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An In-depth Guide to Content Curation Search Engine People (blog) Content curation is something that spurs quite a few debates over the web, and its not even about its usefulness or effectiveness – most people agree that content curation can be...
'Mind Maps' Exhibit Hacked: A Case Of Guerrilla Curation? Public Radio East Mind Maps: Stories from Psychology is a current exhibit at London's Science Museum.
Content Curation: 6 Strategies to Add Value With Your Own Commentary Business 2 Community Content Curation: 6 Strategies to Add Value With Your Own Commentary image content curation annotation When curating content as part of your content marketing...
Gather, sequence, synthesize and re-present online content (from Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, Youtube, Vimeo, or anywhere else on the web); Incorporate custom text between curated content; Add interactive links; Embed ...
Excerpted from article by SEOmoz: " It's not that SEO is dead or that links are obsolete, or whatever all that crazy talk is that's been going around. It's that there's a way to integrate all the pieces into the big picture of building a better company by building an online community around it.
There are lots of benefits to building a community around your company, but if I had to choose a few, here are my top five: 1. It will help you weather Google’s algorithms; 2. It will add equity and value to your business; 3. It will help you have purpose; 4. It will help you stand out; 5. It will put the focus on goals, not tools.
Here is a super awesome infographic and the play-by-play breakdown of each step in the process. Whether you’re building a community from scratch, or you’re working to grow an existing one, you can use this process to get your community rolling or optimize and leverage what you already have.
[Here are only main sections of article]:
[1] Define your business objectives. So before you do that, think about this: 1) What makes your company unique? 2) Why do you care? 3) What do you want to build? 4) Who do you want to build it for?
[2] Elect your team. Here’s a few tips for getting the right team in place so that you can start working toward achieving your goals: 1) Understand the roles; 2) Elect, don’t just assign; 3) Work together as one, big, happy family;
[3] Develop your strategy. Think about strategy in three pieces: the what, the when, and the how. 1) The what: campaigns; 2) The when: execution calendar; 3) The how: ongoing efforts.
[4] Empower your team. Do not skip this step. I repeat. This step is important. You can empower your team for success by addressing a few simple questions: 1) Why are we doing this? 2) How much work is involved? 3) When will we see results?
[5] Learn your industry. One of your number one priorities in marketing your business online is providing the best possible customer experience. And you can’t do that if you’re not learning continuously.
[6] Create the value. Ok, now we’re getting to the real good stuff. Value is what your community is built upon, whether that’s “tangible” stuff like blog posts, videos, resources, and tools; or an approach, perspective, or virtue that is the basis for common ground. Value that focuses on your customer and their experience is what attracts people to your business, your brand, and your community. Foundational content is the more static stuff on your website... The challenge with foundational content is to listen to your customer. Observe their needs, the things in life that they struggle with, and then communicate how your products or services address those things. Community building content is the stuff that’s more dynamic in nature and usually lives on your blog. It’s the content that is less about what you do and more about what you know.
[7] Share the value. It works like this: 80% of the time, share other people’s great stuff. But don’t just retweet it or hit the share button and place it on your feed. Read it. Internalize it. And then curate it. Tell people why it’s good. This helps you learn and also keeps the focus where it belongs: on the value that you're providing for the reader. 20% of the time, share your own stuff, but make it remarkable. This is the community building stuff that we just talked about.
[8] Build and foster growth. There are lots of things that you can do to foster and grow your community. Here’s just a few: 1) Get in there; 2) Embrace offline efforts; 3) Acknowledge and show appreciation.
[9] Measure and analyze (and communicate). Everything you do will include testing, feedback, measurement, analysis, adjustments, rinsing, and repeating. And then, you’ve got to communicate this data to your team (and/or your client).
Keep these final things in mind: - This is about building a brand; - Stay grounded in your goals; - Don’t give up."
Read full, detailed and long article here: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/how-to-build-an-online-community-for-your-business
Via Giuseppe Mauriello
Social curation: shaping the user experience SmartPlanet.com (blog) MELBOURNE — “It's creating scarcity from abundance,” Simon Goodrich, managing director of digital studio Portable, said on the topic of social curation.
I use it to produce my web daily newspaper 'The @grattongirl Review' which, since its launch in 2011, has received thousands of reads and shares. Essentially Paper.li is a free content-curation service that lets you publish ...
New Curation Models Emerge for Publishers MediaBizNet Publishers can create apps that feature original content from their own website (or multiple properties) as well as third-party content curated from TrapIt's discovery engine, which the company...
However, it is strange though that only few people understand what content curation is and how to use the same for business growth and promotion. Moving ahead in the competitive online world is a tough task and one needs to have a ...
Curata- Curata helps marketers maximize their content curation efforts with web-based tools to easily find, organize and share online content. Curated.by- let's you collect & organize topic based content (media, links, tweets) ...
paidContent.org Where WordPress is headed: Longform content, curation and maybe even native ...
Once Snip.It pulled the plug on the content curation site, thereby pulling the rug out from under the feet of content curators like myself, I began speaking with the fine folks at Scoop.It.
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Buffer Good tips here on content curation and wanted to expand a bit. While its been around for some time, content curation continues to be a popular buzzword in the content marketing realm.
The Ultimate List of Content Curation Tools, and accompanying map, is comprised of both business grade tools that can support organizations’ content marketing strategies, as well as personal curati… (Content Curation Tools: The Ultimate List
Curate or be Curated: The Coming Age of the Curation Economy Huffington Post The future is coming into focus.
Content Curation & SEO: A Bad Match? Search Engine Watch Many publishers continue to seek cheap and easy ways to publish lots of pages and get them up with a goal of bringing in incremental search traffic.
Excerpted from article by SEOmoz: " It's not that SEO is dead or that links are obsolete, or whatever all that crazy talk is that's been going around. It's that there's a way to integrate all the pieces into the big picture of building a better company by building an online community around it.
There are lots of benefits to building a community around your company, but if I had to choose a few, here are my top five: 1. It will help you weather Google’s algorithms; 2. It will add equity and value to your business; 3. It will help you have purpose; 4. It will help you stand out; 5. It will put the focus on goals, not tools.
Here is a super awesome infographic and the play-by-play breakdown of each step in the process. Whether you’re building a community from scratch, or you’re working to grow an existing one, you can use this process to get your community rolling or optimize and leverage what you already have.
[Here are only main sections of article]:
[1] Define your business objectives. So before you do that, think about this: 1) What makes your company unique? 2) Why do you care? 3) What do you want to build? 4) Who do you want to build it for?
[2] Elect your team. Here’s a few tips for getting the right team in place so that you can start working toward achieving your goals: 1) Understand the roles; 2) Elect, don’t just assign; 3) Work together as one, big, happy family;
[3] Develop your strategy. Think about strategy in three pieces: the what, the when, and the how. 1) The what: campaigns; 2) The when: execution calendar; 3) The how: ongoing efforts.
[4] Empower your team. Do not skip this step. I repeat. This step is important. You can empower your team for success by addressing a few simple questions: 1) Why are we doing this? 2) How much work is involved? 3) When will we see results?
[5] Learn your industry. One of your number one priorities in marketing your business online is providing the best possible customer experience. And you can’t do that if you’re not learning continuously.
[6] Create the value. Ok, now we’re getting to the real good stuff. Value is what your community is built upon, whether that’s “tangible” stuff like blog posts, videos, resources, and tools; or an approach, perspective, or virtue that is the basis for common ground. Value that focuses on your customer and their experience is what attracts people to your business, your brand, and your community. Foundational content is the more static stuff on your website... The challenge with foundational content is to listen to your customer. Observe their needs, the things in life that they struggle with, and then communicate how your products or services address those things. Community building content is the stuff that’s more dynamic in nature and usually lives on your blog. It’s the content that is less about what you do and more about what you know.
[7] Share the value. It works like this: 80% of the time, share other people’s great stuff. But don’t just retweet it or hit the share button and place it on your feed. Read it. Internalize it. And then curate it. Tell people why it’s good. This helps you learn and also keeps the focus where it belongs: on the value that you're providing for the reader. 20% of the time, share your own stuff, but make it remarkable. This is the community building stuff that we just talked about.
[8] Build and foster growth. There are lots of things that you can do to foster and grow your community. Here’s just a few: 1) Get in there; 2) Embrace offline efforts; 3) Acknowledge and show appreciation.
[9] Measure and analyze (and communicate). Everything you do will include testing, feedback, measurement, analysis, adjustments, rinsing, and repeating. And then, you’ve got to communicate this data to your team (and/or your client).
Keep these final things in mind: - This is about building a brand; - Stay grounded in your goals; - Don’t give up."
Read full, detailed and long article here: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/how-to-build-an-online-community-for-your-business
Via Giuseppe Mauriello
Curate a whole new world Hindustan Times New practitioners are emerging to meet demands in these new areas of curation, and say it is a welcome change.
Asking the question, 'What has changed in content curation?' Graeme Hodgeson answered that it is now bottom-up, with people everywhere on the Web now curating content for others, and filtering information for different ...
Creating original content is resource intensive and while some companies that have all the copywriting resources they need (that's an exception not the rule) it makes sense to curate content in addition to publishing original ...
Livemint Jean-Louis Gassee bemoans lack of App Store curation tuaw.com Former president of the Apple Products Division Jean-Louis Gassee has written an interesting blog post bemoaning the lack of App Store curation.
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