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Rescooped by steve batchelder from Online-Communities onto SteveB's Social Learning Scoop
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What Results Should You Expect From Twitter?

What Results Should You Expect From Twitter? | SteveB's Social Learning Scoop | Scoop.it

Twitter is a great way to build and engage an audience with short, timely, relevant messages, but if you’re trying to drive traffic to your website, what results should you expect in terms of click-through rates?

Check out this Infographic by Joanna Franchetti from Sign-Up, who analysed tens of thousands of tweets sent through Sign-Up’s Twitter marketing tools in the first seven months of 2012 to find out the answer.

Looking at average click through rates (CTR) from tweets and how this varied by the number of followers, day of the week and time of tweet.

They found that the average click through rate for a tweet is 1.64% (just over half the rate of email, which averages 2.95%), and that this declines rapidly as your number of followers increases. They also found that clicks tend to increase later in the day, peaking at around 6pm.

 

Source . http://bit.ly/S4LFx5


Via maxOz
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Rescooped by steve batchelder from E-Learning and Online Teaching
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Put Scoopit on Your Website or WordPress Blog

http://BasicBlogTips.com Scoopit is a hot new curation tool that I mentioned in a previous video. You can add Scoopit to page on your WordPress or Blogger bl...

Via Dennis T OConnor
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Rescooped by steve batchelder from Curation, Social Business and Beyond
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Content Curation Special Edition - What, Why and How

Content Curation Special Edition - What, Why and How | SteveB's Social Learning Scoop | Scoop.it

This piece was selected by Robin Good and discovered by Alison Harrison.

 

Here's an example of what you'll find in these articles: 

 

When you use curation to build trust and establish your reputation

you have to have a well defined strategy by asking questions like this:

 

**How does your curation strengthen and communicate your brand or profile?

 

**How does it generate traffic for your resources and services both physical and virtual?

 

**How does it extend beyond your sphere of influence with key stake holders and decision makers?

 

Intro:

 

Robin Good: The School Library Association of New Zealand Aotearoa (SLANZA) publishes "Collected", a professionally-designed and written digital magazine.

 

This issue is dedicated to content curation and it includes several articles on how to reuse content with confidence, a great checklist for curation and a really nifty piece on a newbie's experience with Scoop.it.

 

Informative. Highly recommended. 8/10

 

Web edition: http://www.slanza.org.nz/collected.html 

Downloadable PDF: http://www.slanza.org.nz/magazine/May2012.pdf  

 

(thanks to Alison Harrison for first discovering it)


Via Robin Good, janlgordon
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Rescooped by steve batchelder from Content and Curation for Nonprofits
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7 Reasons to Love the New Scoop.itScoop.it

7 Reasons to Love the New Scoop.itScoop.it | SteveB's Social Learning Scoop | Scoop.it
.You may have noticed (or maybe not, because they are so awesome to use) that we recently rolled out some big changes to the Scoop.it platform.  Firstly, don’t panic. Secondly. you\'re going to love them.

Via Janet Fouts, Beth Kanter
gdecugis's comment, December 11, 2012 12:28 PM
@Janet, Beth and mirmilla : glad you liked this! Special thanks to Beth as this feature is actually the result of a discussion thread we had on Scoop.it months ago about sources & ethics of curation. Don't know if you remember it Beth but we did! ;-)
Deborah Spector's comment, December 12, 2012 10:02 AM
What a difference this makes. I always read the articles before I scoop them. Now I'll be able to add my insights, which I hope will bring more meaning to my growing community. So nice to know your discussions added this feature to the scoop.it platform.
Niels Schuddeboom's comment, December 13, 2012 5:27 PM
But I can't find back the original options to browse scoopits not explicitly followed, based on topics. Where's that?