Increasing your site's traffic requires more than keyword optimization and churning out blog posts. Sometimes, you have to get a little creativ
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digital marketing strategy
Think | Visualize strategic marketing planning Curated by malek |
Scooped by malek |
Increasing your site's traffic requires more than keyword optimization and churning out blog posts. Sometimes, you have to get a little creativ
Rescooped by malek from BI Revolution |
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Scoop.it Crushes Wordpress
The @Scoop.it team has done an amazing job. Their content curation tool anticipates what is going to happen next beautifully as a stat we found by accident proves.
How does Scoop.it compare to Wordpress?
We wrote and Scooped a post on the 5 Reasons We Are Leaving Wordpress ( http://sco.lt/590bYn ) earlier. As we shared that post in our Web Design Revolution Scoop.it feed ( http://sco.lt/5Hy5Q1 ) we wondered how the tools would compare.
As we noted in our post the comparison isn't straight up. We've used Scoop.it longer, but we've put more time into Wordpress since 2014 (by far). So differences in usage may be moot, but results sure are not.
Results speak to many things including the "lean marketing" and critical role content curation plays in our marketing future as @Guillaume Decugis and the Scoop.it team preach. The biggest win is in the TIME to RESULT ratio. Scoop.it is a snowball rolling down hill now.
Momentum and good friends such as @massimo facchinetti, @malek , @Ana Cristina Pratas @Cendrine Marrouat - https://www.cendrinemedia.com and @John van den Brink (to name only a few) mean what any content marketer needs most - a supportive tribe of advocates - we have...on Scoop.it. Not so much on Wordpress.
How does Scoop.it compare on our 5 Reasons We're Leaving Wordpress?
* Spam - Had some in the beginning, but @Marc Rougier Guillaume and the team CRUSHED spam now threatening to choke WP.
* Unrealized Promise - Scoop.it under promised and over delivered vs. Wordpress
* Bad SEO - Our first feed, Content Revolution (http://www.scoop.it/t/curation-revolution ) has fallen to #6 after owning #1 on Curation Revolution for years. I'm to blame here. since I put so much time into Wordpress (who knew :).
* Crap Overload - Scoop.it is BUILT to filter the web's CRAP into effective content curation with tools such as their keyword based spider and community suggestions. Scoop.it FILTERS CRAP into meaningful content with ROI attached.
* Multi-platform Content Curation - That phrase describes Scoop.it's mission so they CRUSH WP here too.
No matter how you cut the stats, content curation beats blogging and Scoop.it crushes Wordpress (period, full stop).
http://sco.lt/590bYn
When stats confirm anecdotal evidence:
Good job @Martin (Marty) Smith , you nailed it, I had the same Scoop-it-first, feeling, and here you come with numbers and case for Scoop.it. It's all about shared interests (what you rightly called, tribe of advocates) and friendly platform. Thank you for mention
Rescooped by malek from Content Curation World |
A handy spot for curation
Robin Good's insight:
If you are interested in what could be a good workflow and set of tools to use to curate content on your own WordPress blog, Nathan Weller has a must-read article for you.
In it, he dissects and explains the tools he uses to curate content on WordPress, from how he aggregates and browses RSS feeds, to how he filters, edits and actually curates the content of each post.
Interestingly his focus is on quality, not on having his site populated by lots of "somewhat relevant" content pulled in automatically by one of the many "content marketing"-oriented curation tools available today.
I think you will find several interesting ideas that you may have not considered on how to approach your curation workflow, let alone checking the several insightful comments at the end.
Lost of valuable information, resources, examples and advice. 8/10
Full article: https://managewp.com/wordpress-content-curation
Nathan Weller alude al uso de dos bookmarklets para curar contenidos. Se trata de Feedly y Tabcloud, herramientas interesantes que sirven para curar contenidos. Y es que no necesitamos un pluggin increíble para curar contenidos en nuestro Wordpress, sino que estos bookmarklets pueden hacer la misma función incluso de una manera más eficaz.
Rescooped by malek from SOCIAL MEDIA, what we think about! |
Sometimes you’ll need to move your blog from one host to another. It’s a bit of a pain and might seem a daunting task if you’ve never done it before.
But transferring a site is a fairly straightforward process that you can do yourself with an FTP program and this step-by-step guide.
Before trying the DIY method, it’s worth checking to see whether your new hosting company offers a site transfer service for new customers. Many do—but check whether there’s a cost involved. I’ve seen free services for this, but I’ve also seen prices around $300!
If you just need to learn how to make a simple backup of your posts, and don’t need to move hosts, take a look at this ProBlogger post.
But if you’re ready to back up and move your blog, let’s do it.
What you need to begin
Read more: http://bit.ly/KDHAzv
a couple of not-so-standard methods of increasing website traffic.