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Curation Station. Jeffbullas. Writing is hard work and not every one is cut out to put pen to paper or hunt keys on the keyboard for hours each day. Even Tolstoy, a famous Russian writer who may have been one of the worlds greatest novelists and the author of “War and Peace” once said “I don’t like writing but I love having written“. You may decide then that you will video blog rather than write but standing in front of a video camera scares you and your video personality doesn’t shine.

Then sharing your favorite topics that you are passionate about can be done using a tool called Scoop.It. Scoop.it enables you to curate your favourite topic and aggregate and edit it. So how does it work? 1. 2. 3. 4. It appears newspaper-style, similar to paper.li which I reviewed in an article “The New Twitter Newspaper You Cannot Ignore” which curates and reformats material tweeted by a selection of users rather than individual articles, Scoop.it lets you can hand-select every single article curated under your heading. 1. 2. 3. 4. Content Curation: Learning from others and sharing their knowledge | Web Development Blog – Heidi Cool – Cleveland, Ohio. Over the past few months the subject of content curation has been coming up more often.

Some of you have actually been curating content for years, others are just hearing about it, so it seems a good topic for discussion. Curators at the Cleveland Museum of Art took care to select the right pieces, placement and accompanying art when re-doing the museum's Armor Court. The process of content curation is pretty simple. Basically one reads a variety of blogs, articles and sites on a given topic, then picks out the best ones to share, just as an editor might choose the most appropriate stories for an anthology of fiction, or a museum curator might choose the right combination of paintings for an exhibit.

In the early days of blogging, the process of choosing and sharing links to various noteworthy sites, was one of the most popular ways to blog. Why curate content? I learn in the process. I can be a more effective resource on a topic if I share more than my own thoughts. Search Feeds Podcasts. Content Curation versus Content Creation. Scott Abel has a good post on content curation strategies. He writes, In order to develop an active and engaged audience, you have to publish as much interesting and informative content as possible — as often as possible! He notes how tweets and blog posts are short-lived, so you have to keep publishing all the time: … Add to the mix the sheer volume of tweets, posts, and updates being made every hour on socially-enabled sites around the digital globe, and you’ll soon realize the best strategy for getting noticed is to publish as often as possible, 24 hours a day, especially if you are trying to reach a global audience.

In order to satisfy the demand for content, you need a content curation strategy: …I decided what was needed was a way to curate content and publish it to social networks automatically. For more, see Content Curation: Streamlining The Process Of Populating Your Social Networks With Relevant, Interesting and Engaging Content. I’ve noticed a trend about content this year. HyperDock. Junto :: connect - collaborate - grow :: Social Magazines: What's Their Business Model? Yesterday we looked at the latest "social magazine" app to hit the iPad, called NewsMix. It's very similar to Flipboard, the innovator and leader in this small but rapidly evolving market.

Social magazines is a term that Flipboard came up with. It's come to mean a News Reader type application for the iPad that has the visual appeal of a magazine, along with the social media features common to this era of the Web (integration with Facebook, Twitter and other social apps). Social magazine apps will become a key application for tablets over the next couple of years. Also we will see existing magazines on the iPad, such as Wired and TIME, evolve to become more like Flipboard - with better customization of magazine sections, whizzier UI, more social media functionality, and so on.

An important question for Flipboard, NewsMix and other such apps is: how will they make money? Tough to Monetize Flipboard's Plan For Adverts Acquisition May Be Flipboard's Answer. Google search and search engine spam. Welcome to PostUp. Eyeka launches in the US so big brands can crowd-source creative feedback. One year ago, French startup Eyeka announced that it had raised €3 million ($4 million) to take its online alternative to the traditional focus group international. The company had raised €8 million to date and had already opened offices in Singapore.

Last year, the 40-person company set-up shop in the UK and now it’s officially launching in the US, with offices in San Francisco and New York. Eyeka was initially launched in 2006 by French serial entrepreneur, Gilles Babinet. The platfrom often gets compared to the likes of participative creative agencies (like Creads, who has also been eyeing the US market since last year) but is really more of a consumer engagement community. Big brands leverage the platform to crowd-source feedback from a community of over 130,000 creative consumers.

It’s kind of like what Innocentive does for solving scientific problems. According to Eyeka’s CEO, François Pétavy, this model is more efficient than the traditional focus group. Can social media make your company smarter? | Analysis & Opinion | You’ve started a fan page for your company on Facebook. You’ve attracted a few followers on Twitter. You’ve got a presence on Foursquare, and you’ve started offering deals to customers through Groupon. Seems you’ve got that whole social media thing figured out. Or do you? While social media presents, first and foremost, a cheap marketing and advertising option to help businesses generate leads and drive up revenue, some experts insist it’s about more than just setting up a few profiles and then moving on. “Social technologies are to me holistic technologies, a lot like PCs or the Internet,” said Scott Klososky, a social media business consultant who’s releasing three new books on the subject this year.

Klososky, whose clients range from managers at Fortune 500 companies to entrepreneurs, encourages businesses to integrate different social technology tools into their day-to-day operations in a couple of different ways. “That’s raising the IQ of the organization.