At what point does the exponential increase in content production make the cost of trying to grab and hold attention no longer cost-effective?
Via janlgordon
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Siri Anderson's curator insight,
February 1, 2014 9:16 AM
Interesting to consider as well from various roles/ fields -- what are the missing skills in social media amongst teachers, nurses, social workers, parents, students, police officers etc.
Frederic Hohl's curator insight,
February 2, 2014 5:55 PM
What talents in digital marketing companies will look for in 2014
Josette Williams's curator insight,
July 5, 2013 4:33 PM
This content powerfully points out the massive shift that has happened in marketing today. Is your company adapting?
Richard Stadler's curator insight,
July 8, 2013 4:33 AM
The purchase process is no longer linear, it is not even predictable. Chaos Theory, here we come...
Michelle Gilstrap's curator insight,
May 26, 2013 11:10 AM
This is a very cool way to show e-commerce and how some companies are making the connection with their customer.
janlgordon's comment,
June 18, 2013 3:02 PM
Michelle Gilstrap I'm happy you found it useful, sorry I'm late in responding but better late than never, thank you!
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janlgordon's curator insight,
December 26, 2013 3:31 PM
This fascinating article from Arc Blog takes a look at where we've been in 2013 and how technology will transform the way we live and connect with information through technology. Great insights and ideas to get you thinking about how you might leverage these opportunities for your business. Here are some highlights; The Promise of 2013 was fulfilled: "2013 came in like a lamb but it did not disappoint. It most definitely is roaring into 2014 at full force". This article talks about the "fascinating look at the percolation of events that draw more and more significance from the rise of consumer awareness and its impending impact on business and its operations". "The ultimate future is the the way you connect people to your life and how you connect to information" Examples discussed are: Hummingbird, Bitcoin, Google Glass, iBeacon the shopping in-store App from Apple. Their are pros and cons but overall, our lives will never be the same, exciting things coming our way in 2014!. Selected by Jan Gordon for Curatti covering Curation, Social Busness and Beyond Read full article here: [http://bit.ly/1fKs29i] Image: Newslettercartoon.com
Manú Iñaki's curator insight,
February 11, 2014 2:33 PM
Los usuarios de smartphones son importantes para la mercadotecnia
willdonovan's curator insight,
February 27, 2014 7:42 AM
INFOGRAPHIC ALERT: The Social Case for Mobile 1st
Brenton Millers's curator insight,
March 28, 2014 12:48 AM
This info graphic created by Unified shows statistics of how social marketers target people on a mobile platform.
janlgordon's curator insight,
May 26, 2013 10:33 PM
This timely article is from Businessinsider about how consumers are using their phones and what marketers need to know. Here are some highlights: "Mobile is no longer a communications utility, but a media distribution hub" According to eMarketer, mobile now accounts for 12 percent of Americans' media consumption time, triple its share in 2009. Where ius this consumer attention being focused? Mobile apps - Time spent on apps dwarfs time spent on the mobile web and smartphone owners now spend 127 minutes per day in mobile apps. Here are four usage trends developers and publishers should consider: 1. The rise of gaming: Games are the largest mobile app category anad the biggest money-maker in the app stores, accounting for 70% of Apple's top-grossing apps. 2. Mobile-social synergies: social networking apps are the second largest time bucket for mobile users. 39% of mobile users access social networks. 3. The piggyback rule: The only tried-and-true way for a mobile success is to take a popular usage category and build a product that piggybacks on that activity to provide a unnique mobile-native experience. 4. Portal erosion: Mobile is a fragmented space and consumers seem to like it that way. Selected by Jan Gordon for Curatti covering Mobile Marketing Strategies and Beyond Read full article here: http://read.bi/13UouwP
janlgordon's curator insight,
February 19, 2013 5:32 PM
This piece is from mediabistro and infographic from uberflip which takes a closer look at why mobile video might be the next big thing in the social media space. The recent introduction of apps like Vine and Facebook's mobile video sharing shows that the social media landscape is broadening even further into video content. Here are a few highlights from the souces used in this infograph (scroll down to the bottom and you'll find who they are) **Mobile video will represent 66 percent of global mobile data traffic by 2017, up from 51 percent last year. **87% of marketers in the US use video for content marketing **Two of the biggest social networks aim to dominate the video sharing scene *Facebook and mobile video *Vine and Twitter Selected by Jan Gordon covering "Mobile Marketing Strategy and Beyond" See article and infographic here: [ |
Quite a stir was made a week ago, when Mark Schaefer published his Content Shock article on the businessesgrow blog.
A paraphrasing of the question he asked was, ‘At what point does the exponential increase in content production make the cost of trying to grab and hold attention no longer cost-effective?’
The topic resonated me as well as many others and the responses were swift, including Shel Holtz, Sonia Simone of Copyblogger and Marty Smith, the first two of which are discussed in the piece published in curatti.com (Marty’s piece was published too late to be included).
We don’t feel that Content Shock is something that any of us need to be concerned over.
Let’s not forget that
“As content continues to grow, search keeps pace by constantly improving. “
“Semantic Search may be beyond most people now, but it will become a part of everyone’s life even if in the same mysterious way that a car engine helps that wonderful machine convey us from point A to point B.”
And amongst those who stand to gain from the situation are:
“Discerning Curators who understand the needs of their readers because they are consumers of the same content, only sharing what blows them away!”
… a statement which is at least partly backed up here by an end user perspective:
“When I need to research something, I go to a few trusted sources and get what I want, when I want it.”
The message to readers is: “If someone is out there filtering the deluge of articles that you might otherwise have to work your own way through…. it removes the burden of you having to deal with the ever growing content mountain.”
So is Content Shock real? With all the excellent curators and filtering tools available ....... Only for those who insist on reading every source for themselves
Reviewed and written by Jan Gordon for Curatti covering Curation, Social Business and Beyond