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The Future Of Social Is In Content Solutions, Syndication

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

You don’t get very far in talking about social media for business without running into a discussion about content. Companies need to provide informative, entertaining and engaging content to their audiences to attract visits to company blogs, websites, Facebook pages and more. The deeper you get into understanding the various benefits of engaging your audiences with great content (enhanced online reputation, conversational market share, search engine ranking improvement and increased lead or sales generation to name a few) you begin to not only produce the content, but distribute and promote it accordingly. Everyone wants more eyeballs. Because relatively few businesses have crossed the threshold from just blogging to developing content strategies, I see a big opportunity for content providers and promoters in the coming years. The easier brands can provide content (even if they, themselves, don’t create it) and distribute it, driving links, eyeballs and the like, the more successful they’ll be in the social realm. This opens the door for a couple different types of companies or service providers. First, professional blogging services (I hate calling them ghost blogging services for reasons you can see in this 2009 post about the topic ) and free-lance web content providers should see a boon in the need for their services in the next few years. Second, larger scale content distribution companies like wire-services should see a bit of an increase in volume as well. But then there’s a unique opportunity for a company that combines both content creation and distribution to step in and do something neat. Enter NewsUSA and its newest offering, Social Syndication , which is advertising on Social Media Explorer this month. NewsUSA has been a content provider and distributor in the traditional media world for some time. You hire them to take your press release or company news, turn it into an editorial/advertorial piece and they use a network of copyright-free distribution channels to get that article placed in newspapers, magazines and more. And there are a lot of those publications out there looking to fill their pages with interesting content without having to pay for it. The copyright-free syndication houses like NewsUSA were doing good corporate blogging before blogging existed. Sell trophies, like Plaquemaker Plus ? News USA can craft a useful article likely to get picked up by publications looking for such like, “ Tips To Plan A Fun Family Reunion ” and insert the suggestion you get trophies for the kids. It’s advertorial, but it’s non-obtrusive and provides value to the audience beyond just “buy our trophies.” With NewsUSA’s new Social Syndication effort, they’re taking the traditional distribution model and applying it to social channels. And believe me, while Huffington Post and Mashable aren’t the types of websites that would use copyright free, syndicated content, there are TONS of sites out there that will. As more companies get into the “gotta have fresh content” mode, I think you’ll start to see the trend of using copyright free content expand into the brand world. One recent client project NewsUSA shared with me resulted in 156 social and online placements, 127 inbound links to the syndicated story (placed on CopyrightFreeContent.com ) and two inbound links to the client’s website. The story also generated over 100 links and references from Twitter users. Now, none of these numbers are eye-popping, but as the company builds trust and provides value to the social news communities, plus more companies and websites turn to syndication services for useful content, NewsUSA is looking at the tip of a big iceberg. And not one that will sink the ship. One piece of Social Syndication that I offered NewsUSA feedback on was their activity in posting the content to the social news and bookmarking sites. While there’s great potential to increase the exposure and reach of their client’s work there, I felt like they still had some work to do in order to make that piece work better for them. But make no mistake about it, NewsUSA is on the right path and is a company to watch. On the flip side of the syndication argument is the fact that inbound links from sites that use syndicated content may not be as valuable as those from the Huffington Posts of the world. I would never say NewsUSA is a single solution to distributing content or driving inbound links. But as their network grows, they will be able to reasonably guarantee a turnkey number of links based on the sites that grow to trust their content. Debate the merits of advertorial all you want. When companies want content, they want content that is going to help them. And there will always be sites out there hungry enough for content to publish advertorial. When the brands looking for content see they can use a NewsUSA to provide such for their blogs, sites, outposts and more, PLUS distribute it around the web for even more value in exposure, SEO and more, the content creation and syndication companies are going to see customers. How would you polish the content solution and syndication business? What do companies like NewsUSA have to do to convince your brand or company they are worth the investment? The comments are yours. NOTE : For those of you who might be new to Social Media Explorer, I do have advertisers like NewsUSA from time-to-time, but because my audience trusts me, I have some very particular requirements to allow them to be brought to your attention. For more on my advertising policy, see this page on Advertising Relevancy . Related articles by Zemanta The Basics Of Content Syndication (slideshare.net) With Help From NewsUSA, Use Social Media To Keep Your Brand Relevant (prweb.com)

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The Future Of Social Is In Content Solutions, Syndication

Trackur White Labels Ultimate Package

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Social media monitoring firm Trackur has revamped its website and package offerings and now offers complete white-labeling, custom domain names and direct client logins with their Ultimate platform. The changes were announced yesterday on Trackur’s blog by CEO Andy Beal . While several other platforms do allow for white-labeling, especially if you’re willing to pay them a boat-load of money, Trackur’s Ultimate package is just $297 per month for those signing up before June 30. It jumps to $377 per month afterwards. What this means is now ad agencies don’t have to spend a wad of money to claim they offer social media monitoring themselves. Rejoice! Wonder how long it will take one of them to claim their social media monitoring solution is built on, “proprietary software,” in a new business pitch? Sorry. Making fun of ad agencies, not Trackur. Trackur is actually a nice monitoring solution. Though I’ve not covered it in-depth here before, Beal is a digital marketing veteran, solidly rooted in search engine expertise and data mining experience. The company is small compared to most in the industry and as such hasn’t had quite the top-of-mind outcomes the Radian6 and ScoutLabs of the world have had, but Trackur is solid. Besides, Beal is brilliant. If he’s behind it, it’s trustworthy. The screen capture below shows Trackur’s standard look and feel. This one shows the white-labeling. Apparently, you can choose from a bunch of color schemes and so-on. I’ve been testing their free service (one saved search, but unlimited results) and enjoy the simplicity of the tool. It’s Site Influence tool is a nice, simple way to see if you should be concerned about a particular blog saying something negative about you. While I haven’t been able to get my hands on some of the paid versions of Trackur, the ease of use and simplicity of the free tool makes me think they’re equally as useful. If Trackur leaves anything to be desired (at least what I’ve seen of it) is that its simplicity and ease of use is undermined by the fact there doesn’t seem to be a great deal of depth in pretty charts and graphs, reports and the like marketers want to see (even if they don’t understand them). The data is exportable, and paid solutions offer trending graphs, but it almost seems to assume you know what to do with a CSV to make the CEO say, “OMG!” Most marketers don’t. And fewer ad agencies do. The white-labeling, though, should make a difference for Trackur. Agencies love telling clients and new business targets they have their act together, even when they don’t. Now, for just a few hundred bucks a month, they have access to a nice monitoring tool they can label as their own that offers them unlimited searches, results, custom feeds, alerts, bookmarking and sharing of items, custom filters and more. Regardless of your need for white-labeling, or ego-maniacal “we do that ourselves” claims, there’s one category Trackur normally beats people out on and this addition doesn’t disappoint there either: Price. It’s worth looking into. If you are a Trackur customer, jump in the comments and let us know what you think about the tool, particularly the paid features I haven’t had an adequate look at. If you’re at and ad agency, how much more interesting does Trackur become now that you can white-label it and share it with your clients? And if you’re at an ad agency and offended at my insinuations, have at it. I speak from experience.

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Trackur White Labels Ultimate Package

Twitter bans in-tweet ads from third parties – StrategyEye

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Telegraph.co.uk Twitter bans in-tweet ads from third parties StrategyEye Twitter is forbidding third-party ad firms from inserting marketing tweets into Twitter feeds, confirming the fears of many developers … Will the 'Hundreds' of Advertisers Twitter Expects Be As Successful as the … Marketing Vox News TweetUp, Sponsored Tweets say they dodge Twitter's new restrictions VentureBeat Oh No! Twitter Wants to Get Paid! Marketing Pilgrim (blog) Inc.com (blog)

Twitter Cracks Down – Inc.com (blog)

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

MSN Malaysia News Twitter Cracks Down Inc.com (blog) How do you turn a costly and potentially embarrassing mistake into a marketing opportunity? If you're Zappos.com, you blog it. Zappos's Aaron Magness writes … Will the 'Hundreds' of Advertisers Twitter Expects Be As Successful as the … Marketing Vox News TweetUp, Sponsored Tweets say they dodge Twitter's new restrictions VentureBeat FAQ: Twitter's New Rules On Third-Party Ads Search Engine Land (blog) Digital Media Wire

TweetUp, Sponsored Tweets say they dodge Twitter’s new restrictions – VentureBeat

Monday, May 24th, 2010

BigPond News TweetUp, Sponsored Tweets say they dodge Twitter's new restrictions VentureBeat  Last year, Facebook moved in the same direction by prohibiting people from using their personal status updates as vehicles for commercial marketing . … Will the 'Hundreds' of Advertisers Twitter Expects Be As Successful as the … Marketing Vox News Twitter Bans Third-Party Ad Networks Digital Media Wire FAQ: Twitter's New Rules On Third-Party Ads Search Engine Land (blog) Gawker