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Scooped by Brian Yanish - MarketingHits.com onto MarketingHits |
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November 1, 2012 4:45 PM
Let’s be honest, we don’t like to read big pieces of text. Text-heavy graphs are rather difficult for understanding, especially when dealing with numbers and statistics. That is why illustrations and flowcharts are often used for such kind of information. An infographic, or a visual representation of study or data, like anything else, can be done right or wrong. How to create a successful infographic? A good idea and a good design. Stop by the link for more on what defines an infographic, what contributes to its popularity, as well as the various types of infographics and references for tutorials and best practices. Additional topics covered include:
Via Lauren Moss Delete the scoop?
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This piece and infographic is from Adam Vincenzini on his blog. I selected this article because it's another way for you to find key influencers and these tools will help to narrow your search Here are some highlights: Instead of focusing on the subjectivity of this process (and how this insight is deployed) Here's how you can use a combination of free tools to narrow your search. Where do online influencers operate? Most popular are: blogs, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Online communities, discussion boards Assumptions: **Influencers are active on Twitter **Influencers operate some for of blogging hub Focus on the intelligence you can glean from Twitter initially then verify this initial sweep with blog (or relevant hub) data The initial steps involve: 1. Search by keyword 2. Search by location 3 tools useful in the process: The first two you can also search by location: **followerwonk.com - then run this through another influencer tool - tweetlevel to give it even more relevance (this isn't fool proof) There are more suggestions in this piece having said that:
**No matter how hard we try, a 100% fool proof influence rating is near on impossible because influence is not a science, it can't be. ** this can help narrow things down, significantly
Selected by Jan Gordon covering "Content Curation, Social Business and Beyond" Read full article here: [http://tinyurl.com/7humubp] Via janlgordon Delete the scoop?
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Infographics can be great link building tools. Many folks assume that developing great infographics is too hard. In reality, it is pretty straight forward if you keep things simple, sweet, and to the point. You are going to need a good looking visual too. Covering a trending topic helps as well. For the complete infographic that shows you how to develop quality visuals, make sure to visit the article link... Via Lauren Moss Delete the scoop?
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