Remove Aggregator Remove Blogger Remove Communities Remove Examples
article thumbnail

Content Aggregators are Killing Content Creators

Techipedia: Tamar Weinberg

Social Media Consultant and Tech Geek at Heart Home About Press Consulting Contact Sitemap Home > Opinion , Social Media > Content Aggregators are Killing Content Creators Content Aggregators are Killing Content Creators by Tamar Weinberg on September 23, 2009 Share This is a guest post from Josh Schnell, founder of Macgasm.net and web developer.

article thumbnail

100 Examples of Corporate Social Media Policies

Koka Sexton

Online Community Guidelines. Blogger Policy. Compilation of Legal Actions Against Bloggers. Alumni Blog Aggregation Additional Terms. Policy for Social Networking and Other Web-Based Communications. Guidelines for Participation in Online Communities. Community Guidelines. Community Guidelines.

Policies 111
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Sysomos Audience Moves Towards Measuring Social Media ROI

Dave Fleet

However, Audience really focuses in a different direction, providing tools that should pique the interest of your sales, marketing and community management folks alike. It does so by letting you assign values for visits to different areas of your site (those key to your sales funnel might have a higher value, for example) and other factors.

Sysomos 273
article thumbnail

Mainstream editors will get articles from bloggers with audience

Laurel Papworth

Why traditional media editors will turn to bloggers for articles in the future. Someone who is held in high regard in that industry or specialist topic, who has an audience of other people interested in that topic and who has now had 3 or 4 years of writing/blogging and retaining interest of the online community?

Blogger 81
article thumbnail

50 Ways Marketers use Social Media to Improve Their Marketing

Harp Interactive

Build community platforms around real communities of shared interest. Learn which bloggers might care about your customer. Start a community group on Facebook or Ning or MySpace or LinkedIn around the space where your customer does business. Example: what Jeremiah Owyang did for Hitachi Data Systems.

article thumbnail

Pinterest Basics for Bloggers

ProBlogger

For example, if I see a pretty wedding dress, I will pin it to my “wedding ideas” board, which is full of images of my favorite wedding-related ideas gathered from various websites. Bloggers can make use of these “clickthrough images” to attract more people to our blogs. But don’t spam the community boards with your pinned images.

Blogger 50
article thumbnail

The complete guide to online social listening

Sprout Social

And while you may not think of these platforms as social sites, bear in mind that they do represent active communities with profiles, comment sections and opportunities to engage with businesses. As video content continues to take over the web, YouTube represents one of the fastest-growing communities online.

Reddit 100