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PR insight, social media & thought leadership - from The PR Coach www.theprcoach.com
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A PR Pro’s Guide to Google+ Communities | HyperText

A PR Pro’s Guide to Google+ Communities | HyperText | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it
A PR Pro's Guide to Google+ Communities and our prediction for its success

 

...The concept of a group discussion site is nothing new (think Facebook Groups, Yahoo! Groups and LinkedIn groups) but what sets Google+ Communities apart is the integration of the topical groups into the social platform.  For example, members of a group can capitalize on the hangout feature of Google+ and take part in a video chat within the group. Additionally, because the communities ‘live’ on Google, the Events calendar feature is enabled within communities, allowing photo sharing and event management to happen more easily.

 

One of the biggest differences in Google+ Communities versus other discussion groups is that you don’t have to actually visit the community’s URL to take part in the conversation. Users can share links directly with their communities simply using the +1 button that is now integrated into most social sharing technologies.  Another function unique to Google+ Communities is that conversations can be tagged and categorized, so members can find pieces of the discussion that are most relevant to them....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Quick introduction to several good features of Google+.

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Printing Summit 2013: How compact is compact? - WAN-IFRA

Printing Summit 2013: How compact is compact? - WAN-IFRA | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it

If the newspaper is to survive, does it become miniscule? That’s the prediction from a Dutch designer and printer, who unveiled two new takes on really tiny newspapers at the World Printing Summit on Tuesday.

 

One prototype is a single broadsheet page, folded and refolded until it is A5 size. You open it, piece by piece, like an unfolding paper flower, to read all the content. The other version is two broadsheet pages, folded down to A4 size.

 

Designer Koos Staal thinks these are logical designs – newspapers have been reducing size since the tabloid revolution began in 2003. But a tabloid really isn’t that small. “If you wanted to read it all, it would take three hours,” he says....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Interesting POV. I never thought about reinventing the printing and the newspaper product as a potential solution. 

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The Scariest Thing About the Newspaper Business Isn't Print's Decline, It's Digital's Growth | The Atlantic

The Scariest Thing About the Newspaper Business Isn't Print's Decline, It's Digital's Growth | The Atlantic | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it
Newspaper print ad sales have declined more than $20 billion in six years. In that time, digital ads growth has erased only 2% of the losses.

 

Emma Gardner of the Economist Group presents a visual look back at digital publishing in 2012. No visual struck me more than the graph below showing the extent of devastation to newspaper print ad sales since 2006: $20 billion in annual revenue, down the drain. In that time, digital ad growth has erased only 2% of the losses. How dreadful.


Where did the digital money go? It went to new online marketplaces, and apps, and sites. And Google. Yeah, basically the money went to Google. In 2006, Google made $60 billion less than U.S. newspapers and magazines. Now it makes more ad money than all of U.S. print media combined. Wow....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Derek Thompson provides a must-read analysis of print and digital business trends.

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