Content - Marketers simply can't create enough original, quality content for each channel every day, which is why many rely on content curation. But, all too often, it's not done well. Avoid ...
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Barry Deutsch
onto Content Curation and Marketing March 1, 2014 3:40 PM
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This is an interesting article about curating content and some of the common mistakes that we make in sharing information with our networks.
I liked the first 4. In the 5th, the author seems to contradict herself. In the beginning of the paragraph she talks about spending time to do a quality job on curation (taking other people's content and adding your insight, observation, thoughts based on your experience and how it's relevant to your specific audience).
A couple of paragraphs latter she talks about using some of these new tools that everyone is rushing to try on that "automate" content curation. It seems like a contradiction.
You can fully automate 1out of the 3 elements of content curation. - the distribution of your content. You can partially automate the first step - finding the content. The middle part is where you've got to invest a few minutes on a human-personal level writing epic insights.
You can automate finding the content - that's Step 1. One of my favorite platforms is scoop.it - the flexibility and ease of this tool is outstanding and very intuitive to use. They have both a free and professional paid version. However, it still takes a human touch to go through the hundreds of articles to pick the one or two that might really be impactful for your network. I spend 1-2 hours a week using tools like google alerts, sccop.it, the LinkedIn publishing platform of influencers, and feedly to identify potential curated content worthy of sharing.
Step 2 is the writing of your insights, thoughts, observations. This is where you are going to promise me you will not be boring. Once you get good at - it should take about 5-10 minutes per curated piece of content to add your outrageous and compelling wisdom. This CANNOT be automated. This is the piece no one wants to spend time on. It takes time.
I'll share an example: It takes me 45-60 minutes to write a 450-600 word blog article. I can curate a piece of content like I am doing here in 5-10 minutes. Again, Sccop.it provides a great platform for you to ad your individualized thought-leadership. I try to publish 5 curated pieces of content for every original blog post (or slideshare or youtube video or podcast).
Finally, Step 3 is the distribution of your curated content and insights into your various social media networks. This step is probably the one that lends itself most easily to automation. My preferred approach is to use Scoop.it integrated with Bufferapp to schedule my curated content at appropriate intervals and times with different social networks. This process requires about 10 seconds of your time after writing - once you've set the initial parameters.
There you have it - the proper blend of human touch with automation to create a powerful communication vehicle with your network to engage, stimulate, interact, and encourage folks to raise their hands to learn more about you and your business/service/products.
Barry Deutsch
Social Media Coach to Vistage and TEC Chairs
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