Monday, 4 July 2016

Israeli minister says Facebook is a 'monster' that hinders security

Computer screens display the Facebook sign-in screen in this photo illustration taken in Golden, Colorado, United States July 28, 2015.  REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo

(Reuters) – Israel's Minister of Internal Security on Saturday accused Facebook and its founder, Mark Zuckerberg, of not doing enough to prevent incitement against Israel and said the social network was “sabotaging” Israeli police work.


Israel has in the past said Facebook is used to encourage attacks and the government is drafting legislation to enable it to order Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and other social media to remove online postings it deems incite terrorism. [L8N19C1NE]


But the comments made by Gilad Erdan, a cabinet minister in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing coalition that oversees law enforcement, were particularly biting.


He said Zuckerberg was responsible for Facebook policy and called on “the citizens of Israel to flood him in every possible place with the demand to monitor the platform he established and from which he earns billions”.


A spokesman for Facebook in Israel said the company was not commenting on the minister's assertions.


During an interview on Channel 2 television, Erdan said, “Facebook today, which brought an amazing, positive revolution to the world, sadly, we see this since the rise of Daesh (Islamic State) and the wave of terror, it has simply become a monster.”


“Facebook today sabotages, it should be known, sabotages the work of the Israeli police, because when the Israeli police approach them, and it is regarding a resident of Judea and Samaria, Facebook does not cooperate,” he said, referring to the area of the West Bank.


“It also sets a very high bar for removing inciteful content and posts,” Erdan said.



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Since October, Palestinians have killed 34 Israelis and two visiting U.S. citizens in a wave of street attacks, mostly stabbings. Israeli forces have shot dead at least 201 Palestinians, 137 of whom Israel has said were assailants. Others were killed in clashes and protests.


Palestinian leaders say assailants have acted out of desperation over the collapse of peace talks in 2014 and Israeli settlement expansion in occupied territory that Palestinians seek for an independent state. Most countries view the settlements as illegal. Israel disputes this.


Israel says incitement in the Palestinian media and personal problems at home have been important factors that have spurred assailants, often teenagers, to launch attacks.


Tensions over Jewish access to a contested Jerusalem holy site, revered by Muslims as Haram al-Sharif (Noble Sanctuary) and Jews as Temple Mount, have also fueled the violence.


(Reporting by Ari Rabinovitch; editing by David Clarke)


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10 tasks for Twitter's new VR and AR team

Twitter's logo featured in the lobby of its San Francisco headquarters.




Last week, UploadVR broke the news that Twitter has started an AR and VR team and pegged ex-Apple designer, Alessandro Sabatelli, as its director of VR and AR to “[empower] us all in the spatial computing revolution.” Beyond that, Twitter is remaining mum on where it is going with the new medium - but that doesn't mean I can't suggest a few things they should do.


Before I tell you where Twitter should go, however, we should see where we are now. Here are several “givens” about the state of Twitter and VR:



  • Next year VR will go from millions sold to tens of millions sold, especially as a range of Android devices come along thanks to Google's Daydream efforts.

  • Twitter has been passed by by the teenage crowd who are using Snapchat and Instagram instead.

  • Eventually people are going to spend hours inside VR headsets playing games, watching movies, being inside journalism.

  • Major companies like Google, Apple, Snapchat, Facebook, Microsoft are investing billions in either VR or MR or both.

  • Spatial computing (where the user interface is put on top of the real world) is a new user interface and companies that bet against new user interfaces tend to go away or become radically less important to the world (Borland, Wordperfect, Nokia, Blackberry, are some examples).

  • Twitter's growth has stagnated when compared to Snapchat or even Facebook, and VR promises to take even more minutes of attention

    away from social networks.

  • Twitter has a major world brand, its logo is on businesses around the world, along with Facebook.

  • Low cost consumer 360 cameras are already hitting the market.


If you accept all of these things you can see just why Twitter acquired a new team that will work on VR/AR. It's becoming more and more important.


So here's the things I think Twitter should do in Virtual and then mixed reality:



  1. Stay out of hardware. You are up against big names there and you just don't have the time or resources or expertise.

  2. Don't bother me with crap. Think about contextual filtering in a whole new way. I know Twitter has some amazing artificial intelligence folks. It's time to have their work bear some major fruit and figure out how to train the system to build new kinds of filters.

  3. Become the most amazing place to find and share real-time 360-degree videos and partner with the team who will have the leading camera by the end of next year. Maybe even license your name/brand out to such camera manufacturer.

  4. Don't just stream tweets into VR. Make something new out of them.

  5. Partner smartly for the mobile world coming. Google is a natural friend because Oculus is going to be the other system on mobile (Samsung already partnered with them) so you need to go big into Google's Daydream system.

  6. Think about a quick win. Twitter's board isn't that astute so I doubt they are giving you the real money you need to go for mixed reality (which won't show up for consumers for at least three years, probably more). So you have to think about getting the board a win so they feel more comfortable with giving you the money you'll need to really build an amazing mixed reality experience.

  7. If you aren't betting huge on artificial intelligence then you are making a huge mistake. Contextual real time news is going to be huge, but Twitter shows no demonstration that it knows how to build AI that adds real value to users.

  8. Focus on the mobile world, that's where the big headset sales will come. The rest is sexy, but won't bring the numbers you will need to get to see another day. Facebook can afford longer-term moves, you can't.

  9. Separate brand and strategy from old-school Twitter. Twitter in VR needs to be different than Twitter on, say, your laptop screen. Personally I wouldn't even call it Twitter. Periscope style naming might be called for here to get your team to think different. In fact, you should take over the Periscope name, since at least that stands for live video and doesn't come with the baggage of Twitter.

  10. Get a family of cool experiences onto the new VR part of Twitter, whatever it's called. That's going to cost you tens of millions at this point, maybe more.


The problem for Alessandro Sabatelli and his team at Twitter is that the board needs a win fast, say in next six months. So, has to choose carefully for this short-term win, while keeping an eye on the longer-term spatial computing/mixed reality world. More on that in a bit, for now, let's focus on virtual reality since that will be more important short term than mixed reality will be.



Here I would become a top-tier Google partner. Google needs to keep Facebook from taking over this new world, so will be looking for any weapon it can use against Facebook and Twitter is the most natural partner (even to the point where lots of people think Google should buy Twitter, which isn't a bad idea at all).


The question is, how do you have a short-term win in a space that's had billions invested already, and where you are competing with big companies with huge datacenter capabilities, not to mention fiber wrapped around the world?


I'd focus on being the real-time news platform for Google's Daydream. Can you help developers get access to 360-degree videos flowing through Twitter's platform? Do that to start, but you need a cool partner to show off the platform. That is going to be tough.


Here, I've started two Twitter lists with VR leaders. One recognizes leading brands while the other focuses specifically on people.


These lists are much better than I can build on Facebook, where people continue to think Facebook is only for private stuff to families, so I'm not going to fight it anymore. Imagine if Twitter filtered out all the URLs, and showed VR experiences that these people find popular?


That's always been the trouble, Twitter has the data coursing through its real-time arteries, but it hasn't been able to build systems that use that data for anything really amazing or useful.


Today these lists have lots of noise. Put artificial intelligence to work to find the gold in this feed and present it to us in a fun way in both VR as well as elsewhere. Of course that means figuring out how to do really great, personalized, news filters, something that Twitter hasn't yet turned on (Nuzzel is pretty close, but not customizable by where you are, who you care about, etc).


Get the short term win then start working toward that Magic Leap/Hololens future we all know is coming.


Good luck!


This post first appeared on UploadVR.


Robert Scoble is the Entrepreneur in Residence at Upload. Prior to working with Upload, Scoble was the futurist for Rackspace, where he grew a massive following evangelizing emerging technology to the masses. 


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4 Conversion-Boosting Tips For Using Landing Page Videos


4 Conversion-Boosting Tips For Using Landing Page Videos


Many marketers confuse the concept of a landing page and a homepage, bundling them up as one.


It's important to see these as two different web pages, which are equally important for your website, but have dfferent functions to perform.


Your homepage is designed to serve several purposes in one go, such as introducing your company, and giving a brief overview about your product or services.


On the other hand, landing pages exist to serve one purpose: getting website visitors to convert to the next stage in the buying journey. Videos play an important role in boosting this conversion rate.


Have a look at the Amazon's homepage to get a clearer view of the difference between the two pages.


Amazon's homepage has many clickable call-to-action tabs, but it's not a landing page with one conversion objective that's easy for a visitor to act upon.


Amazon landing page 1 for landing page videos


Amazon have thousands of landing pages, one for each of their products. Each landing page has a clear and well executed purpose, getting visitors to click on the “Add To Cart” button.


Amazon landing page 2 for landing page videos


Source: Amazon


Why landing page videos?


When online shoppers were polled, 90% of them said they found videos helpful in making decisions, making videos a powerful conversion tool.


Landing page videos not only help with conversions, but are also a great way to communicate complex messages much more clearly than bulky text-based content.


Let's say if you're an SaaS company, landing page videos are an amazing way to cover a lot of information in a short period of time.


Like this example from Wordstream;





Source: Wordstream


Regardless of what your business is selling and what conversion rates you are looking to achieve, it is always helpful to get inspired by the marketers who have tried experimental formats. That's how you can get a fresh perspective, and give your audience a brand new experience.


Want to see what I mean? Let's check out a few conversion-boosting tips for landing page videos to help inspire you.


1. Use a good thumbnail


The first thing your visitors will experience about your video is its thumbnail, and videos have to be enticing to be clicked, so the thumbnail is your first big step to engaging and converting audience members.


A thumbnail is an abstract image of your video and to get the most from it, never forget to A/B test it to see which works with your audience the best.


TapInfluence is a particularly a good example of a thumbnail video; the image creates an urge to click through as it reflects the insights of the video. The design of this page itself is clean and simple, removing many of the potential obstacles between the prospect and the goal.


TapInfluence for landing page videos


Source: TapInfluence


2. Place your video above the fold


It's a rule of thumb, whatever is attractive to visitors coming into store should be displayed  for everyone to see right away, and the same goes for a landing page.


Start things off with a catchy headline and place your landing page video front and center, tempting people to click, be engaged, and convert.


It's also true that landing pages are generally meant for simple messaging, and simple design, so don't swamp your audience with information or confuse them. But even though it's standard practice, you don't always have to place your video above the fold.


Yes, you should have one primary video explaining your most important messages, but you can add to the experience and deepen the understanding of your message by providing even more videos throughout the rest of the page.


For the software company Autopilot, this was a unique opportunity to demystify lead nurturing and highlight the benefits of their software. This landing page is hard to avoid because their design is so simple and clean, yet compelling with a clear call to action.


Autopilot for landing page videos


Source: Autopilot


Similarly the video from this landing page deserves some serious attention;





3. Keep your video fascinating enough to be valuable


You must be wondering what “fascinating” has to do with a video. Wait, let me explain. No one likes to waste their time watching something that doesn't teach them anything or make their day better or easier.


So it's important to make sure your video content is fascinating enough to back up, explain, or give more detail about your landing page's significant message. You want to make sure the content is useful for everyone who lands on the page, and entices them to want to know more.


Dropbox is a company that is fully invested in video production. One of my favorite web apps out there, Dropbox has two options on this page – watch a video or download the app. The landing page is unified without any clutter and guides visitors to take the direct action.


Dropbox for landing page videos


Not only is their landing page designed beautifully, but the video itself is very engaging as it quickly explains the key features of Dropbox along with the benefits.


What else do you want? Check out the video to see what I mean.





Source: Dropbox


This video propelled DropBox onto a trajectory that saw them acquire a huge heap of funding, 50 million customers and a 4 billion dollar valuation. They even had Steve Jobs knocking on their door looking to acquire their company.


4. Choose an appropriate size for your video


Video is a powerful experience but it is not the standalone experience. Make sure that along with the video there are other effective elements which can enhance your landing page even more.


Your video should not cut down any important content or images. Size each video appropriately for the value it offers the audience.


Panorama9 is an IT monitoring company for IT monitoring systems. Sounds quite boring right? But their landing page video has overcome the boredom. Their explainer video features an IT Man, a throwback to Super Mario and PacMan.


Not only is their an attention-grabbing video on their page, but catchy content combined with the perfect call to action.


Any IT sales professional who watches the landing page video and landing page layout will surely get a kick.


Panorama 9 for landing page videos


Check-out the humor filled video below.





Wrap


It can't be denied that a good landing page video will do wonders for your business,  but as I have said previously, a video alone cannot do the job. You have to focus on all the components of the landing page, making them work together to create an engaging experience and boost those conversion rates.


All the landing page examples you have seen have registered some real results and created tons of happy customers. So, get inspired and build your landing page accordingly, and increase your conversion rates!


Guest Author: Mehroz Khan is an Entrepreneur and Co-founder at Videoexplainers-Video production company. He is a blogger, strategist, social media marketing specialist and growth strategist. His expertise includes marketing and video production. He regularly writes on Videoexplainers where he talks about explainer video, its various business advantages (increased website conversions, high sales, qualified leads, and facilitating customers' understanding level) and the massive video impact on the customers. Follow Mehroz on Twitter: @mehrozanwer, connect with him on LinkedIn: Mehroz Khan or email him at mehroz@videoexplainers.com.


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4 Conversion-Boosting Tips For Using Landing Page Videos

China says it will crack down on fake news from social media

Sina Weibo




(Reuters) – China's internet regulator will launch a crackdown on the reporting of news gathered from social media, as part of what the government calls a campaign against fake news and the spreading of rumors.


In a statement late on Sunday, the Cyberspace Administration of China said that online media cannot report any news taken from social media sites without approval.


“It is forbidden to use hearsay to create news or use conjecture and imagination to distort the facts,” it said.


“All levels of the cyberspace administration must earnestly fulfill their management responsibility for internet content, strengthen supervision and investigation, severely probe and handle fake and unfactual news,” the regulator added.


It listed a number of fake news stories it said had recently circulated on the internet, including one about a bus fire.


The Chinese government already exercises widespread controls over the internet and has sought to codify that policy in law.


Officials say internet restrictions, including the blocking of popular foreign sites like Google and Facebook, are needed to ensure security in the face of rising threats, such as terrorism, and stop the spread of damaging rumors.


Foreign governments and business groups have pointed to restrictions on the internet as a broader trade issue.


(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Michael Perry)


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Flipboard's Mike McCue on the last startup he'll ever do

Flipboard chief executive Mike McCue at the company's new office in Palo Alto, Calif. on May 12, 2016.




Inside a renovated building in Palo Alto, Calif. is a wall adorned with photographs from some of the major figures and breakthroughs of history. From David Bowie to the death-defying leap by Felix Baumgartner to the Supreme Court ruling on marriage equality, this installation is designed to highlight positive moments that have transpired through an exchange of knowledge and ideas.


To media publishing platform Flipboard, the occupant of this office space, spreading ideas and stories is part of the company mission. After more than five years, Flipboard believes it has found its stride. In fact, cofounder and CEO Mike McCue believes it will be the last startup he'll ever do, something he's said before. This time around, the 49-year-old entrepreneur wants to continue to execute his vision and keep Flipboard going for many years to come.


A wall in Flipboard's Palo Alto, Calif. office is adorned with photos from some of the world's most historic moments.


Above: A wall in Flipboard's Palo Alto, Calif. office is adorned with photos from some of the world's most historic moments.


Image Credit: Ken Yeung/VentureBeat


Standing tall and building towards profitability


At first glance, the company might not seem like anything spectacular, particularly in a fluctuating marketplace. But as publishers and news outlets pontificate about the future of media, Flipboard appears to have settled on a path to democratize media and re-engineer how people get their news. It has remained steadfast in its approach, even with the arrival (and departure) of other companies, including Facebook, with its Paper app, Circa, Apple News, Inside, AOL's Editions app, Yahoo News Digest, and Zite, which Flipboard ultimately acquired and shut down.


Flipboard aspires to be the new magazine rack to replace the one we'd come across while navigating our way down the street or in a busy airport terminal. It now counts more than 90 million monthly active users and is “significantly” growing. But it has faced criticism from those who claim that the company is “doomed” and even predictions that it will likely sell soon due to its fading fanfare. This year, there had been speculation that a number of companies were looking to acquire Flipboard, such as Twitter, which was reported to be making a $1 billion bid, or interest from Google and Yahoo. McCue shrugged the rumors off, saying that it's “all in the same vein as the dead unicorn meme.”


Flipboard's Palo Alto, Calif. office features displays that engineers use to monitor activity on the social content curation app.


Above: Flipboard's Palo Alto, Calif. office features displays that engineers use to monitor activity on the social content curation app.


Image Credit: Ken Yeung/VentureBeat


“Part of the thing is that if you read into [the Bloomberg article], if you take the headline away, [Flipboard] sounds like a pretty damn good company,” he told VentureBeat in an interview.


He admits that he's lost some top lieutenants recently, including McCue's cofounder Evan Doll, chief technology officer Eric Feng, head of product Eugene Wei, chief financial officer Jeff McCombs, and, most recently, the head of advertising and monetization product Dave Huynh. But he says that kind of turnover is normal for a company like Flipboard after five years. “You have to change,” McCue explained.


As for a lack of fanfare, he pointed out that Flipboard doubled its monthly users from 40 million to 80 million in less than a year. Now that it has the user numbers, McCue is focusing on the next phase of development, which involves making the company profitable so “that it can stand on its two feet.”


And while the number of players in the space appears to be contracting, McCue has a plan to avoid the fate of formal rivals, like Circa. He describes the problem there as two-fold: “There was no scale of users and they weren't able to have enough runway to get the scale to happen. [Circa] didn't have a business model that could sustain them.” He did praise the news app maker, saying it was “well innovated by really good people and captured some trends that will be important and live on.”


Flipboard CEO Mike McCue gestures while speaking at a ReadWriteMix event on August 13, 2014.


Above: Flipboard CEO Mike McCue gestures while speaking at a ReadWriteMix event on August 13, 2014.


Image Credit: Ken Yeung


McCue isn't new to the startup space. Prior to Flipboard, he cofounded TellMe Networks, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2007, and before that, he started pen computing company Paper Software.


“One of the things I've learned is that you have to build a real business,” he said. “I started a company with not only a good vision for a product, but an ecosystem that encompassed a business fueled by the product. When you invest in the user experience of the product, you make the business model better, as opposed to worse.”


It's about creating that “a-ha!” moment


At VentureBeat's MobileBeat conference last year, McCue shared that Flipboard is about creating “a-ha!” moments within its apps. It's this thinking that has pushed the company forward and guided its thinking as it continues to monetize itself. “We've always had a clear idea of what we can do is to create an ecosystem for great stories to thrive and support a business model that's beneficial to authors and Flipboard,” he told us recently.


“We're trying to give [advertisers] an opportunity to build brands in a social media world. This is an important thing. The problem is that if you build a product that's inherently direct response, it's not a good platform for building brands.”


Advertisers have a plethora of opportunities to market their products, including running sponsored tweets on Twitter and buying ads on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, or even on Google. There's also native advertising through companies like Sharethrough. But those don't really offer the capabilities necessary to create desire in viewers, the way a full-page ad in a magazine can, and this is something that McCue said Flipboard can offer.


Flipboard CEO Mike McCue with VentureBeat's Harrison Weber at MobileBeat 2015


Above: Flipboard CEO Mike McCue with VentureBeat's Harrison Weber at MobileBeat 2015


Image Credit: Michael O'Donnell / VentureBeat


“If you look at the world of advertising in totality, there's roughly about $600 billion in revenue across digital, offline, print, and television globally,” he explained. “70 percent is still offline, meaning we're in early innings. The market hasn't shifted the percentage. It's just the beginning.”


“What you see are the vast majority of dollars moved online have been for direct response ads,” McCue continued. “What's offline is brand advertisements. Any company needs to do two things: build brand awareness and desire, and harvest that desire and turn it into sales. These are two very different kinds of advertising.”


Take Banana Republic as an example: If the clothing retailer wants to market its next line of khakis, it'll buy placement on a billboard in San Francisco, an ad in Vogue, TV commercials, and more. The goal, as McCue shared, is to be aspirational, emotional, immersive, and tell a story. What Flipboard seeks to offer is the same experience you might get from print advertising but have it hosted on a digital-based publication with advanced targeting by interests.


But rather than having it be a place inundated with ads like just another website filled with information, Flipboard is going to be purposefully picky about what is displayed within its app. McCue is creating a product that supports premium content and advertisements and at this time select brands will get to tap into Flipboard's audience.


Flipboard on an iPad


Above: Flipboard on an iPad


Image Credit: Ken Yeung/VentureBeat


“Brands want to go where there's high quality content. They don't want to be next to a diet ad or a picture of youin a bar. When you have a long-tail of advertisers that number in the millions, you can't create that type of experience,” McCue shared. That's why his company is focused on the top tier brands instead of making the platform available to everyone.


“It's about reaching a person when in an aspirational state,” he remarked. “One of the challenges in products is with mobile, when are people using them? When are they checking out products? Flipboard is diving into your interests and passions. Do you want to be a better parent? Where do you want to travel on summer vacation? People do a deep dive and they do it when in an aspirational state or personal prime time. They're thinking about their future, shopping, open to inspiration and ideas.”


So rather than have a product that is similar to others on the market, Flipboard has spent its time and effort looking at ways to not only create a unique experience for users, but also to have a way to impact advertisers and show this isn't the normal way you market digitally anymore.


The go-to place for what you're passionate about


While social products have become places to share knowledge, they have also come under fire because of perceived censorship. Facebook most recently was accused of employing human editors that were filtering out posts from conservative media outlets, thereby offering a bias view to its users within its Trending Topics tool. The company denied these claims, but made some changes to boost its credibility among its conservative users.


Flipboard CEO Mike McCue chats with a coworker in the company's new Palo Alto, Calif office.


Above: Flipboard CEO Mike McCue chats with a coworker in the company's new Palo Alto, Calif office.


Image Credit: Ken Yeung/VentureBeat


So as a content curation service, how does Flipboard view this? “We want it to be the go-to place for what you're passionate about and see multiple perspectives from people that are just as passionate, if not more,” McCue remarked. “We want people to get a full round up of perspectives and then, if they want to see more, click-through. We want advertisers to map to the interest of the user's choice.”


“There is no algorithm for insightful or relevant, no algorithm to duplicate what the front page editor of The New York Times does every morning,” he continued. “You do need people. You have to treat that as a solemn responsibility, just like publishers have done for decades. How you think about algorithms and popularity, and weigh that on importance and insight is a challenging problem space.”


McCue said Flipboard is a company that mixes both algorithm with human editors and the community in order to show users articles and content at the right time without it being link bait or all extreme. “The problem that the web has had is that it has simultaneously devalued advertising and made it harder for journalists to have their work subsidized,” he pontificated. “Everything is trending to the law of numbers model. The stuff that's the most popular and gets the most numbers is the stuff that oftentimes are not what users are going to read.”


Flipboard believes it's among the unique products out on the marketplace especially with the power of technology it integrated from its Zite acquisition. Users can more acutely fine-tune the content they want to see, specifying topics and interests they want to learn more about, muting sources, and more. This also helped advertisers better target their ads as the company improved its monetization offering with Zite's interest graph.


The future


Inside Flipboard's Palo Alto, Calif. office is a space dedicated to the international users of its social content curation app.


Above: Inside Flipboard's Palo Alto, Calif. office is a space dedicated to the international users of its social content curation app.


Image Credit: Ken Yeung/VentureBeat


Word has it that Flipboard is working on its next major release, but the company is hush on the details. But if we had to speculate, there might be a push towards more monetization, not only for advertisers but for users, as well as including more sources of curation to help tell the whole story about a particular story, topic, or issue.


While there's cause for celebration when a company gets more than a billion users, McCue doesn't subscribe to that, saying Flipboard is “focused on quality over quantity, class over mass, the world's high-quality brands versus 'come one, come all'.” His goal is to have a “solid ecosystem that stands on its own two feet from a cash flow point of view” and has a long-term vision to create something that not only provides enjoyment to its users but advertisers will like as well.


McCue stated that although Flipboard raised $50 million in new funding in 2015, efforts are being made to make itself sustainable without any further need for outside investment. He claimed that its ads are impactful enough that they sell as a higher Cost Per Impression (CPM) above traditional mobile rates.


Flipboard's mission is plastered on a wall in the company's Palo Alto, Calif. office.


Above: Flipboard's mission is plastered on a wall in the company's Palo Alto, Calif. office.


Image Credit: Ken Yeung/VentureBeat


He admits that the company has been thinking about a self-service ad model, but there aren't any immediate plans to implement it. Among the issues that need to be sorted out includes a channel model that allows companies to have an ad, content, or page on Flipboard providing the right amount of prominence as others. McCue seeks to emulate how magazines work - after all, it's a big part of how the product was conceived. However, he wants to avoid random ads being displayed solely through programmatic efforts:


“When you have machines do the bidding, you get Kim Kardashian and diet ads. There's nothing wrong with that, but that's not what Flipboard is about. It's where you come to read about where the future of clean energy is going,” McCue said.


Flipboard has also thought about letting users generate some income off its platform, but any plans are very much in its early stages. In an example McCue shared, if you found an awesome camera lens article that you flipped, and someone purchased it on Amazon, you might receive an affiliate fee. But he cautioned that right now, a lot of Flipboard's users that curate content aren't doing it in the hopes of making money. “They're using it for fun or passion, or they're buiding a following, advancing their business, career, or point of view on something that translates back into doing marketing.”


Flipboard CEO Mike McCue ponders the future of media on stage while at a ReadWriteMix event in August 2014.


Above: Flipboard CEO Mike McCue ponders the future of media on stage while at a ReadWriteMix event in August 2014.


Image Credit: Ken Yeung


More ways to curate could be a part of Flipboard's product roadmap as well. McCue hinted that as the battle over video plays out on Snapchat, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, it might make sense for live videos to even be integrated into Flipboard. “It's growing in importance, and a place for brands to participate,” he opined. “All the work that we've been doing to articles applies to videos.”


Flipboard does support videos now, but as people share content around their interests in real-time, being able to bring that into a magazine could continue to offer unique perspectives and points of view users may want. “We think we can do a better job to surface and discover it while also having a more immersive experience,” McCue claimed.


So while critics may argue that Flipboard is doomed, the company is continuing to march forward with McCue's vision, emboldened in its task to create a long-term product that lets people share what they're interested in, like a topical Digg or StumpleUpon, but with mobile in mind, and an a-ha! moment for both users and advertisers. McCue believes that Flipboard is in a unique position:


“There are very few platforms at scale that provide premium content and advertising experience on mobile. We've been laser-focused on the same thing for the last 5.5 years.”


































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Flipboard's Mike McCue on the last startup he'll ever do

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Sunday, 3 July 2016

Top 10 Most Shared Content Marketing Resources That Could Transform Your Business


Top 10 Most Shared Content Marketing Resources That Could Transform Your Business


You may have heard the phrase “invest in yourself”


As knowledge workers, entrepreneurs, consultants and content marketers we often end up in an echo chamber of our own creation. We get consumed by a project, answering emails and bouncing around in your business.


The price?


Sharpening the saw is often forgotten or neglected. Why? Because we sometimes feel that reading and research as not as vital to generating cash flow or turning that all important profit.


The result?


We can become blunt and jaded by the incidentals rather than what is really important. Inspiration and creativity can then wither away. Investing in yourself means feeding your mind and soul.



  1. Reading and researching

  2. Creating

  3. Publishing


To help you find some inspiration I have been crawling through the most shared content marketing articles on BuzzSumo and come up with these 10 “must read” posts on content marketing.


#1. Comparing the ROI of Content Marketing and Native Advertising


This post by Kelsey Liebert (Director of Promotions at Fractl) on the Harvard Business Review website was one of the most shared content marketing articles in the last 12 months.


Over time any marketing tactic becomes less effective.


Technology such as “Ad blocking” stops banner ads and digital advertising produces a lower rate of return. Some of the solutions to solve this include using content marketing to get attention and native advertising including sponsored content.


This resource provides some rather interesting insights into what works best.


Shares – 16,100


HBR Content marketing


#2. How To Create An Easy Content Marketing Strategy You'll Actually Use


Brian Sutter (Director of Marketing for Wasp Barcode Technologies) wrote this great piece that most marketers want to know and need to understand. Creating a content marketing strategy you will use.


It provides great tips and steps on the keys to succeeding at content marketing from goals, automation and conversions .


The secret to its sharing success could be put down to 2 things. A great headline and and a site that gets a lot of organic traffic.


My favourite quote from the post. “Never create a piece of content and only use it once. Every single piece of content you make needs to be reused and recycled”.


Shares – 14,600


Forbes content marketing strategy


Image source: Ascend2


#3. Content Marketing Trends That Will Dominate 2016


Linkedin was a little late to the content marketing party but this great piece by Aashish Chopra got some serious sharing.


Trends posts are always a sure fire winner to maximize sharing and views and this is no different


Favourite insight from this post. “Human attention span is at the all time lowest of 8 seconds, Gold fish is 9 seconds…..Gold Fish!


Shares: 9,900


Linkedin Content marketing trends


#4. Content Marketing Tips for B2B Organisations


Rand Fishkin has a popular series called “Whiteboard Friday”. This insightful post is both a transcript and a 14 minute video.


One little lesson from this article: Re-purpose content for people's media preferences including text and video.


Favourite insight: “Target the right section of the funnel. Make sure it's targeted to the right audience, and then come up with a piece of content that's going to move the needle in the right place”.


Shares – 6,600


Rand Fishkin Content marketing tips


 


Image source: Moz.com


#5. Visual Content Marketing: A Resource Guide for Marketers


Visual content is a great way to maximize sharing. This post provides an exhaustive list of resources that you can use to take your content marketing to the next level.


The top insight from this post: “Creating a series makes your content immediately recognizable”


Shares – 5,900


SME - Visual content marketing


6. The 7 deadly sins of content marketing


Content marketing is often seen as a game of trust building and maximizing social sharing. Trond Lyngbo in this post from Search Engine Land reveals one strategy that is often overlooked by the amatueur.


The importance of optimizing for search engines.


Favourite insight: Creating a few outstanding, memorable articles that are well-researched and written by experts, ones that others would have a hard time improving upon, can set you apart from everyone else….especially if they've been properly optimized for search engines.


Shares: 5,800


Search engine land the 7 deadly sins of content marketing


7. How to Turn 1 Idea Into 2 Months of Content Marketing


Not surprising to see Content Marketing Institute on the list.


Coming up with ideas and inspiration is the bane of not just authors but also content marketers. Here are some clever tips on how to create a series of posts and also why it is important.


Top insight: “How often have you come up with an idea that's too big and too important for a single blog post, but you're not ready to write a book?”


Shares: 5,500


CMI - Content marketing


8. How to Manage Your Content Marketing in 30 Minutes a Day


Time is precious and you need to get smart about how you use your time as a content marketer. Otherwise you will be trapped behind your desk for the rest of your life!


Aaron Agius's great post reveals the tips, tricks and tactics to make the most of your time.


Top insight: “Reach out to bloggers. While you're reading through blog posts, take a moment to find the email of the blogger that wrote the piece. Compliment their work, and open up the doors of communication……you will have a surprising number of opportunities from doing this”


Shares – 4,500


Hubspot Content marketing


Image source: Hubspot 


#9. 16 Eye-Popping Statistics You Need to Know About Visual Content Marketing


Larry Kim (the author behind this post on Inc.com) is a master of creating content and making it ignite. Heer he reveals some stats about visual content that may make you reconsider your focus.


Top insight: “Visuals are memorable and effective, because they help people process, understand, and retain more information more quickly”.


 Shares: 4,500


Larry Kim - Visual Content marketing


Image source: Imgur


#10. 75 Content Marketing Tools You Can't Live Without


Marketing is now just as much a tech game as an art form and creative pursuite. Neil Patel from Quick Sprout reveals some tools that will save your time and money.


Top insight: “With the right subject matter, a targeted strategy, and a bit of luck, your post has the potential to go viral”.


Shares: 4,100 shares


Neil Patel - Content marketing


Image source: Quicksprout.com


Before you go


We also made the list several times but thought it would be good to give some awesome content marketers a shout out! And here are some of the Jeffbullas.com posts that ranked as some of the most shared content marketing posts in the last 12 months.



But there is more!



The post Top 10 Most Shared Content Marketing Resources That Could Transform Your Business appeared first on Jeffbullas's Blog.






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Top 10 Most Shared Content Marketing Resources That Could Transform Your Business