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Free Bookmark Manager. Home - Bag The Web. Paper.li Alternatives and Similar Software. Peeep.us. Zimilate. Storify · Make the web tell a story. Welcome to Sulia. Build engaged audiences through publishing by curation. RebelMouse: Let Your Content Roar. 7 top tools for content curation. Scoop.it, Storify, Pearltrees let you become a niche authority This is the second of a two-part series.

7 top tools for content curation

See part 1: • 7 smart techniques for content curation Target audience: Nonprofits, cause organizations, foundations, NGOs, social enterprises, businesses, educators, journalists, general public. By now you’ve likely heard of content curation, the process of collecting and cataloging the most useful or interesting things about a topic in order to share it for the common benefit. In part 1, Beth Kanter looked at 7 smart techniques for content curation. Keep in mind, there are lots of different ways to curate. More often, though, the new breed of content curation tools refers to sites and services specifically geared for finding the diamonds in the rough. Scoop This: A Comprehensive Guide to Scoop.it for Content Curation. We’ve been hearing (and talking) a lot about curation and how helpful it can be for companies.

Scoop This: A Comprehensive Guide to Scoop.it for Content Curation

As you all know, I’m sure, great content is one sure thing in today’s marketing arena; it takes the front seat to anything and everything else. When you do a search, what are you using? Content. When you look for the closest restaurant to eat, how do you search? Scoop.it: Content Curation Platform Review; 13 Things I Like and Three I Don’t. Scoop.it - 50 Similar Sites and Alternatives. 50 Websites Like Scoop.it. Scoop.it! Alternatives. Scoop.it: Content Curation Platform Review; 13 Things I Like and Three I Don’t. This post is the second in a series on content curation and deals with content curation platform Scoop.it.

Scoop.it: Content Curation Platform Review; 13 Things I Like and Three I Don’t

In subsequent posts, I will examine two other such platforms: Rebelmouse and Paper.li. NOTE: The first post in this series dealt with curation fundamentals. Lately, I’ve been testing three different content curation platforms: Scoop.it, Rebelmouse and Paper.li. In this post, I review what has become my curation platform of preference, Scoop.it. Thirteen Things I Like About Scoop.it Scoop.it offers many features that commend it as a highly useful curation platform. Visual format – Scoop.it makes use of graphics to draw attention to each article shared, which is in keeping with a shift toward the Pinterest/Instagram inspired visual orientation of the web.Two column layout – By presenting stories in a simple two-column format, Scoop.it offers a more orderly layout than does its competitor Rebelmouse, which, aside from the featured post, I find a tad too cluttered. Conclusion. Content Curation World.

Curation tools selection criteria. Social-Visual Bookmarking. 1/2, The Future Of Content Curation Tools. Content curation tools are in their infancy.

1/2, The Future Of Content Curation Tools

Nonetheless you see so many of them around, there are more new curation tools coming your way soon, with lots of new features and options. Existing content curation services will in fact need to start rolling up their sleeves as the next wave of offerings will significantly go well beyond what is possible with present day tools Photo credit: 3D Flower by ShutterStock In this last few years I have looked at, signed up for and tested over 400 content curation tools, which I have gradually collected and listed first here: The NewsMaster Toolkit and hereBest News Curation Tools for Independent Publishers then here on Mindomo: Content Curation Tools: Newsmaster Toolkit 2012 from July 2013 here on Pearltrees: Content Curation Tools Supermap and from September 2013 a simplified version here: Content Curation Tools Directory As a small independent author and publisher, I curate content on a daily basis, since 2005. 2) Slicing and Dicing 3) Micro - Macro.

2/2, The Future Of Content Curation Tools. -> continued from Part I - Future of Content Curation Tools 8) Preservation Contrary to popular belief, the nature of the web is quite volatile.

2/2, The Future Of Content Curation Tools

A large percentage of the overall content available online, is moved, taken down, deleted or disappears on a daily basis, at times only because the website owner has no more money to pay his hosting bills. If you run a check for broken links on your web site you will see what I am talking about. How many times have you run through a list of tools on a blog post, only to find that a bunch of them were not available anymore? How many startups are created and how many them survive after one or two years (and with them their websites and blogs)? Even without you as a publisher doing anything wrong, the links you create, pointing to other sites, tools and information, do disappear.

This is the life of content on the Internet. Unless you save it on the Internet Archive or on some similar service.