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5 Reasons Why Web Publishing is Changing | ReadWriteWeb

5 Reasons Why Web Publishing is Changing | ReadWriteWeb | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpted from article:

"We're witnessing another sea change in Web publishing.

There's a new edge and it's populated by the likes of Medium (a kind of categorized Tumblr), Branch (the sister site of Medium, for discussions), App.net (a microblogging platform) and Svbtle (an elite network of indie bloggers).

 

Here are five key drivers for this new wave of publishing services.

 

1. Publishing Is Getting More Casual:

The publishing process less onerous. It's now less about composition (being a writer or blogger) and more about expressing your thoughts as simply as possible.

Not only is the type of content less formal now, the design is stripped back too. All of the latest web publishing tools have minimalist, in some cases almost naked, interfaces.

 

2. The Web Is Moving From Pages to Streams:

This new wave of tools is looking for ways to deliver content in a more flexible way.

Veteran blogger Anil Dash declared that he wants "a clean, simple stream of my writing, organized by topic and sorted with the newest stuff on top."

 

3. Topic Organization Is Finally Happening:

This is essentially what Medium is attempting to do, with its "collections" - which are posts by various people organized by topic or theme. Content on the Social Web has become far too chaotic and it desparately needs organization.

 

4. Quality Is In Vogue:

The Web is awash with content - much of it poor quality. Medium is explicit about wanting to change this:

"Our philosophy is that quality begets quality, so we will grow Medium smartly, ensuring that our platform is valuable to everyone in this increasingly mobile, connected, and noisy world."

 

5. Startups Are Searching For Non-Advertising Business Models:

Finally, the new wave of publishing services are all seemingly anti-advertising. There is experimentation happening again on the Web - which is a very positive sign..."

 

Read full original article here:

http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/5-reasons-why-web-publishing-is-changing-again.php

Giuseppe Mauriello's comment, August 16, 2012 11:27 AM
Hi Guillaume,
thank you for rescoop and appreciation about my post!
Rachel Wild's comment, August 17, 2012 10:29 AM
Great. Thank you. Rescooped.
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The Busy Person's Guide to Content Curation: A 3-Step Process

The Busy Person's Guide to Content Curation: A 3-Step Process | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the article written by Kevan Lee and posted on Buffer Blog:
"Finding and sharing exquisite content has never had more value than it does today.

What is content curation?
Content curation is sorting through a large amount of web content to find the best, most meaningful bits and presenting these in an organized, valuable way.
Or another definition:
"In a world of nearly infinite content, consumers are looking to one-stop shop." by Mike Kaput

Curation is not aggregation.
Aggregation is algorithmic. Curation is handpicked.
The human element of curation is a huge source of its value.

Significant benefits to a good content curation strategy include:
- You improve your relationship with the sites whose content you share.
- You grow your authority on a subject (provided the curation is top-notch).
- You add quality content to your site or timeline and create a great resource for others.
- You save time from creating content yourself, from scratch.

Examples of where you might use content curation:
- Curate content in a weekly blog post.
- Curate content in an email newsletter.
- Curate content on your social media profiles.

How to curate content as efficiently and expertly as possible.
Certainly, there is a time investment involved in doing it right (as with most things done well). There are a number of resources, tools, and tricks that help make the curation process even easier. Here’s what’s involved.

-Find unique places to discover exquisite content
We collected 17 off-the-radar places to search for new content. The off-the-radar spots are often quite good; there’s content on those sites that your audience may not have seen before, which adds an immediate boost of credibility for you and a boost of value your readers.

- Read what you find
I can admit to being tempted to skim a story and share it—or skip the skimming altogether and jump straight to sharing! There’s just so much content to read and so little time.
I’m clearly not alone in this temptation. Do people read what they share? Not exactly.

- Pick out your favorites
As you read, make note of the stories that really stood out to you and that you’d like to share. There are a number of different ways of organizing these, ranging from old-school to highly automated.

Batch and schedule: The shortcut to social curation
If you choose to share your curation on social media (great idea!), you have a number of tools at your disposal and one neat time-saving trick: Batch and schedule.

Inside the Buffer curation process
Curation is a regular part of our daily activities here at Buffer, both in our social media marketing and in the Buffer product itself.  We share the best stories we can find from our archives and from the web to our profiles on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, and LinkedIn, and we curate a list of content suggestions that are offered fresh each day for folks to pick up and add to their buffers..."

Each point is analyzed with detailed information and external links. Read original, useful and informative article here:
http://blog.bufferapp.com/guide-to-content-curation

Tell Shop's comment, July 7, 2021 12:07 AM
good
Tell Shop's comment, July 7, 2021 12:07 AM
good
Happy2HelpID's comment, February 17, 6:54 AM
good
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End of School Roundup: Using Creation & Curation in Education

End of School Roundup: Using Creation & Curation in Education | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the article on Scoop.it Blog:
"According to the Content Marketing Institute, original content should be the cornerstone of your content marketing. And curating content can raise your brand awareness and bring more visitors to your website.
Specifically in education, EdTech consultants, teachers and librarians are doing a great job combining creation and curation to showcase student creativity.

1. ICTPHMS - Middle school
Patrick Henry Middle School’s ICT (Information, Communications, & Technology) class shows the creativity of students and organized streams of tech content by using two simple tools: Tackk and Scoop.it.

2. Edudemic - EdTech blog
Edudemic’s website hosts a community of educators and technologists looking to enhance learning. Not only does the community post original content on the website, they also use Twitter and Feedly to create and curate.

3. TechChef4u - EdTech specialist, blogger, speaker
Lisa Johnson is using a variety of digital creation and curation tools to establish her TechChef4u brand as one of the most influential in the EdTech space.

4. University of San Francisco - Higher education institution
The University of San Francisco builds community and maintains an exciting and engaging online presence by collecting content that’s shared by over 10,000 people and curates the best of it to share with the world..."

Each example is analyzed with more information and external links. Read full original article here:
http://blog.scoop.it/2014/05/20/end-of-school-roundup-using-creation-and-curation-in-education/

quoteinfo's comment, May 7, 2021 8:24 AM
GOOD
quoteinfo's comment, May 7, 2021 8:24 AM
GOOD
quoteinfo's comment, May 7, 2021 8:24 AM
GOOD
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Discover, Organize And Save Your Trusted Recipes Into Collections With The New York Times Cooking

Discover, Organize And Save Your Trusted Recipes Into Collections With The New York Times Cooking | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

From "about us" of Official Website:
"Yesterday (May 13, 2014), The Times launched a closed beta of a new product, NYT Cooking.


NYT Cooking is an intuitive and dynamic recipe box designed to make cooking easier. The site features more than 15.000 recipes from The Times archive to browse and search. Users can save their favorite recipes to a digital recipe box, get inspired with hand-picked collections of recipes from Times cooks, create custom recipe collections of their own and learn how to make recipes with instructional videos featuring Melissa Clark, Sam Sifton and Mark Bittman, among others.


The limited web beta will be available to approximately 10.000 NYTimes.com users. The Times will use the beta to develop insights on how users interact with the product, and to learn from those insights as it approaches the launch of the full product later this year..."


Now I am surfing into site, and there are some key sections:
- RECIPE BOX
Anywhere you see a recipe, you can drag it into this drawer and access your saved recipes here at any time.
You can also group recipes together to create menus or plan a meal by creating a collection. Use the button below to get started.


- RECIPES
More than 16.000 recipes now: there is a box search or you can use related filters as Barbecue, Dairy-Free, Dinner, Japanese, Middle Eastern, Soup.
Other different filters with key related words are: diets, cuisines, preparation methods, meal types, and more.


- TIMES COOKS
They are your guides to NYT Cooking. Use your recipe boxes as inspiration for recipes and the start of your own collections.


Already have an NYTimes.com account as me? Login and try it:
http://cooking.nytimes.com 

Or request an invitation.


"About Us" of NYT Cooking:
http://www.nytco.com/nyt-cooking-beta-product-testing-begins/


One of first review articles is by Nieman Journalism Lab:
http://www.niemanlab.org/2014/05/the-new-york-times-has-a-lovely-new-cooking-site/


BTW: the website is beautiful!

phoebecoaming's comment, August 19, 2016 1:09 AM
wonderful
timberfloori ngmelbourne's comment, June 1, 2018 3:04 AM
good
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Adobe Launches Standalone Storytelling App for iPad: Adobe Voice

Adobe Launches Standalone Storytelling App for iPad: Adobe Voice | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from review article by Mashable:
"Adobe is focusing on providing more tools for its mobile users. The company rolled out Adobe Voice Thursday, an all-new storytelling app for iPad users.

The app gives users a way to easily create and share animated videos that combine images, music, voice recordings and special effects.

The app is meant be simple to use, and provide people — especially those who may not be able to use traditional video-editing software — with ways to tell stories through video.

Users begin by choosing from a preset story template that helps outline the structure of their video. They can then import their own photos, draw from the app's library of 25,000 icons or search the web for their own images.

Adobe also included specially created soundtracks, so users can add music to fit the story. Users can also record their own voiceovers..."

Read full original article by Mashable:
http://mashable.com/2014/05/08/adobe-voice-app/

The free app is available for iPad here:
http://getvoice.adobe.com/


Here’s a peek at how Voice works:

http://youtu.be/I6f0XMOHzoM


technologywelsh's comment, October 25, 2015 10:52 PM
Breathtaking...!!
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New Community-Powered Curation Platform: Milq

New Community-Powered Curation Platform: Milq | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the review article by The New York Times:
"Social media users know the frustration: a deluge of videos, images and music clips flows through their news feeds all the time, some of it precious but mostly not.

The people behind Milq, a new website and app, say they have one solution: change the network. 
Milq lets users organize songs, video clips and other bits of media around common themes, resulting in something like collaborative mixtapes.


By trying to tame the web’s chaos through communities of taste, Milq is entering a crowded field of websites and apps that are betting on the power of human “curation”.
Perhaps Milq’s closest competitor is Pinterest, but Milq sees that personal process and raises it with group curation.
To do this, Milq has come up with something like a new atomic particle of online media: the bead. Milq is set up as a permanent collection of topic pages, or beads, each containing media clips posted by users.


Milq is free to use, on the web or on iPhones. (An Android app is being developed, the founders said.) But the involvement of corporate sponsors and media outlets is crucial to its expansion.
Condé Nast is an early media partner, and has been exploring ways to incorporate beads on its magazines’ sites..."


Read full original review by The New York Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/28/business/media/milq-aims-to-separate-wheat-from-social-media-chaff.html


Check out Milq: http://milq.com


More info: http://milq.com/about


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A Flipped-Up Twitter Feed with Only The Good Stuff In It: Vellum

A Flipped-Up Twitter Feed with Only The Good Stuff In It: Vellum | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

From Robin Good's insight:

"Vellum is a new free web app born out of a quick experiment at the New York Times R&D labs which allows you to see all of the most relevant Twitter stories coming from the people you follow, stripped of their commentary and showing their original title, description and source.

Vellum filters out text only tweets that contain no links, eliminates duplicates and surfaces only those tweets that have already been retweeted by multiple people.


An excellent news discovery tool for content curators..."


Read full and interesting Robin Good's insight below.


Try it out now: http://vellum.nytlabs.com/mylinks 


More info:

http://blog.nytlabs.com/2014/04/25/vellum-a-reading-layer-for-your-twitter-feed/ 



Via Robin Good
Nicoletta Gay's curator insight, April 28, 2014 8:06 AM

app developed by @nytlabs

Stephen Dale's curator insight, May 9, 2014 7:29 AM

Vellum acts as a reading list  for your Twitter feed, finding all the links that are being shared by those you follow on Twitter and displaying them each with their full titles and descriptions. 

This flips the Twitter model, treating the links as primary and the commentary as secondary (you can still see all the tweets about each link, but they are less prominent). 


Vellum puts a spotlight on content, making it easy to find what you should read next.

Pankaj Jindal's curator insight, May 12, 2014 8:43 AM

Test  4

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Google Is Testing New Service That Lets Chrome Users Save, Share And Organize Web Content: Google Stars

Google Is Testing New Service That Lets Chrome Users Save, Share And Organize Web Content: Google Stars | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the article by The Next Web:
"Google is testing a new favoriting service for its Chrome browser. Called Google Stars, the new option appears to still in very early testing.
The new addition was first discovered by Google+ user Florian Kiersch. He found the following strings in “the source code of the Google Collections modules in web search”.

Here are some of the strings that reveal a bit about the feature:
- Use the star in the address bar to save anything across the web.
- Search the entire page content with suggestions and auto complete.
- Discover new dimensions in your content through the automatically created filters.
- Browse and find your stars in a beautiful image rich grid. Add notes and make it yours.
- Select, and edit items to organize your starred content by clicking on them or dragging and dropping.
- Organize your starred items into groups, by typing a name for a new group here.

It does tell us this is a Chrome-specific feature.
In short, Google Stars supports favoriting (called starring) URLs, lets you add a title and a note, includes folders, and sharing functionality (both public and private). How much of all this will remain in the final release, is not clear.
The real interesting aspect here is that Stars appears to be a cloud service that allows for sharing..."

Read full original article:
http://thenextweb.com/google/2014/04/22/google-is-testing-a-feature-that-lets-chrome-users-save-share-and-organize-their-favorite-web-content/

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Wearable Smart Glass Curates Content Based On Your Physical Response: Amoeba

This is the description about Amoeba by Sanya Rai from the video on Vimeo:
"Amoeba is a wearable device that analyses your bio-parameters to understand your interest levels.
It is designed to help you intuitively sift through your digital content while it analyses your likes and dislikes in the background."

Yesterday, April 16, 2014, CNET Australia posted its review article about Amoeba.
Here is an excerpt from it:
"What if Google Glass could tell when you were interested in something — and recommend personally curated content based on a cumulative database of your likes and dislikes?

We've already seen tech that responds automatically to your physiological responses; but None of these, however, have really made their way into the mainstream — but the technology has definite potential. Take a concept created by Sanya Rai, Carine Collé and Florian Puech, students at the Royal College of Art and Imperial College in the UK.
It's called Amoeba, and it's an eyeglass designed to be worn when you spend time on the web.

"We envision that you would wear the Amoeba device before you start your web-based research," Rai wrote on her website. "As you go through different web pages, the device senses your bio-data and quantifies your interest. When you are done, you can then go to the Amoeba app and select the keyword you were looking at. The app will show you a time-based summary of all links visited, layering them based on how interesting you found the content. You also have the option of seeing the route you took to arrive at a certain page, thus enabling better reflection and self awareness."
The device has sensors to measure three involuntary physical responses: your perspiration rate, your pupillary dilation and your respiration rate.

The team believes this could have several potential uses. Firstly, providing advertisers with honest feedback. Another is measuring student engagement in education. For the user, of course, it could help unearth content that they otherwise might not find for themselves — a pretty intriguing prospect, although we suspect some might baulk at the notion that everything they engage with is being fed to a database and potentially sold.

Still, at the moment it's only a concept, and one would hope it would remain optional, even if the team were to achieve their dream. "Our final vision would be to have Amoeba as an embedded feature in all wearable devices so that it can help streamline all content for the user, bringing to the forefront only the most interesting stuff rather than the entire daily log of data," Rai said..."

Original Video: http://vimeo.com/90857768

Official Website by Sanya Rai about Amoeba:

http://www.sanyarai.co.uk/#!amoeba/c11x1

Review article by CNET Australia:

http://www.cnet.com.au/wearable-smart-glass-curates-content-based-on-your-physical-response-339347094.htm


but it is a summary from the long review article by Deezen:
http://www.dezeen.com/2014/04/10/amoeba-wearable-headpiece-monitors-sensory-responses-digital-content-intuitive-bookmarking/

An other review article is here by Motherboard:
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/this-monocle-curates-the-web-according-to-your-biological-clues


TeresaSiluar's curator insight, April 26, 2014 1:24 PM

Amoeba: una app que reconoce tus intereses y te ayuda a descubrirlos en la red.

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Twitter Adds Search For Timelines And Lists Offering A New Way To Find Curated Content Sources

Twitter Adds Search For Timelines And Lists Offering A New Way To Find Curated Content Sources | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the article on Search Engine Land:

"Twitter continues to expand its collection of search filters with the recent addition of search for Timelines and Lists.

It’s showing up as a search filter on Twitter.com and in the official Twitter apps (both iOS and Android).


The option in the left-side navigation says “Timelines,” and then once you’ve selected that search filter, there’s a secondary option above the search results to switch between Timelines and Lists.


For users, the new filters offer a way to find curated content sources from other Twitter users..."


Read original article:

http://searchengineland.com/twitter-quietly-adds-search-timelines-lists-188943

Martyn Cooper's curator insight, April 12, 2014 3:15 AM

This should make Twitter more useful to me:

Imel Seda's curator insight, April 13, 2014 8:39 AM

For users, the new filters offer a way to find curated content sources from other Twitter users..."

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Google Alerts Adds Filters For Regions And Languages

Google Alerts Adds Filters For Regions And Languages | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the article by Search Engine Land:
"Google has added two more filter and delivery options to Google Alerts. Google Alerts informs you of updates within Google results via email or RSS feed. The two new filters let you refine those alerts by language or region..."

Read full original article:
http://searchengineland.com/google-alerts-adds-filters-regions-languages-187282

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BuzzFeed and Time magazine: The next big thing always starts out looking like a toy

BuzzFeed and Time magazine: The next big thing always starts out looking like a toy | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from article written By Mathew Ingram and published on GigaOM:
"BuzzFeed co-founder Jonah Peretti compares a nine-year-old website known primarily for its “listicles” and funny cat GIFs to a venerable and award-winning newsmagazine like Time. There are a lot more similarities between Time magazine and BuzzFeed than even most media-industry watchers would probably care to admit.

Peretti describes how he started reading David Halberstam’s book “The Powers That Be"...
“The stories in the book, which was first published in 1979, are great reminders that even traditional media companies like Time Inc., CBS, and the New York Times were once small startups. In those early days, they had many similarities to BuzzFeed and other new web startups that are emerging today.”

As the BuzzFeed founder notes, Time magazine started as just a crazy plan hatched by a couple of twenty-something former university friends named Henry Luce and Briton Hadden. Their bright idea? To take news that had already been reported by other more mainstream media organizations and summarize it, make it more readable and more entertaining, but mostly short enough so people could catch up on the news. In other words, the first modern newsmagazine.

In case you missed it, that sounds an awful lot like what BuzzFeed and others, including Gawker and The Huffington Post, did when they first arrived on the scene: they aggregated and highlighted content from other outlets and made it more user-friendly, made it more entertaining. That may be difficult to reconcile with the Time magazine we know now, but that’s how the empire began (others were also summarizing the news, including a startup called Reader’s Digest).

“Time began as a clipping service in a small office. A group of writers subscribed to a dozen newspapers and summarized the most important stories, rewriting the news in a more digestible format. BuzzFeed also started as a clipping service in a small office seven years ago. Instead of subscribing to newspapers, we surfed the web.”

“Again and again, the conventional wisdom was dismissive of every new medium; each new communications technology was seen as a fad, a tool for demagoguery, or the end of journalism. And always these skeptics were proven wrong, usually by newbies who didn’t care about the old way things were done.”...

Read full, long and interesting article here:
http://gigaom.com/2014/03/08/buzzfeed-and-time-magazine-the-next-big-thing-always-starts-out-looking-like-a-toy-and-media-is-no-exception/


Giuseppe Mauriello's insight:

My simple insight:

"Build engaged audiences through publishing by curation."
by Scoop.it Home Page.

When I read the article by GigaOM, I found some similarities with us, indipendent and human content curators.
Today, everyone is a media company!

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Drag And Drop Links, Text And Images To Open Them In New Tab With This Firefox Extension: Super Drag

Drag And Drop Links, Text And Images To Open Them In New Tab With This Firefox Extension: Super Drag | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

From Add-on About page:
"Super Drag extends the feature of drag & drop. For example, you can drag a link to open it in a new background, foreground and current tab. You can also drag text to search, by using the default search engine, or select what you want. And for image, you can drag it to view in a background tab, foreground tab, or save it to the default download location.

Super Drag supports links, text and images.
- links: open it in background tab, foreground tab or current tab.
- text: search it in background tab, foreground tab or current tab.
- images: open it in background tab, foreground tab or save it."

Try out it:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/super-drag/

Read more from the review article by CNET:
http://howto.cnet.com/8301-11310_39-57619755-285/open-links-and-search-text-faster-in-firefox-with-super-drag/
via AddictiveTips:
http://www.addictivetips.com/web/super-drag-speeds-up-browsing-in-firefox-via-drag-drop-actions/


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A Return to Simplicity, Empathy and Imperfection in Communication: Human to Human | Brian Solis

A Return to Simplicity, Empathy and Imperfection in Communication: Human to Human | Brian Solis | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the guest post by Bryan Kramer, author of the new ebook "There is no B2B or B2C: Human to Human", and published on Brian Solis Blog.
"Marketing has become so complex, in segmenting audiences into “B2B” (business to business) and “B2C” (business to consumer).
This, plus the rise of social, digital and mobile channels, have created an atmosphere of anonymity.
I fear that the social/digital/mobile world has created an angry mob of anonymous reactors who take short form communication literally.

That’s where “H2H” came from.
The dawn of a more social web, i.e. forums, discussion boards, and pre- Web 2.0 online communities, would eventually equalize the media landscape and give a voice and brand to customers while introducing the need for a human persona in business. As Brian says of P2P, "people are now brands and brands are now people."
This evolution has been guiding our society back into one that requires a more personal approach.

- Speaking Human
Consumers are confused. Why can’t we make it simple for people to understand what we’re selling, so they can more easily share their experiences and the value they felt with others?
Don’t care what language you speak, who your brand is or what message you’re trying to send, we all need to speak more human.

- A Human Approach: Social Sensory Marketing
The future of social marketing involves “human sensory building”, and how it will become necessary to intertwine this approach into the marketing experience at each stage of the customer lifecycle. When we are able to weave directly relatable human experiences into social situations, it changes how we share and consume information forever.

- Customers are Fickle Humans
Customers, as humans, are fickle and are so empowered today that they expect extraordinary, over-the-top experiences that rock their world.
Customers are ready to move on unless they have one thing – an undying relationship with a person or people at your brand who made them feel uniquely special.

- Becoming Better Storytellers
Humans require context to understand concepts. Without boundaries, short bursts of communication, coupled with a faster-paced, noisy society and shorter attention spans is affecting how we, as humans, tell stories.
We need to become better storytellers. Storytelling is a great way to communicate how you feel, or how you want your audience to feel. A story helps us understand how things fit into our individual experiences and gives us context to make decisions. Stories add the color, personality and relevance about what you’re trying to sell..."

Read full original article:
http://www.briansolis.com/2014/02/return-simplicity-empathy-imperfection-communication-human-human-h2h/

Lynn O'Connell for O'Connell Meier's curator insight, February 26, 2014 2:07 AM

We've had great success with B2B marketing by remembering that these prospects are people first, B2B second. The shift to thinking about your program as H2H marketing is definitely one to watch. Must-read article!

valeriecharron's curator insight, February 26, 2014 6:19 PM

There is no BtoB or BtoC...

Ricardo De Leon's curator insight, March 19, 2014 1:33 AM

Simpática invitación al retorno de la comunicación H2H, mejor dejemos los teclados, salgamos a escuchar al mundo.

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News Discovery: Find Topic-Specific Curated RSS Feed Reading Lists on FeedShare.net

News Discovery: Find Topic-Specific Curated RSS Feed Reading Lists on FeedShare.net | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

From Robin Good's insight:

"FeedShare is an excellent free online resource to find curated reading lists of RSS feeds on specific topics.
FeedShare is in fact an open-source web app which allows you to easily upload and share your OPML file with others..."


Read full original Robin Good's insight below.


Try out it: http://feedshare.net/


Via Robin Good
panoramawindows's comment, December 23, 2021 10:57 AM
good
panoramawindows's comment, December 23, 2021 10:57 AM
good
Happy2HelpID's comment, February 17, 6:53 AM
SUPER
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7 Tactics For Content Curation Success By Heidi Cohen

7 Tactics For Content Curation Success By Heidi Cohen | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the article on Heidi Cohen's Blog:
"Content curation requires special skills, specifically, a strong point of view and expertise at content selection and presentation. It takes an expert with in-depth area knowledge to pick the content gems your audience seeks and needs.

1. Provide editorial selection expertise.
Become known as a trustworthy filter and thought leader on a specific topic.

2. Add commentary to augment existing information.
Give the selected information context for your specific audience.

3. Write attention-grabbing headlines.
Develop headline expertise within your organization.

4. Package your content to attract attention and facilitate consumption.
Outline and highlight key points.
Add images to appeal to readers’ visual senses.

5. Offer curated content on regular schedule.

6. Distribute curated content effectively across channels, platforms and devices.

7. Track results of curated content to achieve your objectives.
Incorporate appropriate content marketing metrics to determine content curation effectiveness..."

Each tactic is analyzed with more information. Read full original article:
http://heidicohen.com/content-curation-success


houseofferletter's comment, June 29, 2021 1:28 AM
nice
houseofferletter's comment, June 29, 2021 1:28 AM
nice
houseofferletter's comment, June 29, 2021 1:28 AM
nice
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Announcing TLDR: A Media Curated By The Entire Scoop.it Community

Announcing TLDR: A Media Curated By The Entire Scoop.it Community | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from article on Scoop.it Blog:
"You are now over 1 million curators on Scoop.it – content marketers, community managers, thought leaders and knowledge managers: curation has demonstrated its effectiveness in helping built visibility and reputation for pros and businesses.

But the point now is … we love reading what you curate!
We are excited to announce “TLDR by Scoop.it!“

TL;DR, as you know, means “Too Long, Didn’t Read.” TLDR by Scoop.it is a digest of content curated by the Scoop.it community. It captures the time saving benefit of curation in this overloaded Internet.

Make no mistake: curated content isn’t always faster to read; one could even argue that the curator’s insight adds to the reading time. This is valid. But the real time-consuming task on the Internet is not reading good content. It’s finding good content; extracting the signal from the noise. Once all search and filtering time is factored in, human curation by like-minded experts is the most time effective way to read relevant content. Hence, TLDR.

TLDR shows your work to the world: it offers direct access to relevant, curated content to a whole new audience..."

Read full original article here:
http://blog.scoop.it/2014/05/08/making-you-a-media-announcing-tldr-by-scoop-it/

belovednohitter's comment, September 19, 2017 12:40 AM
GOOD
Massagegun's comment, April 29, 2021 8:07 AM
good
Massagegun's comment, April 29, 2021 8:07 AM
good
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9/11 Memorial Museum Now Gathers And Shares Survivor Stories Into Online Collection: 9/11 Memorial Registries

9/11 Memorial Museum Now Gathers And Shares Survivor Stories Into Online Collection: 9/11 Memorial Registries | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from review article by Mashable:
"Survivors and witnesses of the Sept. 11 attacks and the World Trade Center bombing of 1993 now have a digital venue to share their stories, thanks to a new initiative the National September 11 Memorial and Museum launched on Wednesday.


The 9/11 Memorial Registries collect and share the personal experiences of survivors and rescue workers, as well as information about existing Sept. 11 memorials around the world. The interactive site, which technology and design company Infusion engineered and Microsoft sponsored, also invites the public to share firsthand testimonials from the attacks.


It's divided into three sections: the Rescue and Recovery Registry, which documents first-person stories of rescue, investigation, cleanup and relief efforts; the Witnesses and Survivors Registry, which includes the experiences of those who survived the events; and the Memorials Registry, which tracks Sept. 11 memorials across the globe through an interactive map.


Joe Daniels, 9/11 Memorial president, called it a "unique web experience that captures this important history through the perspectives of those men and women who lived through it."..."


Read full original article:
http://mashable.com/2014/04/30/9-11-memorial-registries/


9/11 Memorial Registries Website:
https://registries.911memorial.org/


neovstcom's comment, May 21, 2021 6:52 AM
nice
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Knight Lab Is Developing Its Smarter Twitter Search Tool: twXplorer

Knight Lab Is Developing Its Smarter Twitter Search Tool: twXplorer | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Northwestern University Knight Lab is developing its smarter Twitter search tool: twXplorer and was launched at the end of 2013.
It’s made its way into the toolboxes of journalists and non-journalists alike and offers a more convenient and organized way of finding and tracking Twitter content.


Key features are:
- Search Twitter for a word or phrase in 12 different languages;
- View popular terms, hashtags and links found in your searches;
- Save snapshots for later viewing.


From About Page how it works:


Sign In
You have to sign in before you can use twXplorer. You do this using OAuth, which is an authentication protocol that allows users to approve applications to act on their behalf without sharing their password.


Search queries
Enter a query in the search box, pick a language, and hit the search button. To provide a relatively swift response, and comply with Twitter's API limits, twXplorer finds the 500 most recent tweets that include your search terms.
If twXplorer reports finding 400 tweets, it means it found 400 unique tweets–which you can scroll through–and 100 “new style” retweets.


Search results
For any search terms you enter into twXplorer, you get four different ways to see your search results:
- Up to 500 recent tweets containing the terms you entered;
- In tweets that include your search terms;
- The most popular hashtags;
- The most popular links.


Lists
This search provides information about tweets on Twitter lists you have created or subscribed to (maximum of 100).


Snapshots
You can save a set of results by clicking on "Save Snapshot." You can view everything you've saved by clicking on "saved snapshots."....


twXplorer "About Page": http://twxplorer.knightlab.com/about/


Try out it: http://twxplorer.knightlab.com/


Blog Post by Knight Lab:
http://knightlab.northwestern.edu/2014/04/24/help-us-improve-twxplorer-our-twitter-search-tool-for-journalists/


showersscuttles's comment, April 5, 2017 1:31 AM
good
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Pinterest Adds New Visual Discovery Tool For Mobile Devices: Guided Search

Excerpt from the review article by Search Engine Land:
"Pinterest wants to help its users find what they are looking for even if they don’t know what exactly that is. The company’s solution, Guided Search, is a predictive search engine powered by social curation.

Announced last night at Pinterest’s San Francisco headquarters, Guided Search was presented by CEO Ben Silbermann as a breakthrough for people exploring Pinterest, “the world’s largest human created collection of things.”

Regular search is great — the most amazing invention, Silbermann said — but it’s best for answering specific questions. Users of Pinterest need something better to sift through the billions of pieces of content on the visual social bookmarking site.

And because 75% of Pinterest usage is on mobile devices, the company is focusing on mobile development. Guided Search is a mobile only product, released within updated iOS and Android apps in the Apple and Google Play stores last night. A desktop version will come later, but no timetable was given.
Pinterest aimed to minimize typing by improving autocomplete and giving each suggestion a compelling visual representation. They made the search bar more prominent and added a new visual parasol of guides directly below it..."

Read full original article by Searche Engine Land:
http://searchengineland.com/pinterest-guided-search-189950

Read more on the Pinterest Blog:
http://blog.pinterest.com/post/83772264616/guided-search-a-new-way-to-find-what-youre-looking

Introducing Guided Search Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyYVI0ySDvk


Giuseppe Mauriello's comment, April 26, 2014 2:35 AM
@oddsink ...thank you for appreciation my scooped article!
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Google Trends Now Lets Users Subscribe To Any Search Topic

Google Trends Now Lets Users Subscribe To Any Search Topic | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from Google Inside Search (The Official Google Search Blog):
"Google Trends is a helpful place to see what people are searching for around the world. You can keep up with hot searches in real time, or take a historical look at trends dating back to 2004.
Started some days ago, it’s easier to get just the right insights at just the right time with email notifications.

You can now "Subscribe" to any search topic, Hot Searches for any country, or any U.S. monthly Top Chart.
You can also subscribe to email notifications about search interest in any topic you'd like.

If you decide you’re getting too many notifications, there’s an easy “unsubscribe” link in every email, or you can manage your preference on the Trends website in the new "subscriptions" section..."

Read full original article:
http://insidesearch.blogspot.it/2014/04/the-hottest-topics-on-google-delivered.html

Stephen Dale's curator insight, April 24, 2014 12:09 PM

So glad that Google is putting some investment into its Trends service. Being able to subscribe to a Trends search is a natural extension to Google's news alerts service.

 

Love it!

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Tools and Best Advice on Verifying Content in Breaking News: The Verification Handbook

The Verification Handbook, released two months ago by the European Journalism Centre, features tools and advice on verifying content in breaking news situations.

From book intro:
"The Verification Handbook is a groundbreaking new resource for journalists and aid responders, which provides step-by-step guidelines for using user-generated content (UGC) during emergencies.

In a crisis situation, social networks are overloaded with situational updates, calls for relief, reports of new developments, and rescue information. Reporting the right information is often critical in shaping responses from the public and relief workers; it can literally be a matter of life or death.

The Handbook prescribes best practice advice on how to verify and use this information provided by the crowd, as well as actionable advice to facilitate disaster preparedness in newsrooms.

While it primarily targets journalists and aid providers, the Handbook can be used by anyone. It’s advice and guidance are valuable whether you are a news journalist, citizen reporter, relief responder, volunteer, journalism school student, emergency communication specialist, or an academic researching social media."

Index (I only mention the chapters here):

  • Chapter 1: When Emergency News Breaks
  • Chapter 2: Verification Fundaments: Rules to Live By
  • Chapter 3: Verifying User-Generated Content
  • Chapter 4: Verifying Images
  • Chapter 5: Verifying Video
  • Chapter 6: Putting the Human Crowd to Work
  • Chapter 7: Adding the Computer Crowd to the Human Crowd
  • Chapter 8: Preparing for Disaster Coverage
  • Chapter 9: Creating a Verification Process and Checklist(s)
  • Chapter 10: Verification Tools


Editors of the Handbook:
Editor: Craig Silverman, The Poynter Institute
Copyeditor: Merrill Perlman, the American Copy Editors Society (ACES)

Each chapter is analyzed with information, tips and many case studies.
PDF version, 112 pages. A Must download and read!

"Verification Handbook" home page: http://verificationhandbook.com/

Read Verification Handbook online: http://verificationhandbook.com/book/

Free Downloads:
Download PDF version: http://goo.gl/fZMGRY

Download ePub version: http://goo.gl/aq4a3Y

Download Kindle version: http://goo.gl/aZEW28


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The New Rules of Social Journalism: The Curators and More

The New Rules of Social Journalism: The Curators and More | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Interesting excerpt for my topic from the article by PandoDaily:
"Is all social platform content inherently untrustworthy or is it possible to elevate it with journalism’s standards of higher quality and ethics?

We know that traditional methods of screening – e.g. professional editors directly supervising every piece of content – aren’t going to work. Social sites generate too much content for that.

Before despairing the conflict is irresolvable, I’d point out that even some professional journalists rely heavily on Wikipedia, perhaps the best example of generally high-quality crowd-sourced content.

The fact is, there are ways to improve the quality, and reliability of social journalism.
Here are a bunch of practical suggestions about how to bring journalistic ethos to the new hybrid models.

- Label contributors prominently. E.g. Staff Writer. Staff Columnist. Staff Curator. Expert Contributor, Expert Curator, Guest contributor. Reader Contribution. Clue in the audience who’s who.

- Publish staff, contributor and reader credentials as part of a profile linked to all their bylines. I recommend LinkedIn style profiles, with links to articles written for the site or anyone else. Let the audience have plenty of information to decide if a contributor is trustworthy.

- Signing up a guest or expert contributor is a tacit endorsement.

- Business publication, in particular, should consider mandating that contributors take formal online ethics training.

- Getting featured on a content channel should require a curator’s approval (paid professionals or expert volunteers), rather than automated inclusion based on subject matter or pre-approval of the author.

- Unlike social networks, consider only allowing users to follow curated channels, not individual posters.

- Consistently highly-scoring content contributors (including staff) should be labeled as such, so they can gain a reputation as being trustworthy.

- If content has been rejected by curators, or not socially shared, or has poor engagement time and few up votes, screen it for deletion. Provide feedback to contributors facing deletion. Social journalism is not just about increasing the amount of content. It’s about increasing quality of information..."

The article is very long and there also is a first part that I didn't mention here.
In addition, there are more information and other suggestions by author. Read interesting original article here:
http://pando.com/2014/03/29/the-new-rules-of-social-journalism-a-proposal/


Martyn Cooper's curator insight, March 31, 2014 4:22 AM

Monkeys and Typewriters: I use online  quite a lot - this is a case in point.  I find it a good way to book-mark things I want to access later as well as to publicise to colleagues.

Nine0Media's curator insight, March 31, 2014 2:45 PM

#DIYSEO #SocialMediaTools

Neha Xavier's curator insight, April 2, 2014 2:08 AM

Interesting!

Rescooped by Giuseppe Mauriello from Content Curation World
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Content Curation Is Not Content Marketing

Content Curation Is Not Content Marketing | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

From Robin Good's insight:

"Many content curation startups, and many of the people using curation tools will probably not like what I have written in this article, but I have a hard time behaving as if I couldn't see a cardboard façade that's been sold for a real destination.


Content Curation has been hijacked and has been sold as a cheap and easy solution for content marketers plagued by the growing problem of getting greater attention from their readers and therefore of how to produce more quality content within tighter and tighter time constraints..."


Read full and interesting Robin Good's insight below.



Via Robin Good
i.e. Realty's curator insight, March 25, 2014 4:06 PM

Are you creating value or noise?

LennyFromTheBlock's curator insight, June 21, 2020 9:56 PM
I've always wanted to know the difference, if there was any, between content curation and content marketing, and I found it! I found out there is a huge difference between the two and even though they sound like the same things, they are not. This article is such an easy read if you have extra time on your lunch break or on the bus to work! 
Content curation is looked at as easy and effortless but actually is more time consuming because you have to go through site after site, and infographic after infographic to look for the perfect ones for your intended audience.
Amanda Schenk's curator insight, June 22, 2020 10:56 PM
The media industry is just one blurred line. Every subject and specialty overlaps at least a tiny bit with another. However, though content curation and content marketing are frequently seen as synonymous, they are distinctly different. 
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VideoGenie Launches StoryBox, A Product That Aggregates All Kinds Of Content About A Brand

VideoGenie Launches StoryBox, A Product That Aggregates All Kinds Of Content About A Brand | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the review article by TechCrunch:
"VideoGenie has launched a new product that it calls StoryBox, which aggregates all kinds of content about a brand. The company says the testimonials can include tweets, YouTube videos, Instagram photos, and more, all presented in what Nassiri (VideoGenie's CEO) called “a rich, visual environment” on the brand’s site, and with the option for visitors to add their own stories directly from the site.

Naturally, brands can curate the content, so that a tweet with the wrong message doesn’t end up in the StoryBox. At the same time, Nassiri said the product offers analytics showing which content is getting the most engagement and (when relevant) driving the most sales. StoryBox can automatically prioritize the best-performing content and display it prominently on the site..."

Read full original article by TechCrunch:
http://techcrunch.com/2014/03/03/videogenie-launches-storybox

More Info about StoryBox:
http://www.videogenie.com/solutions

The product is already live on the Mountain Hardwear site:
http://www.findingwinter.com/


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Five Content Curation Mistakes That B2B Marketers Need To Avoid

Five Content Curation Mistakes That B2B Marketers Need To Avoid | Social Media Content Curation | Scoop.it

Excerpt from the guest post by Patricia Hume, President of Trapit, and published on MarketingProfs:
"It's impossible for marketers to create enough original, quality material for each channel every day, which is why many rely on content curation to help build brand awareness and generate leads via social media and email marketing.

Here are five of the top content curation mistakes that B2B marketers need to avoid if they want to offer their audiences value, rather than noise.

1. Skimming the Headline and Sharing Immediately
A good headline doesn't mean a good article. Sometimes, it doesn't even mean a relevant article. That's why it's important to take the time to read the entire article before sharing it with an audience.
Content curation is about showing thought leadership, too; so, if you don't engage with the article yourself, then you can't show your expertise about the topic.

2. Checking Only the Most Popular Stories and Sources for Content
If your content curation is supposed to attract people to the brand for originality and thought leadership, depending on the most-visited sources and most-read articles is merely going to backfire. Your social media accounts won't stand out, and prospects and customers won't see the value in following them.

3. Not Personalizing for Your Audience
In a world of almost infinite content, your audience is going to be interested only in the stories that are most relevant to their needs.
You should carefully consider the target audience for each piece of curated content.

4. Promoting the Same Content Across Every Channel
One tactic that's employed by time-starved marketers is to share one link across a few different channels, all at once.
Ultimately, doing so undermines the purpose of content curation.

5. Spending Too Much Time Curating Content
It can take hours to create a blog post, and just a few minutes to curate content. So marketers may write blog posts a few days a week and fill the gaps in output with curated content very quickly.
But curating good content that effectively engages the audience—and making sure each piece is promoted and distributed in the context of each social environment—can take hours..."

Read full original article:
http://www.marketingprofs.com/articles/2014/24500/five-content-curation-mistakes-b2b-marketers-are-making

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