Archive for ◊ October, 2011 ◊

Author: admin
• Monday, October 31st, 2011

We know it’s a tad bit too late to dish out pumpkin carving ideas, besides we’re no Martha Stewart anyway. Still we wish to greet you a Happy Halloween. Hope you all had a fun time this Halloween.

img class=”aligncenter size-full wp-image-1656″ title=”pumpkins-candy-jars-covers” src=”http://www.phoenixrealm.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/pumpkins-candy-jars-covers.jpg” alt=”" width=”360″ height=”450″ />

Happy Halloween from all of us at PhoenixRealm!

Author: admin
• Monday, October 31st, 2011

Halloween Social Media Marketing Tips

This Halloween do you think social media will bring you tricks or treats? For some marketers, every day is Halloween when it comes to /a>. These marketers expect the bogeyman to be hiding behind every piece of consumer-generated content and assume their customers and the public only use Facebook and Twitter witchcraft to create bloodcurdling tricks. Yet the reality is that most of the social media conversation about your firm isn’t scary.

For your Halloween treat from TopRank’s Online Marketing Blog, here are the top five tricks in my social media goodie bag you can easily integrate into your marketing efforts.

1. Shock Them with Killer Headlines

Grab the attention of your business’ witches and wizards to lure them into your social media content. Otherwise they’ll take off on their broomstick. A magic headline casts a spell over your visitors and entices them to read on. According to Copyblogger’s Brian Clark only one out of five visitors /a>t. It’s a pretty scary statistic considering most of your time is spent creating the body of your content, not the headline. Since quality counts, a strong headline can tempt more readers in. Additionally it’ll come as no shock that the more powerful your title, the more it encourages social sharing.

2. Thrill Them with Spine-Chilling Content

Your content doesn’t stand a ghost of a chance if it doesn’t deliver value to your readers. Even worse, it won’t support your sales process because people don’t like to troll through shadowy content. This means content that’s a rehash of other information or recycled marketing promotions.  Don’t be frightened but 60% of consumers /a>.  So show some wizardry and create quality information your prospects desire and need. Want to enhance your content marketing’s magical powers? Make it mobile friendly since 55% of smartphone owners use their device while shopping according to research by /a>.  If nothing else it’ll give your competitors a fright since the shoppers may be checking your information in their store!

3. Scare up Some Treats

Bewitch your customers and social media followers with a special deal. Forget the over-hyped Groupon and similar group coupon offers. These promotions can be very scary for small business since Rice University found that /a> were unprofitable. Instead create a targeted offer to entice social media followers to engage with your firm. Exact Target research found that roughly /a> (pdf) on Facebook to take advantage of a one-time offer. Beware– you need to keep these prospects engaged once you’ve lured them in or they’ll just disappear with their discount never to be heard from again.

4. Spook Them Into Doing What You Want

Incorporate a call-to-action into your social media. This old direct marketing trick is easy to overlook in social media yet it can reap significant returns. The secret is to make it contextually relevant to what you want your social media followers to do next and the specific environment or platform in which it appears. Remember persuading prospects to purchase isn’t magic. Think baby steps that help move prospects towards your ultimate goal. Use appropriate colors and graphics to make your call-to-action stand out. While you’re creating your call-to-action, don’t forget to develop a targeted promotion code so you can track your results.

5. Offer Halloween Visitors Candy

Decorate your content with social media icons to encourage social sharing. It’s Halloween—who doesn’t want to share their haul so they don’t get sick? But don’t scare your visitors by making them think, or work too much or they’re off. You want to cast a spell over your visitors so they’ll spread the word about you to their social media friends.

Even though it’s Halloween, don’t creep your customers and the public out with a lot of me, me, me marketing-speak. Instead, pay-it-forward by offering some social media treats that yield real marketing benefits for your organization.

Do you have any special social media tricks to share?

Author: admin
• Monday, October 31st, 2011

img class=”alignright” style=”margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 10px;” title=”Liveblogging Conferences” src=”http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3502/3820109549_1bf9d1b7c9_m.jpg” alt=”Audience SES San Jose 2009″ width=”240″ height=”180″ /> I’ve been liveblogging conferences since about 2005. While I had personally liveblogged SES and Pubcon, the first time I ever liveblogged for a conference itself was ad:tech Chicago thanks to Steve Hall. I was then able further develop my liveblogging skills observing and sometimes working with Barry Schwartz of Search Engine Roundtable. Since then TopRank has liveblogged nearly 100 events from SES Hong Kong to Intel’s first Social Media Summit.

When Mack Collier /a> to talk about liveblogging in anticipation of the upcoming /a> conference, I had no hesitation. Liveblogging has helped /a> and myself personally achieve numerous business and marketing goals at a fraction of the cost of many traditional marketing, advertising and content creation tactics.

Despite the practice being around for quite a long time, many people have no idea what /a> is. In fact, technology and tools have evolved to change much of what it means to liveblog events. It used to be that you’d sit in on a session, write notes into an article and file the story/blog post within 1/2 hours or so after the presentation ended. Now, liveblogging can take the form of live tweeting and then taking those tweets and compiling them into a post later or curating tweets through tools like Storify.

During the #BlogChat focused on Liveblogging on Sunday night, Mack wanted to focus on two key questions. I’ve taken a stab at listing insights, advice, processes and suggestions for each.

What are the Top 2-3 things you should know before you attempt to live-blog an event?

Thanks Mack! Appreciate the opportunity & really looking forward to this. I have a lot more than 2 or 3 (fortunately and unfortunately) I’d like to split my 2-3 things answer into suggestions relevant to pre, during & post even liveblogging. This is by no means a comprehensive post about liveblogging – but a summary and elaboration of what came up during the #blogchat about it.

Let’s get a handy link out there right away: /a>

Pre Event Live Blogging:

  • Answer why, who, what, when, where – Plan for specifics but be open to spontaneity. It’s really useful to have firm ideas about the purpose of liveblogging. For some it’s just a way to capture content for personal use. For others, it’s a way to create content for a blog or even repurpose into a compiled guide of tips for conference attendees. Or it might serve multiple purposes as in my case where I needed to build my writing skills, attend events on a budget and create content. Also, liveblogging can create connections with speakers.There’s an expression I’ve used many times – If you want to get into the media, become the media. Liveblogging was the proxy for me to do that here with Online Marketing Blog.
  • Create suspense - Write a pre-event post, reach out to session speakers for tips, crowd source sessions to cover. I learned this from Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Roundtable. Create a grid of sessions you (and/or your team) will be covering during an event.  Pre-event posts will inform your readers and subscribers what’s coming. This can be important if your blog posting frequency goes way up. It also gives you the opportunity to mention the speakers in the post. Their Google Alerts for their names will put you on their radar.I’ve had success with reaching out to speakers beforehand, advising that I’ll be liveblogging their session and to see if they have any tactical tips to share for a pre-event blog post that will promote their session.  A small number of tips from each speaker is easy for them to do, and results in a great compilation.  Here’s an example of where I’ve done that: /a>. Obviously it helps if you a c0-speaker or moderator, or if you know at least one of the presenters.
  • Be a media sponsor. TopRankBlog was the 1st Blog Media Sponsor for SES, Pubcon, SMX, eMetrics. Although, we are currently only sponsoring SES and OMS. Being a media sponsor is more than a press pass. It’s mutual exposure for the blogger and the event: online, offline and through email. Advertisers pay huge $$ for sponsorships and media sponsorships used to be reserved to print magazines and large email lists.Not just any blog can become a media sponsor. You really need to be a credible blog in the category with a pre-existing audience. Size and quality of other social networks come in to play besides blog subscribers as well as a healthy email subscriber list. However, getting started liveblogging events that you’re already attending is a great start.
  • Duplicate yourself. There’s only so much you can cover on your own, so recruit other people to liveblog with/for you and you’ll provide mutual exposure as well as another source of great content. Find out if other people are already going to attend the conference or if you have secured a media sponsorship, see if you can give away a free pass as part of your event promotion. Then require the winner to liveblog with you.
  • Be open minded about what “event” means for live blogging. “Real world” conferences, workshops, press events and training sessions are common situations for liveblogging, but also consider virtual conferences, webinars, tele classes (where allowed). There’s a ton of archived content that’s never been blogged. In fact, if you can’t afford to attend conferences, get started with free webinars.  Video archives of conference presentations are also a great opportunity to practice liveblogging skills with the added benefit of being able to replay the video as often as you want.  With webinars, be sure to mention speakers, the event and link to the brand site that hosted the webinar in your blog post. That can get you on their radar.As a speaker in webinars, I’ve suggested to participants that there’s nothing wrong with liveblogging the presentation I’m giving and that has turned into blog posts (and links).
  • Identify specific sessions, topics, approach and a “hook”. Think about style: transcription, running commentary, pure reaction, real time article. There are a variety of formats for liveblogging, so pick a format and even an angle to the session beforehand if you can. This will provide structure to fill in the blanks, providing you know about the topic and the speakers.
  • Live tweeting running commentary can be used as liveblogging. It was suggested during the #blogchat that maybe live tweeting has replaced live blogging. That is true to some extent. As you’ll see from the links at the bottom of this post, curating those live tweets has also replaced roundups and liveblogging to some degree.  It’s easier to do, but not quite as valuable as summarizing highlights and takeaways.  There’s no reason you cannot mix a little of both live tweeting and blogging together.
  • Pre-write portions of the post such as intro, speakers and other language that is fairly predictable.  Having static information pre-written can save time and also adds to the format you’ve decided to follow for liveblogging.
  • Use Evernote then post to WordPress or your blogging platform of choice. Evernote is awesome because you won’t lose your work as can happen with a WordPress glitch or bad internet connection – an inevitability at most conferences. Plus Evernote synchs between devices, which can be handy.
  • Have the right equipment – charged laptop, camera or phone, backup internet source and a power strip. A computer that runs out of battery power just as the keynote speaker finally says something interesting can ruin your entire morning. Same for internet access if posting in a timely manner is important to your liveblogging goals.

During Event Live Blogging:

  • Get yourself in the right frame of mind and bring the skills. Focus on what you’ll be doing and type FAST. If you don’t type very quickly, then learn. Or you’ll be miserable. Same goes for multi-tasking. Taking photos (and resizing them), live tweeting and writing a 800 word liveblog post within 45 minutes is very doable, but only with lots of practice.
  • Sit in front, take photos, (video is usually a no no at conferences). Smart speakers love livebloggers and may even call you out during their presentation, which helps when you network with others. I’ve never left a conference thinking I’ve taken too many photos or networked with too many new contacts.  I have however, regretted not sitting closer to the front to get a decent photo.  Most people are afraid to sit up front and those are the best seats. Do what others are unwilling or unable to do and you’ll create a competitive advantage from the start.
  • Follow a format. Trying to capture everything that’s said can be boring & impossible, especially if speakers don’t follow any kind of structure. To get a good liveblog post from a session with speakers that ramble, or a topic you’re not super familiar with, just listen for the best quotes, stats and highlights for a “10 tips about topic XYZ post”.
    You can also use some of those nuggets to live tweet with the conference hashtag during the session.

Post Event Live Blogging:

  • Share your post via social channels & use the event hashtag in the title tag and the body copy. Great content isn’t great until it gets consumed and shared. Over and over again. Help that along by promoting your liveblogging efforts and of course, make it easy to share.
  • Do a roundup post of all that you covered each day or at least at the end of the conference including images, video interviews and tweets. Link to other livebloggers that are covering the same event.
  • Add a post-session video of yourself giving commentary. Do an interview with speakers or with attendees.  Adding multiple media formats can really spice up your liveblogging efforts.

What are the advantages to live-blogging an event versus simply doing a recap post once you get home?

Real time isn’t a luxury, it’s expected at events. People are going to get the information from somewhere, why not from you? If you can consistently provide quality live blogging coverage, you’ll win many new friends: speakers, event, media, subscribers and maybe even prospective clients and employees.

Live coverage meets a need for event attendees, speakers/brands (they view as news coverage) & those not attending However, there’s no rule that you can’t do some kind of real time coverage AND do a recap post once you get home.

Liveblog coverage is treated as media coverage by many Public Relations departments and that means a link from company newsrooms.

Live blogging events can take many forms and there are so many ways to gain value from it that there’s really no “right” or “wrong” way to do it. Like anything, if you set goals, make a plan to reach those goals, execute and evaluate the results to refine future efforts, you’ll undoubtedly discover what flavor of live blogging is right for you.

Thanks again to /a> for having me on #blogchat and also for everyone that participated. I was great to see friends like /a>, /a>, /a> & /a> stop by :)

Here are links to a few creative curation and recaps of the Live Blogging #blogchat:

  • /a> Tweet stats, contributors & transcript via Hashtracking
  • /a> curated and organized tweets from the #blogchat via Storify
  • /a> Top links shared via Tweetreports
  • /a> collection of tweets from the #blogchat via Storify

Are you a conference live blogger and what are some of your live blogging tips?


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Author: admin
• Monday, October 31st, 2011

Google collects a lot of information on individuals & can have some level of confidence if the person is a real person or not based on things like their history of email usage, if they have a credit card on file, how they interact with other high confidence real accounts, how many people are friends with them on Google+, usage of an Android cell phone, their search history, etc.

Google doesn’t need all those signals on any individual, just some blend of them.

From there they can create a lot of usage-based brand signals.

Query Volume + Click Distribution

For any keyword Google can see the search volume & the click distribution on the search results.

If a lot of people click on the top result & very few people click on the second or third result there is a strong chance the keyword is a brand. If the click distribution is spread more evenly across the search results then it is less likely to be a brand keyword.

The above was a hypothetical example, but the following image shows how lower volume branded navigational keywords can drive far more traffic than broader industry keywords. We get twice as much traffic for seobook & seo book as we do for seo.

Query Chains

When people search for a generic keyword they may (immediately or later) modify their search query to search for related keywords. In the past Microsoft offered a search funnels tool that would show common searches before & after a keyword. If someone searched for credit cards they might soon search for visa or mastercard.

Shortly after /a>, a Googler described the algorithmic change as /a>.

High User Acceptance

Of course getting the user to click is just the first step. From there you must satisfy them. ;)

If you visit a page quickly & then jump right back to the search results Google asks users for an explicit vote against that site.

And if you visit a page for a significant period of time Google asks users for an explicit vote for that site.

That Google is measuring the time until return the search results to determine which explicit vote to request also implies that they can use the same aggregate data to create an implicit signal.

Where this measurement can get a bit fuzzy is that Panda can create a self-reinforcing impact (good or bad).

Some examples…

Self-Reinforcing Positive Impacts

Let’s say your site got a ranking boost by Panda. It will rank higher across broader industry keywords, to where people may enter your site at the category level (say shoes or Nike shoes) and then surf around your site quite a bit. This equates to a longer time on site & a better user experience.

2 more factors on this front are branded navigation & familiarity.

On some search results Google shows branded search options.

If clicking those brand & store links feeds into the Vince relevancy signal, then any brand featured there has a huge wind at their back, building further brand signals. Eventually such suggestions can work their way into Google Instant keyword suggestions as well. Even if people do not click on those particular options, the various highlights in the search results act as advertisements for the brands, which drive incremental demand and search volume for those brands.

Amazon.com is responsible for roughly /a> in the United States (outside of travel), so many people might go and research product options generally & then conclude those search sessions by seeing if they can buy it off Amazon.com (due to getting free shipping & the high level of user trust Amazon has). As this becomes part of search relevancy algorithms this is the online equivalent of going to your local Borders store to find something to buy & then buying it on Amazon. In the short run you save a few Dollars, but in the long run stores like Borders go out of business.

Self-Reinforcing Negative Impacts

There are 2 bad ways a business can be impacted by Panda. One is missing out on the above promotional options that a large competitor may enjoy, which over time build more brand signals for them & leave your site stranded in no man’s land until it is finally clipped by Panda for lacking “quality.”

A second issue is a self-reinforcing issue with Panda. On WMW a user nicknamed Walkman described it as the “size 13 shoe problem.” After you have been hit by Panda you are not likely to rank for broader category level searches. However you might still rank for some really obscure longtail keyword that is uneconomic to address directly (and thus only have a glancing mention of the user’s intent). Your page might say we do not carry size 13 or size 13 out of stock and your Panda-hit site ranks for “Nike Carmelo Anthony size 13.” Thus the user bounces, creating a self-reinforcing negative user experience signal.

A third (non-Panda) issue that can cause poor user experience metrics is /a> in a way that makes the organic results irrelevant.

More on User Votes

Google has long used reviews in their ranking algorithms & even /a>.

The above examples of +1 votes and blocks can be used (along with the time on site & repeat visits) to gauge user satisfaction, however if they can’t get enough engagement then it will be very easy for big brands to buy that signal for pennies on the Dollar, as some social signals are easily bought by brands.

Not only does Amazon directly integrate promoting your wishlist on social media …

… but they also have done interesting promotions like a “Tweet & get” …

Imagine if/when a new local Wal-Mart store launches offering a free $10 coupon to everyone who Tweets their savings at the checkout counter!

One big issue I have with the +1 votes & blocks is that they apply across the board. I may /a> hosted on YouTube, but there is also a lot of great content there. I love eBay for vintage video games, but it does not mean I love them for books.

Likewise some of the friend of friend stuff can be a bit off.

At some point Google should make +1 votes & blocks more granular.

Near the end of this article I will also further discuss some issues with ad votes.

Repeat Visits

Does Google measure repeat visitors? Yes.

They use that user interaction to ask for an explicit vote…

…and they can use it as an implicit vote as well.

User Location

Once it is obvious Google is counting certain types of user metrics (just like they count links) there will be a race to the bottom to provide those said signals. That race to the bottom will lead to such signals being sold by accounts that either have sketchy trust metrics associated with them (if done through automation) and/or in markets with lower living costs.

In addition to AdSense & Google Analytics, Google has huge search market share, a widely distributed toolbar and their Chrome web browser. They can track /a> and /a>

And they can also track where the votes come from.

Domain Name

If your domain name matches your keyword that may be a brand signal. However, Google may also look at some other signals (like user engagement, repeat visits, relative CTR, etc.) as confirmation signals on this front.

URL Links

Sometimes when a spammer builds links they trap themselves by using the same anchor text too much. Whereas when a branded website pulls in organic citations the anchor text tends to be mixed up, like…

/a>
/a>
Pay pal.com
paypal.com
pay pal
Paypal
paypal payments
etc.

Diversity in any sense (anchor text, linking sources, pages being linked to, links built across time, etc.) is generally considered a good thing.

Other types of links might also be seen as potential brand signals. For instance, frequent exposure in trusted news sites, other trusted seed sites, or other known brand sites could pass additional karma. Some link spikes that are also associated with strong direct traffic spikes, strong referral traffic from the links, and strong brand searches might also boost the weight given to links.

Non-search Brand Data Sources

  • Google has suggested they could /a>.
  • In local search Google has long used the sites they displaced in the organic results /a> (even if they were in some cases unlinked).
  • In addition to offering branded filters in their internal navigation, many merchants submitting their products to Google product search may also be giving Google signals about which brands matter.
  • Google will be able to lean into Zagat ratings for business & other data sources (Google Wallet, Google Offers, etc.) will provide additional signals to Google.

Advertising

Any type of non-search distribution you have (RSS subscribers, email newsletters, mobile applications, physical stores, membership loyalty programs, etc.) makes it easier to influence search engines.

If advertising with Google had a negative impact on search relevancy you can be sure that the relevancy algorithms would change. Whereas if there is a convenient positive spill over then Google won’t complain. In fact, they will even go out of their way to advertise that spill over. Any sort of advertising you do increases brand awareness. And that leads to additional incremental brand searches (and thus brand signal)

More exposure also leads to more user experiences, which in turn leads to more opportunities for people to leave signals behind (be it links, social mentions, additional brand searches, and/or repeat visits).

On YouTube /a> (thus undermining relevancy) and more recently Google has implemented the controversial policy of putting +1 buttons in display ads.


Even if those votes don’t influence rank directly, they still influence user perception. And what is so bad about that is that users are only voting of the content of the ad. This basically is the equivalent of cloaking.

If the landing page doesn’t match the ad (free iPad anyone???) then people are going to see their friends vouching for scams & get duped by Google.

That is worse that a press release being advertised as though it was news

You can also be certain that some clever spammers are integrating +1 buttons in display ads on other ad networks in ways that may automatically collect user clicks & so on, or have users pay for viewing their next porn video by clicking a +1 button (much like some old school email spammers used porn viewers as manual captcha breakers).

Google does offer the ability to vote against an ad as well, but if an ad looks great upfront & its the landing page that scams you then how exactly do you vote against it if you don’t see the site until after you click the ad?

Author: admin
• Sunday, October 30th, 2011

Ho incontrato per la prima volta /a> circa un anno fa. Eravamo ad un incontro organizzato da Telecom Italia. Ospiti: Naveen Selvadurai, co-fondatore di Foursquare, e Dina Kaplan, co-fondatrice di blip.tv.

A moderare la sessione c’erano self-proclaimed guru della prima ora dell’internet italiano e qualche giornalista televisivo più adatto alle tribune politiche che non ad una riflessione seria e sensata su internet e la tecnologia. In tutto circa un centinaio di persone tra il pubblico per una serata tutto sommato anonima e prima di spunti interessanti.

In quell’occasione Fabio mi parlò di un suo progetto che era quello di creare un grande network italiano, un vero e proprio movimento che nasceva dal basso, capace di racchiudere al suo interno tutte le diverse anime che ruotano intorno ad Internet, tra startupper, blogger, web celebrity, programmatori, investitori e semplici curiosi.

Il meccanismo era semplice, basato sul modello delle serate-aperitivo. Niente presentazioni, niente cattedre o professori. Niente rapporti verticali tra organizzatori ed invitati. Una free-zone dove stabilire direttamente nuove relazioni e conoscenze in modo orizzontale tra tutti i partecipanti.

L’idea ha funzionato. A distanza di un anno gli Indigeni Digitali sono più di tremila persone in tutta Italia che si danno appuntamento regolarmente a Roma, Milano, Napoli e in altre città italiane. È un network in continua crescita che conta centinaia di persone ad ogni incontro, che ha contribuito a creare collaborazioni e a instaurare amicizie reali al di fuori della rete.

Chiunque voglia iscriversi può farlo gratuitamente attraverso il /a> su Facebook o il/a> ufficiale.

Prossima tappa Milano, 15 novembre. Ci vediamo lì.

img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=yIl2AUoC8zA” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=FHDEJs6xaTE:LtOsbozxgqE:F7zBnMyn0Lo” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=FHDEJs6xaTE:LtOsbozxgqE:gIN9vFwOqvQ” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=FHDEJs6xaTE:LtOsbozxgqE:V_sGLiPBpWU” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=qj6IDK7rITs” border=”0″>

Ho incontrato per la prima volta /a> circa un anno fa. Eravamo ad un incontro organizzato da Telecom Italia. Ospiti: Naveen Selvadurai, co-fondatore di Foursquare, e Dina Kaplan, co-fondatrice di blip.tv.

A moderare la sessione c’erano self-proclaimed guru della prima ora dell’internet italiano e qualche giornalista televisivo più adatto alle tribune politiche che non ad una riflessione seria e sensata su internet e la tecnologia. In tutto circa un centinaio di persone tra il pubblico per una serata tutto sommato anonima e prima di spunti interessanti.

In quell’occasione Fabio mi parlò di un suo progetto che era quello di creare un grande network italiano, un vero e proprio movimento che nasceva dal basso, capace di racchiudere al suo interno tutte le diverse anime che ruotano intorno ad Internet, tra startupper, blogger, web celebrity, programmatori, investitori e semplici curiosi.

Il meccanismo era semplice, basato sul modello delle serate-aperitivo. Niente presentazioni, niente cattedre o professori. Niente rapporti verticali tra organizzatori ed invitati. Una free-zone dove stabilire direttamente nuove relazioni e conoscenze in modo orizzontale tra tutti i partecipanti.

L’idea ha funzionato. A distanza di un anno gli Indigeni Digitali sono più di tremila persone in tutta Italia che si danno appuntamento regolarmente a Roma, Milano, Napoli e in altre città italiane. È un network in continua crescita che conta centinaia di persone ad ogni incontro, che ha contribuito a creare collaborazioni e a instaurare amicizie reali al di fuori della rete.

Chiunque voglia iscriversi può farlo gratuitamente attraverso il /a> su Facebook o il/a> ufficiale.

Prossima tappa Milano, 15 novembre. Ci vediamo lì.

img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=yIl2AUoC8zA” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=FHDEJs6xaTE:LtOsbozxgqE:F7zBnMyn0Lo” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=FHDEJs6xaTE:LtOsbozxgqE:gIN9vFwOqvQ” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?i=FHDEJs6xaTE:LtOsbozxgqE:V_sGLiPBpWU” border=”0″> img src=”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Woork?d=qj6IDK7rITs” border=”0″>


Read more from the original source:
/a>

Author: admin
• Friday, October 28th, 2011

img class=”alignright size-medium wp-image-12903″ style=”margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px; margin-top: 3px; margin-bottom: 3px;” title=”Scoop.It” src=”http://www.toprankblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Scoop.It_-300×117.png” alt=”" width=”300″ height=”117″ />As an Internet marketer I am always on the hunt for new content marketing tools that can increase my efficiencies and improve engagement with my audience.  I cannot begin to express how valuable content curation can be if done right.  It will allow you tap into and respond to what people are searching for, what they like to read and share, what influences their buying decisions and so on.  In my search for a new means of marketing I came across a tool called Scoop.It.  Below I have detailed my review of this tool including some of it’s cool features.

There were a lot of interesting tools on the list but one stood out, Scoop.it so I decided to look into it further.  The first thing I noticed is that the tool is in beta and I needed to sign up for an invite to be able to use this tool.  I’m happy to say my request was granted just 48 hours after submission, so right away I started to like Scoop.it (Once you are in and hit a minimum level of use, you are awarded 9 invites).

A few of the things in the post about Scoop.it that caught my eye were the ability to use an unlimited amount of sources (websites, RSS feeds, specific social media accounts, etc.).  The ability to us RSS feeds is important because I’m a big fan of Google Reader and already have a number of feeds I could use for some of my Scoop.it topics.

img class=”alignnone size-full wp-image-12904″ title=”manage sources” src=”http://www.toprankblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/manage-sources.png” alt=”" width=”455″ height=”789″ />

/a>The other feature that peaked my interest was the ability to feed keywords into the tool and let it find content based on those.  As an SEO consultant and practitioner, I have great confidence that by choosing the best, most relevant keywords, I can seriously influence the quality of the content I receive from the tool.  I also know that if my first round of keywords doesn’t deliver exactly what I’m looking for, I can continue to adjust and fine tune my keywords until the curation tool delivers what I want.

img class=”alignnone size-full wp-image-12905″ title=”search sources” src=”http://www.toprankblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/search-sources.png” alt=”" width=”515″ height=”327″ />

I’ve been using Scoop.it for 4 weeks now and I must say it’s been a lot of fun and very easy to use.  The first thing you do after signing up is add the Scoop.it button to your tool bar so you can easily add posts as you find them.  I’ve installed the button on both Firefox and Chrome.

When you find a post/article that you want to save and click on the Scoop.it button, a dashboard appears on the right side of the page presenting you with a number of cool options.  From the pop-up dashboard you can choose which topic to add it to, change the title, image and intro copy and choose which if any of your social channels you also want to share this post on.

When you share the post on Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn, another box opens so you can add a comment.  Then, when it appears on your social media profile, the tiny url that is automatically created, directs readers to the story on your Scoop.it topic page.  This is a great way to build followers and encourage sharing and, if you doing a great job of curating for a topic, you will see more followers and shares.

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Overall my experience with Scoop.it has been very good. With the few issues I did have I was able to submit my question to support and receive a response in less than 24 hours.  I’ve been using the tool to curate content 3-5 hours each week and the more I use it and learn how to use it even better, the more I want to use it.

That said, there are 3 things I wish Scoop.it would add to this tool;

  • The ability to add multiple Twitter accounts
  • The ability to schedule sharing (It’s no mystery that there are better days and times for seeing re-tweets and shares )
  • A more impressive landing page for our topics (like Paper.li, etc.)

I already love this tool and with the addition of the items above, I may just stop searching for the perfect content curation tool.