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The Most Important Blogging Analysis Ever

Viper Chill

You are here: ViperChill » Social Media » The Most Important Blogging Analysis Ever The Most Important Blogging Analysis Ever Written by Glen, this post has 79 Comments If you ask anyone what makes a blog popular, they’ll say content. Home What the F ? Cloud Living Say "Hi!"

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Social media and the rise of fantasy sports

Sprout Social

Fast forward to the 1980s, a group of journalists developed the Rotisserie system for fantasy baseball. How mainstream media and social media created fantasy hype. Fantasy sports were growing in popularity before social media was a thing. million in 2003. And what did social media and fantasy sports?

Sports 79
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The Silent Rise of LinkedIn to 500M Members: What Marketers Need to Know for 2018 [SSM069]

Buffer Social

billion at the end of 2016 in one of the largest social media deals in history. A quick look at LinkedIn’s journey to 500 million members: 2003 (0 members): Launch. Statistical Analysis and Data Mining are the top skills on LinkedIn. Once a Running Joke, LinkedIn Is Suddenly a Hot Social Network.

LinkedIn 112
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Are Blog Comments Dead? | Justin Levy

Justin Levy

RSS and email subscriptions, site traffic and social sharing may all be continuing to increase. These are tracked through a variety of tools and even popular commenting system Disqus scours social networks to find blog posts being shared and displays those as “interactions&#. Paul Duplantis Great analysis Justin.

Comments 220
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Personal Knowledge Management - Pollard

Buzz Marketing for Technology

I first got interested in the idea of bottom-up knowledge management, focused on the unique needs of each front-line employee, in 2003, my last year as Global Director of Knowledge Innovation for a major professional services firm. · Social Networking. · Social Software Group. Impact Analysis.

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How to Save the World - PKM An Update

Buzz Marketing for Technology

I first got interested in the idea of bottom-up knowledge management, focused on the unique needs of each front-line employee, in 2003, my last year as Global Director of Knowledge Innovation for a major professional services firm. · Social Networking. · Social Software Group. Impact Analysis.

How To 100
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From Shared Databases to Communities of Practice: A Taxonomy of Collaboratories

Buzz Marketing for Technology

Kuhn (1963) showed how scientific peer groups determine what theories will be accepted as well as make more mundane judgments about what papers will be published and what grants will be funded. Crane (1972) first described the loosely-affiliated but highly interactive networks of scientists as "invisible colleges."