E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup)
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E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup)
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14+ Tools for Bloggers : Social Media Examiner

14+ Tools for Bloggers : Social Media Examiner | E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup) | Scoop.it
Are you a busy blogger? Discover more than 14 tools to help bloggers quickly, efficiently perform common tasks.

Via donhornsby
donhornsby's curator insight, May 19, 2016 10:33 AM
Great list of ideas and tools. What would you add to the list?

(From the article): Whether you’re a small business starting out on your marketing journey or a seasoned pro looking for a few useful hacks, each of these tools will help streamline and improve your social media marketing.
Rescooped by juandoming from Curation, Social Business and Beyond
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What Makes A Great Curator Great?

What Makes A Great Curator Great? | E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup) | Scoop.it

This piece was brilliantly written by my fellow curator, Robin Good.

 

Sorry my commentary is so long but this was so thought provoking, I just couldn't help myself:-)

 

The headline draws you in and the material more than delivers on that promise. What makes a great curator is clearly demonstrated in this piece. Bravo Robin!

 

I'm not going to repost what Robin has said but add my own comments, just as if I were in a conversation with him.

 

In Robin's own words - A great curator does the following:

 

"Optimizes, Edits, Formats, Selects, Excerpts, Writes, Classifies, Links, Personalizes, Vets, Credits, Filters, Taps, Suggests, Searches, Scouts, Hacks Filters and Searches, Is Transparent, Recommends, Crowdsources"

 

As you read this article, pay attention to how he has done all the above. He creates a standard, he gives you some criteria so you can understand what makes someone great and what makes someone no so great.

 

****He is responding to an article he read in Forbes about curation which talks about  the importance of keywords.  Robin stresses the importance of "human curation" adding your personal touch and bringing added value to what you're curating and not trying to fit what you're saying into keywords that will draw traffic from the search engines.  

 

These are my comments..........

 

**** Curation is new and is evolving.  Water rises to its own level.  The people who know why they're curating, who their audience is, how they consume information and what they need, and then act on this, will become great trusted sources.

 

Some people just want information. Others want to engage by adding comments or another layer of context. There's a rhythm to this and it takes time to find the right balance.

 

I think a great curator is a good listener and a keen observer who selects content that "speaks to the audience's listening".  Paying attention to this and fine tuning your approach takes a lot of work but it's worth it. I'm inserting a direct quote from Robin:

 

"One point: I believe that curators, as I see them, should rarely if ever be driven by analytics data or statistics but to their personal experience and viewpoint. Their goal is not in fact to go after the broadest and most numerous audience but have the humbleness and vision to serve a very specific need and tribe."

 

If you're passionate and knowledgable about the topic you're curating, and you are committed to serving your readers, you will be great.

 

In business you have to have a unique sales proposition. Adding context to what you curate will set you apart from others and make you great. This is your place to contribute something new, perhaps you disagree with what was said and you bring a new perspective. Anything you can do to expand the piece and add dimension to it is valuable to others.

 

Robin produced this video in 2009 with Gerd Leonhard, a highly respected media futurist. It is excellent. The title speaks for itself: "The Relevance Of Context In Content Curation http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDo6YrJKaoM.

 

There is also another piece "Context Not Content is King" by Arnold Waldstein I posted this some time ago. It is very relevant today and hopefully sheds more light on what will set you apart from people who are just aggregating links.

 

Last but not least......

 

Robin also has a view point and invites us into a conversation when he discusses the scoring system which you will see when you read the article. It makes me want to  respond, it's a two way dialogue between him and me, he's not just talking at me by reposting content without adding anything else.

 

I happen to agree with him about this but that's a whole other discussion.

 

Curated by JanLGordon covering "Content Curation, Social Media and Beyond"

 

This is only a taster.  To see the full article by a true master-curator at the top of his game, click here


Via janlgordon
Robin Good's comment, November 6, 2011 11:44 AM
Exactly Beth!

I couldn't have said better. Thanks for clarifying this further.
Nancy White's curator insight, March 10, 2017 4:37 PM
Oh my - all of my favorite  thought leaders on curation in one spot! This immediately caught my eye and introduced a new way for me to look at curation- as a way to "find your tribe."
Duncan Cole's curator insight, March 11, 2017 2:59 PM
If you are looking for some good advice and insight into how to develop into a great content curator, this is a great article from a few years ago from Robin Good. The additional insight from other curators adds another dimension, and I would suggest looking at this in some detail. It is clearly more effort to curate well, but then high quality work usually does.
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Why Your 2015 Goals Should Be To Blog Daily & Be Social

Why Your 2015 Goals Should Be To Blog Daily & Be Social | E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup) | Scoop.it
Last year Jason and I proposed to blog daily for 2014. We made it our goal. We didn't quite hit 365 blogs posts, but we did post over 200 which I'm very proud about. But beyond being proud the results we're getting because of it is what really counts. Our business has grown (thank you for being a part of it) and we've seen our traffic soar in the past year. A huge part of this growth is due to the fact that we've been blogging very regularly and been social every day. In 2015 we'll do the same and try to blog even more.

Via donhornsby
donhornsby's curator insight, January 9, 2015 9:38 AM

What social media goals are you setting for 2015?

 

(From the article):  Social media helps your blog get found and helps you drive even more traffic than the blog could do on it's own. Of course for it to truly work you need to have a blog. Without a blog you will be sharing other people's content, which of course is good, but you won't be driving the traffic to your site, you'll be driving it to someone else's.


Social media also helps you build relationships. The stronger those online relationships are, the more likely that person will click on the links you share and even share your blog posts themselves. See how that works. :)