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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Content Curation World
Scoop.it!

Scoop.it Introduces New Layout Templates, Full Topic Embeds and Direct White-Label Publishing to WordPress

Scoop.it Introduces New Layout Templates, Full Topic Embeds and Direct White-Label Publishing to WordPress | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it

 

 

Scoop.it, the content discovery, curation, distribution and publishing platform has recently added some very significant improvements to its offering, that make it service even more interesting for any kind of online publisher, company or agency looking forward to find, vet and curate the best content available online on a specific topic.

 

The first and long-awaited new feature is the availability of multiple layout templates that Scoop.it publishers can now utilize and which can be swtiched to instantly.

 

The second one is full embedding of curated topics onto any web page to make it easiest for any publisher to rapidly integrate and display scoop.it content directly on their sites.

 

The third and most powerful new addition is the availability of a new white label direct publishing feature for WordPress-based publishers.

 

Although I have not had the opportunity to test this new feature, which is available only through a new Marketers subscription plan, it surely looks as the perfect fit for all those publishers who wanted to use Scoop.it more as a backend for producing curated content for their site than as a final publishing destination.

 

With these new additions Scoop.it consolidates itself as feature-rich, reliable and affordable content curation system that can satisfy many different types of needs: from education, to content marketing, news publishing and community building.

 

 

Find out more: http://blog.scoop.it/2014/07/23/introducing-templates-embedded-topics-and-website-integration-through-scoop-it/

 

 

 

 


Via Robin Good
Deb Nystrom, REVELN's curator insight, September 4, 2014 5:56 PM

ScoopIt keeps looking for ways to integrate and be highly relevant in the service it provides.  Integrating with Wordpress is worth a good look.  ~  D

wanderingsalsero's curator insight, September 5, 2014 4:17 PM

Nice to see SI moving along.  I haven't read this and I wonder if it's the news I read a few weeks ago.  At any rate I think SI is getting a bit ahead in the race between them and RebelMouse.  

 

I've had an issue in the UI with RM for almost 2 months and they don't seem inclined to do anything about it....but SI has always worked fine.

Nedko Aldev's curator insight, April 5, 2015 12:25 PM

 

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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from visualizing social media
Scoop.it!

Scoop.It for SEO – A New World of Curation [Infographic]

Scoop.It for SEO – A New World of Curation [Infographic] | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it

For almost everyone who is a part of the online world coming up with fresh content consistently is a big challenge. Practically every guideline advises that content should be engaging, informative and relevant every single time. Consequently, content curation has taken off in a big way.

Simply put, content curation is the process of curating relevant and interesting content from various sources on the web and putting them together and publishing them on a personal site or blog. As a result of the popularity of the content curation process, a number of content marketing tools have been introduced. These tools are meant to help in the process of content marketing and SEO and facilitate the process of curation...


Via Lauren Moss
Dillon Thomas's curator insight, February 1, 2014 5:55 PM

SCOOPS --  I began using Scoop when I was defining myself a LITE FEET DANCER.  There was no single source of info about Lite Feet dance, a NYC Born Battle dance phenom and YouTube Sensation.  I created LITE FEET SCOOP TO reference for my own resume but also to provide anyone interested a link to the multitude of YOUTUBE Channels, Sound Cloud and personal sites dedicated to this unique art form and the talented dancers who participate. 

 

 

Annie 's curator insight, December 5, 2014 8:18 PM

Scoop.it helps with the process of curating content. This is a must for your social media.

Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Scoop.it en la Red
Scoop.it!

Mi smartblog #Modaonline recomendado por Scoop.it en su nueva app

Mi smartblog #Modaonline recomendado por Scoop.it en su nueva app | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it

Probablemente sigan ustedes cientos de blogs de moda. Además es muy probable también que el número creciente de blogs de moda en español alcance ya la cifra de millones.

 

Ante esta circunstancia, si queremos posicionarnos en el panorama con un blog de moda, debemos ofrecer algo que lleve dos ingredientes clave:

1. Que sea diferente en todos los sentidos.

2. Que sea específico. Si además de un tema muy específico como hilo conductor, los contenidos son buenos y originales, mucho mejor.

 

Eso es lo que me ha pasado con este blog, contenidos diferentes, específicos en una herramienta diferente. Todo coherente, no?

Así sé que es ahora, pero fue sin pretenderlo. Ya que parte del éxito de que hoy tenga numerosas visitas y esté recomendado en la app para tablets -read.it- que lanza la plataforma donde se ubica mi blog sobre tendencias del mercado de la moda y aplicación del marketing online -en la moda- se debe precisamente a la plataforma, al servicio, a la herramienta: a scoop.it

 

Y os cuento historia... empecé un smartblog (como yo lo llamo) en scoop.it como selector de clips de música -http://scoop.it/t/chelseaclub - por la facilidad para postear los videos de youtube o vimeo en esta herramienta. Pero me enamoré de ella, de su interactividad y de su fácil lectura. Así que abrí unos cuantos más, entre ellos el de Modaonline, que se ha convertido en todo un generador de información.

Me obliga a aprender cosas nuevas para contarlas al mundo. Bueno a esos cuantos que me leen.

Me salen conferencias por lo que posteo aquí

Tengo un sistema de monitoreo bastante eficaz en él

Etc.

 

Así que, hoy daré las gracias a scoop.it por haber seleccionado este humilde blog, devolviendo así de bien la confianza que puse en él cuando abrió y la que pongo ahora. Es una herramienta distinta, adaptada a mis necesidades y tiempo (no time), que nos conduce a contar las cosas de otra manera.


Via Fer Claro, Lydia Gracia
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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Mundo3.0
Scoop.it!

Tutorial Scoop.it español

Tutorial de Scoop.it en español...

 

A mí me ha servido para meter sin miedo el pie en la piscina. Iré tanteando hasta nadar con soltura. Como herramienta parece muy sencilla. Otra cosa es el uso que se le dé. Veo mucha duplicación por ahí con escasa "curación", como los embutidos para barbacoa.


Via Ángel Encinas, ARMAK de ODELOT, Carmen
Lydia Gracia's comment, January 15, 2013 6:02 AM
la opcion Insights te permite escribir tu propia reflexion respecto a la informacion "scooped", a defecto de escribir un contenido original...
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Scoop.it!

Why I Don't Like Scoopit Links on Twitter [+Scenttrail Comment]

Why I Don't Like Scoopit Links on Twitter [+Scenttrail Comment] | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it

I’m seeing more Scoopit links in my Twitter stream and I’m not crazy about it.  Sure it’s quick and easy to share with Scoopit.  But it not quick and easy to consume. For me it's all about the econ...

Marty Note (here is comment I wrote on Dr. V's blog)

Appreciate Bryan’s and Joseph’s comment, but I rarely use Scoop.it as a pass through. More than 90% of the time I’m adding “rich snippets” to content I Scoop.

Rich snippets are “blog” posts that fall between Twitter and the 500 to 1,000 words I would write in Scenttrail Marketing. I often create original content ON Scoop.it because whatever I’m writing falls in the crack between Twitter’s micro blog and what I think of as needing to be on my marketing blog.


I was taught NOT to pass through links on Scoop.it early on by the great curator @Robin Good . Robin has well over 1M views on Scoop.it now and his advice along with the patient advice of other great Scoop.it curators has my profile slouching toward 150,000 views.


Bryan is correct that some curators new to Scoop.it haven’t learned the Robin Good lesson yet. I agree it is frustrating to go to a link and not receive anything of value back, to simply need to click on another link. Curators who pass through links won’t scale, so the Darwinian impact will be they will learn to add value or die out.


For my part I always identify my Scoop.it links, probably about half the content I Tweet and about a quarter of my G+ shares. I also routinely share my favorite “Scoopiteers”, great content curators who taught me valuable lessons such as don’t simply pass through links but add “micro blogging” value via rich snippets.


When you follow or consistently share content from a great curator on Scooop.it you begin to understand HOW they shape the subjects they curate. I know, for example, Robin Good is amazing on new tools. Scoop.it anticipated this learning and built in a feature where I can suggest something to Robin.


This is when Scoop.it is at its most crowdsourcing best because I now have an army of curators who know I like to comment on and share content about design or BI or startups and they (other Scoopiteers) keep an eye out for me. There are several reasons Scoop.it is a “get more with less effort” tool and this crowdsourcing my curation is high on the list.


So, sorry you are sad to see Scoop.it links and understand your frustration. You’ve correctly identified the problem too – some curators don’t know how to use the tool yet. I know it is a lot to ask to wait for the Darwinian learning that will take place over generations, but Scoop.it and the web have “generations” that have the half life of a gnat so trust that the richness of the Scoop.it community will win in the end and “the end” won’t take long.


To my fellow Scoop.it curators we owe Bryan and Joseph thanks for reminding us of what Robin Good taught me – add value or your Scoop.it won’t scale. That lessons is applicable to much more than how we use Scoop.it.


Marty

Added to G+ too
https://plus.google.com/102639884404823294558/posts/TUsNtsAsjWp

 


Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, August 21, 2014 1:11 PM

add your insight...


Dr. Karen Dietz's comment August 22, 2014 2:07 PM
Right on Marty! I'm re-scooping this as a way to help that learning along about how to really use Scoop.it well and leverage it.
Bob Connelly's comment, November 23, 2014 7:11 PM
Being new to Scoop.it, I was glad to read this. I wouldn't have thought about this...
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Scoop.it!

La curation avec Scoop.it

Un tutoriel rapide pour comprendre et utiliser Scoop.it pour faire de la curation.
Hélène Brevet's curator insight, June 11, 2013 5:38 AM

Très bon tutoriel pour bien démarrer sur Scoop.it.

Marco Bertolini's curator insight, June 11, 2013 8:39 AM

Un tutoriel pour une prise en main rapide de l'application de curation "Scoop it!"  Simple et rapide ;-)

Louis Levy's curator insight, June 12, 2013 3:44 AM

Bien fait pour débuter.

Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Curation Revolution
Scoop.it!

Join Scoopit's Lean Content Movement

Join Scoopit's Lean Content Movement | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it
The Lean Content Movement is curation, tools with fast feedback loops and writing less content that does more. Join the Lean Content Movement, here's how.

Via Martin (Marty) Smith
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, February 11, 2013 4:21 PM

Listened to a great interview with Guillaume today on Blog Talk Radio. Guillaume and Scoop.it have created what is tantamount to a new movement - the Lean Content Movement. 

Lean Content is about:

* Writing less, but creating more meaning.
* Using fast feedback loop tools such as Scoop.it.
* Cutting through the clutter with BETTER content.

"Better" in the Lean Content movement is when reader or creator gain insight faster and so realizing the promise of "do more with less".  

Guillaume Decugis's comment, February 13, 2013 6:38 PM
Hi Therese - The way we see it (and please bear in mind that Lean Content is a concept still being defined), Lean Content is not about "Information diet" or trying to refrain from creating Content. We are definitely in a world of content inflation. So how do we cope with this? Part of the best practices we've seen being done come around faster content creation cycle, leveraged content distribution, content curation, etc... Faster content creation cycle is for instance something Leo from Buffer talked about at our first meetup group here in SF explaining techniques to become better and better at turning out quality content fast. What I call leveraged content distribution is the idea of using guest posting, slideshare or quora to give a bigger distribution to your content than your blog if it's nascent - techniques we used a lot at Scoop.it and that proved efficient for us. So it's not about zero growth (an interesting economic concept that I don't believe in but that's a different discussion ;-) but it's about doing more and better with your content strategy for the limited resources that startups, non-profits or even small teams within bigger organizations have. Makes any sense?
Therese Torris's comment, February 14, 2013 4:42 AM
@gdecugis. Get it. It's more rather about lean content production and distribution processes than about lean content..
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Scoop.it!

Top 10 tools for content curation 2012

Top 10 tools for content curation 2012 | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it
Just a reminder of what's Content Curation: Content Curation is the process to discover, grab and organize digital content for a specific niche or matter.

 

===> The difference between content curation and content aggregation is that it involves human processes in order to filter and present relevant content. <===

 


Via Gust MEES, Alfredo Corell, María Asunción Martínez Mayoral, Sonia C. Alonso
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