one in three large social media advertisers are not satisfied with their efforts from both paid and organic social media strategies.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

The Same Message Over And Over
Social Is Different and we keep getting this message over and over. The problem / opportunity with social media marketing is it doesn't respond well to typical Stimulus - Response advertising so favored everywhere else.

Once you break the S - R curve TIME changes. When you reinforce a behavior you created it feels like you gain brand advocacy. I think you make a transaction and advocacy comes AFTER the sale. 

Social media flips this response. Social media builds a relationship first, secures advocacy and then comes money. If that sounds EASTERN and not very capitalist you are right and beginning to see some of the reasons we S - R marketing pros are having such a hard time with social media marketing.

The answers are NOT to attempt to simply cart one set of tactics from paid to social. No, the answer is to form and find new ways to judge ROI vis brand advocacy and social support. Soon we will see just how much social media creates a base for success IN ALL OTHER MARKETING. 

Marketers are a distrusting lot. Instead of looking hard at our efforts and preconceptions we want NEW things to walk and talk like OLD things, things we understand and trust. Life in a digital age can't afford such singular thinking.

 

Fuzziness prevails and the over, what we stand to gain, exceeds the under, what we stand to loose well enough to demand and open minded participation as we define the new marketing on the back of the thing we trust (paid).  

I'm old enough to remember having knockdowns about paid too. There was a time when what is trusted NOW was distrusted then. Best to keep that truth close at hand since it reminds us how important ACTING and LEARNING have become in modern marketing. 

 


John van den Brink's curator insight, May 15, 1:21 PM

Great insight by Martin! You're absolutely right

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

VOTE NOW: Mother's Day Pinterest Contest: Men vs Women

VOTE NOW: Mother's Day Pinterest Contest: Men vs Women | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

Monday 5.13 = Last Day to Vote

View King of Pinterest here: http://pinterest.com/scenttrail/king-of-pinterest/

View Queen of Pinterest here: http://pinterest.com/scenttrail/queen-of-pinterest/

Vote HERE: http://scenttrail.blogspot.com/2013/05/mothers-day-pinterest-contest-men-vs.html#.UY45OYLueG8

Follow ScentTrail on Pinterest to be able to pin. http://pinterest.com/scenttrail/

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

The CoSoMo Manifesto - Atlantic BT

The CoSoMo Manifesto - Atlantic BT | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Our Connected, Social & Mobile revolution moves sand under our Internet marketing feet twenty years+ after Cluetrain's Manifesto, time for a new manifesto.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Had fun writing an update to one of my favorite books - The Cluetrain Manifesto. Here are highlights from the CoSoMo Manifesto:

* We (your customers) are POWERFUL beyond your wildest dream.
* Our (your customers') everyday needs are more than MET.
* Our (your customers') aspirational desires will never be satisfied.
* Greatness is the cost of the poker game you are playing.
* We can't tell You how to be GREAT, but sure know it when we see, feel or buy greatness.
* Our TIME is our most valuable resource, so don't waste it.
* We may know you better ONLINE than you know yourself, so be authentic and real.
* Together we are more powerful than either of us alone.


What about you? Have ideas we should add to the CoSoMo Manifesto? Share in comments and we will curate in. Marty

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Godin, Gladwell, Pink, and Other Mavens on How and Why We Define Ourselves Through Stuff

Godin, Gladwell, Pink, and Other Mavens on How and Why We Define Ourselves Through Stuff | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
"The modern version of introspection is the sum total of all those highly individualized choices that we make about the material content of
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Brands Are Promises
Great share by my friend Phil Buckley (@1918). My favorite is the piece Pink shares, " I think a brand is a promise … a promise of what you can expect if you use the product or service, or if you engage in the experience." Indeed.

Scott Span, MSOD's curator insight, May 7, 11:17 AM

How do you...?

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

3 BIG Reasons Not To Miss The Social Media Revolution

3 BIG Reasons Not To Miss The Social Media Revolution | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
72% of small business that adopted a social media platform found that their traffic both virtual and physical increased.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Personality Sells

There is a real "anti-sales" movement afoot. I'm sitting in a car dealership as I write this and I blame them (lol). The archetype of a used car salesman who believes deals can benefit him and him alone is a hard archetype to shake.

Willy Loman is long gone. Anyone, used car dealers included, who don't create mutual benefit will be hard pressed to survive in a time when I am using a car dealers wifi to type this post.

Once the web is present it is much harder to create unilateral benefit. Even car dealers, the good ones, realize every action creates an equal and opposite reaction in social media these days.

We are still a distance from where we need to be, but progress is clear and unmistakable. We will know we are there when car dealers sell cars like Apple sells iPhones.

So my favorite tip from this post is #3, use social media to create a personality. Personality is truth since it is impossible to fake that you are over time. Short term anyone can lie and fake anything, long term not so much.

Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com's curator insight, May 5, 8:59 AM

Willy Loman, I was just talking about him the other day with my daughter.


Todays buyer can easily knows more about a product than the person selling it. 


Salespeople, don't lie because your buyers will know and will move on.

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

What Creates Brand Loyalty? | Infographic

What Creates Brand Loyalty? | Infographic | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
This infographic shows what drives brand loyalty. A retro theme with some bright colors. Simple!
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Join Brands Don't Buy Them
Agree with this infographic about what makes people loyal to brands. Brands are shorthand for contemporary life. We bundle so much meaning into brands such as Nike, Apple and REI that it would be hard to imagine modern life without these shortcuts. 

Faith Popcorn famously said people don't BUY brands they JOIN them and these "loyalty" reasons can help form a brand people want to join.  

Yu Ji's curator insight, May 1, 10:42 AM

Get your customer know you and then, don't forget to get them fall in love with you as well!!

Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

Defending The PAST Is A Greater Risk Than Creating The Future: Sketchnotes Food for Thought 2013

Defending The PAST Is A Greater Risk Than Creating The Future: Sketchnotes Food for Thought 2013 | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Food for Thought, I imagine, is like TED before it became TED, with really great food. It's a unique conference hosted every year by Erwin Penland in the charming city of Greenville SC, and brings ...
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

What Will Be Your Legacy?
Love these Sketchnotes from Gavin McMahon (@powerfulpoint)

that I found from fellow Scooper Jose Luis Anzizar (@anzizar). Love this management guru Peter Drucker quote:

"Defending the past is a greater risk than creating the future."
Peter Drucker

Drucker's quote has never been more TRUE than in the middle of a revolution when many seek shelter as we lucky few Internet marketers look to create the future.


Great notes from Gavin in a fun Sunni Brown-like format. I hope to make Food For Thought 2014.  


 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith
Scoop.it!

How To Create Product Principles (aka Product Manifesto) for Product Managers

How To Create Product Principles (aka Product Manifesto) for Product Managers | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it
Example of best practice to create a Product Manifesto or Product Principles to guide product development.
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Inspired Helping Cure Cancer
I'm reading Marty Cagan's book Inspired to help create http://www.curecancerstarter.org. Marty is a founding partner of the Silicon Valley Products Group and book is excellent.

Why would a Consumer Products Goods brand marketer who has created more than 10 products need to read a book about inspired product creation? Two reasons including being a marketer today means you never STOP learning and I've never created a TECHNICAL product.

Sure I created FoundObjects.com (now RIP sadly) in 1999, but life was so different THEN than now. Getting Marty's take on the process of creating a product in today's social, mobile world is helping wrap my mind around the task at hand.

This section on creating a Product Values Manifesto is something I will do for Cure Cancer Starter. This link actually goes to examples.

Panicos Kamasia 's curator insight, April 28, 4:27 AM

Example of best practice to create a Product Manifesto or Product Principles to guide product development.

Rescooped by Martin (Marty) Smith from World's Best Infographics
Scoop.it!

A Road To Success Using Social Media | AllTwitter

A Road To Success Using Social Media | AllTwitter | Curation Revolution | Scoop.it

Did you know that 95 percent of businesses throughout the world use social media as a networking tool, and that fifty percent of these companies have noticed a significant improvement in their visibility, website traffic and sales, accordingly? Used correctly, social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn allow brands of all shapes and sizes across almost every industry worldwide to attract and engage with customers (old and new), convert enquiries into strong leads and deliver first-class customer support and service. It takes work, and it takes time, but the road is there for everyone. You just have to take those first steps – and then keep putting one foot in front of the other. This infographic takes a closer look at some key social media facts, figures and statistics....


Via Jeff Domansky
Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

The Future Of Social Media Is Not What We Think

We use social media now as children use a hammer. Sometimes we hit a nail's head, but mostly we inflict damage on ourselves and those around us. As we grow up with social media marketing we will see that its secret is the connections it brings and the way it changes US. 

I wrote about social media's "most important ROI" (http://www.atlanticbt.com/blog/social-media-marketing-the-most-valuable-roi/ ) and would add to that view how social media changes the enterprise. A "social business" operates differently.

Social Businesses
* More Open.

* Listen More Than You Talk.

* Responsive, able to change based on feedback. 

* Environment rewards, encourages and asks for feedback.

* Many ways to provide feedback. 

* Feedback is actively curated into and feedback out of company. 

* Feedback scales (grows faster and faster). 

* There are KPIs for feedback. 

Social businesses measure, trend and respond to social stats. They develop meaningful KPIs for their social business and never simply plug and play. They are always present and accounted for. 

Jeff Domansky's comment, April 27, 3:52 PM
Marty, thanks for your comments and wonderful insight as always. I totally agree. Always, always start with strategy.