10 Principles of Content Marketing

Reblogged from Andrea Antal:

Susan Gunelius has created a great list of tenets for content marketing that are easy to understand and follow.

1. Be Accessible

Don’t publish content and then disappear. Abandoned content won’t deliver the results you want and need.

2. Be Human

Leave corporate rhetoric and hard sales pitches out of your content marketing efforts.

3. Be Social

Content marketing isn’t a one-way street.

Read more… 187 more words

How to become a thought leader

How to become a thought leader

Presently the buzz on social media is all about owning and creating content and then using this to become a thought leader to create and secure a strong brand. Then you utilize the brand to build influence, and the influence to drive profits through increased sales.

 

I think you’ll see this trend continue for 18 months until people realize what creating content is really all about, but obviously I’m not going to put that in print here. You’ll have to get to know me better and create a relationship with me to secure that trust  ;-)

Twitter to enable searches for tweets older than a week - CNET

Reblogged from Manlio Mannozzi:

Click to visit the original post

See on Scoop.it - DISCOVERING SOCIAL MEDIA

Search Engine Land
Twitter to enable searches for tweets older than a week
CNET
Twitter to enable searches for tweets older than a week. Until now, Twitter search has been limited to tweets less than a week or so old.

See on news.cnet.com

More visibility from twitter through search

Thin threads that grow stronger – a true networking story

Many years ago I was involved in Nutrition for Life International (NFLI) , a company I was proud to be associated with, and a role I thoroughly enjoyed. During that time, as a leader, it was my job to support the sales staff who needed leadership and were in the UK, even though I had not recruited them.

As one example, and there are many, I was lucky enough to meet Malcolm Charlaw. Just like many others Malcolm had taken up the right to sell NFLI’s products. However, he could not relate to his line manager, and as one of the four company’s leaders in the UK, it was my job to ensure they received the support to have a fighting chance of making more sales. As we chatted, we became friends, and on his travels with his day job as a computer network specialist he would pop in for a meal at our home. Malcolm relates to us, as we relate to him, our thinking has more in common than it has not in common.

If you consider this relationship in terms of networking (as in relationship building) theory you could have considered Malcolm a stranger. Yes, we had the company in common, but it was a relationship that grew around what we were, rather than who we worked for, indeed Malcolm soon quit marketing NFLI’s products. At that point in time, what would happen in the corporate world, should I have been advised to abandon a friendship, and just left him alone and cut ties as he no longer provided value in £ or $ terms?

NFLI closed in 2003, if memory serves correct, NFLI was another victim of the Enron scandal (we had investors from the oil industry, who had to withdraw their capital to survive having not being paid by Enron).

Since 2003, Malcolm and I have kept in touch, recently a stupid reckless driver has caused Malcolm to be severely injured, leaving him hospitalized and needing ongoing care. As a friend at distance there’s not too much you can do to help, but I did lend an ear. Long story made short I was able to be that person that was just there at the right time to help Malcolm.

The truth is Malcolm and I both like people, but we never really expect our friendships with others to create wealth. There has been no expectation of a result, apart from the fun of being real friends and looking forward to talking to each other.

So, what is my message … nothing new !

Just “Pay it Forward” , be happy you have a friend that cares about you.

Help where you can and help when you genuinely feel willing to do so. Always stay true to yourself, never be anything else but yourself. Allow people to self filter, your real friends will just rise to the top.

I’m looking forward to the next discovery of a real friend.

Are you ?

As ever, Simon Hamer

Medium and Quora aren't the rebirth of content farms -- they're more like curation engines

Reblogged from paidContent:

Click to visit the original post

It's become almost conventional wisdom by now that the rise of social-media tools and networks like Twitter and Facebook (s fb) have killed blogging, but you wouldn't know it by the number of blog-like services that have sprung up recently, including Medium (from former Twitter CEO Evan Williams) and the new blog features launched by the question-and-answer community Quora. In a recent blog post about at this phenomenon, Hunter Walk of YouTube argues that these platforms are…

Read more… 684 more words

Certainly a subject that will be discussed, with #LIQA disappearing and Facebook's questions gone, these sites certainly have less competition.

How to use social media to land your next job

How to use social media to land your next job

Large companies want to save time in assessing potential employees, an easy way to do that is to view your profile(s) on social media.

This guide from Mashable will assist you to maximize your chances of being viewed in the most positive manner.

Things to consider

1. Ethics

2. Grammar

3. Bias you display in your posts

4. Politics, religion, racism, swearing, trolling

5. Attitude

Is there a tool to analyze my LinkedIn connections?

Great tool for analyzing your LinkedIn contacts / connections.

I’m trying to understand in what categories I’m stronger and what companies I can reach out to through my connections. I have 500+ on my network and am really keen on a tool that help me to better understand them.

View Question on Quora

Why I blog and why you should too

Reblogged from The Daily Social:

  • Click to visit the original post

The toughest part of blogging is keeping up the urge to blog seven days a week. This post, inspired by Orwell, started out  as my quest to find out why I  blog, but it kinda evolved into an outline on why you should too.

Trust me on this one: blogging's tough to keep up with, there's no clear end game but 

Read more… 1,002 more words

I must say, I'm having fun blogging and after the recent announcement from LinkedIn that they're "retiring" Answers on LinkedIn, I'll have more time to do it. It just goes to show you, even the social media sites are getting less social. Many LinkedIn users used Answers to get "help" on LinkedIn (sometimes they just received abuse from those that thought the forum was for their self promotion) and they typically got a response inside 20 minutes. Now they have to hunt down the "Help center", I say hunt because it is hidden under "More" as was "answers". The "Learning centre" has been placed under "Help" too. Since answers was hidden the numbers have dropped from around 250 a day to anywhere between 135 and 175 despite a growing user base. Did LinkedIn make the right decision? Time will tell, but I'm not hanging around, our site will be up and running by the end of the month for social media answers.