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Click on the link below to discover MY number 1 tip to help your affiliate business. What do you think it is? http://www.trustthelink.com/ Hello, today I'm going to be talking about content repurposing examples for affiliate marketing. There really is an insanely amount of ways you can repurpose the content you create. I just want to share a few ideas and you can be picky and choose what you enjoy the most. Why would you even want to repurpose your content? So, you can get more people to your landing page, on you list and so you can sale them products to make more money. The holy grail really is video because you can submit your content to video sites such as YouTube, Dailymotion, Instagram and Periscope. Plus upload the video to Facebook and Linkedin and even Reddit Communities. Reddit is a picky platform so you have to be careful and read the rules of each little Reddit Community. The great thing about Reddit is there are 1.2 million reddit subreddits. Yea, that is a lot. You can also take the sound from your YouTube video and submit it to Anchor.Fm and Soundcloud those are the 2 I use. Also, all these methods I'm sharing with you is completely free. You can take the written word you used to create the video and submit them to article directories. Linkedin takes articles, Quora, Medium and there is Tumblr, otherarticles.com and much more like ScoopIt. Oh, and I like sites.Google.com because since it's owned by Google you can get favorible rankings. You can also use the content to answer questions in Yahoo questions and Quora. If that wasn't enough you can create a slideshare of your content and submit to Slideshare for even more views. Then there is submiting the pictures of blog posts to Pinterest and Pinterest groups. Pinterest is a search engine so you can do damage with that site. Oh, and who can forget about Ebooks. Ebooks are great because nobody does them and they are super easy to make. You can use the Ebooks as a link magnet, plus sale them and make money. There is an insane amount of stuff you can do with an Ebook like submit to Facebook groups. Yea, Facebook groups hate spam, but if you give them a gift they accept it like that. Plus there are Ebook Directories, Linkedin groups and you can use them as bonus's to help sale your affiliate links. This is all from 1 short article you wrote. If you have a few articles around 1 topic you can repurpose them into an online course there is Udemy and other online courses. Heck, you can make the course free and use it as a link magnet to get more people on your list. One other idea I want to share is by using Email. Email is a different beast because the way my business works is that is where most all the selling happens. The content is just free stuff I give out. What is really cool about the emails you create is you can repurpose them and use that for posts in Facebook, Linkedin and Tumblr. If you create 1 email to sale one product you can tweak the email and use it to sale another product. This depends on the email. There really are many other ideas on repurposing your content. You can pick and choose what you enjoy doing really. Is there a way you repurpose your content that you would like to share, if so please leave a comment.
Hey everyone! In today’s episode, I share the mic with Guillaume Decugis, Co-Founder and CEO of ScoopIt, which is a B2B software that allows businesses and individuals to curate and publish the best possible content. Tune in to hear Guillaume shed some light on his 15 years as an entrepreneur, how he attempted to build a mobile widget platform, and how he grew Scoopit to 200 B2B customers and 4 million freemium users! Click here for show notes and transcript Leave Some Feedback: What should I talk about next? Who should I interview? Please let me know on Twitter or in the comments below. Did you enjoy this episode? If so, leave a short review here. Subscribe to Growth Everywhere on iTunes. Get the non-iTunes RSS feed Connect with Eric Siu: Growth Everywhere Single Grain Twitter @EricSiu
Nathaniel Schooler Welcome to the show. Jessica. Your name is Jessica Kelly, and you work for Cisco. And we've kind of connected on Twitter probably for about; it's got to be about three or four years, and you've kind of progressed in your jobs. And I don't know quite what you actually do now. So I'll let you introduce yourself. Jessica Kelly Well, first of all, apologies for my puppy who chose that moment to bark. I hope that you got a good solid recording of that. He's very cute, by the way, I probably more interesting than than I am. I do work for Cisco just recently started working for Cisco as an employee. I've been a consultant for a long, long, long time, primarily because I enjoy working from my own office. And Cisco allows me to do that. So it's, it's great. I've been heavily involved in social media for publicity and promotion for years. And that is indeed where we met on Twitter. And it was an accidental meeting, if I remember correctly, just we were talking about a piece of content that got shared somewhere, but it's been great. It's been great sharing tweets with you. Nathaniel Schooler For sure. So I've got a few questions. I know you're tight for time. So I'll begin with the first one. Q1) How can people use content marketing for building their personal brand? Jessica Kelly That's a great question. First, a disclaimer, I sort of feel that marketing is just marketing and content marketing is the newest term, right. But if you know marketing is marketing, and to me under marketing, you've got PR and publicity and promotions and sales and, and all these wonderful things. And social media is part of that social media is to me is the evolution of publicity, its interactive, you know, you may be broadcasting information that you want people to know. But you also better be listening and interacting with them to that's why it's called "social media!" right. So in terms of content, there's so many ways to do it. Obviously, if you are an author or a designer, and you create an amazing piece of content that is all about you, or a service you provide or knowledge you have, then that's a no brainer, you're going to share that in every logical place; every logical place that you think you're audience might might be not, you know, just not just scattershot, and that's that's your content marketing. But then there are people who may be severely pressed for time, I would consider myself one of those people. But I also want to keep my skills sharp. And I want to know what's going on in the tech world and the world of digital media. And so for them, for people like me, I find content curation is just the perfect thing. It allows me to keep up on the latest news, and then curated somewhere I am and I happen to use the scoop it tool. It was one of the first that was available for free, I'll be honest, and I really like way that it worked. Some people use Pinterest, there's, you know, there's all different places you can post. But it enables me to not only share information that I think might be useful to people all in one place. But I don't have the best memory, right. So if I'm curating content, and I'm curating news and resources that I think other marketing people or writers or editors or communications, I kind of cross a broad spectrum all leading out from writing and communications, right? If I've curated something two years ago, I don't remember what it was on topic x, but I know I read something and I can go back to through my own curated content and find something that's helpful to be on my job. So curation to me is just a win win on all fronts when you don't have time to create. Nathaniel Schooler Yeah, yeah, that makes that makes a lot of sense, I think. Yeah, so you're talking about really having like, an online it's almost like a website, right? Like, from Scoopit on you. Jessica Kelly Right. Nathaniel Schooler You put your name in there, and then and then all the stuff that you share will be shared from your Scoopit ...
Scoopit-ee poop, Kanye, we're doin it LIVE, Dan has a mental health breakthrough, Wings of Redemption, Sean Ranklin online drama, reality tv.
Welcome to Series 2 of our Up Close podcast series. The theme of this series is A 5 Step Blueprint for Lead Generation Through Content Marketing. My co-host is Guillaume Decugis, CEO of Scoop.it. We’re releasing 5 episodes in a row Monday through Friday. April 12: Content Marketing Infrastructure All content should convert… provided you have the right content marketing infrastructure. Distribute content to convert. The 3 pillars of a content marketing infrastructure. Why you need a content hub to generate leads. Good content that gets distribution beats awesome content that gets none all the time. Lead magnets vs traffic magnets. You can get access to all five episodes in one recording – running about an hour – by going here: http://www.findandconvert.com/upclose2
Welcome to Series 2 of our Up Close podcast series. The theme of this series is A 5 Step Blueprint for Lead Generation Through Content Marketing. My co-host is Guillaume Decugis, CEO of Scoop.it. We’re releasing 5 episodes in a row Monday through Friday. April 11th episode 2: Marketing & Sales Alignment Lead generation is a relay race involving marketing and sales: alignment is key. The importance of documenting your content marketing strategy to make sure you have clear alignments on buyer personas, lead qualification criteria. Involving the sales team in the content plan generation: what questions do you get from prospects and clients? Involving the sales team in the content plan execution: sharing, distributing and even co-creating content. Maintaining and managing the alignment: content as part of sales enablement. What content is used by sales? What is missing? What should be used but is not? You can get access to all five episodes in one recording – running about an hour – by going here: http://www.findandconvert.com/upclose2
Welcome to Series 2 of our Up Close podcast series. The theme of this series is A 5 Step Blueprint for Lead Generation Through Content Marketing. My co-host is Guillaume Decugis, CEO of Scoop.it. We’re releasing 5 episodes in a row Monday through Friday. April 10th episode 1 is: Content Strategy and Content Plan. Are you creating content for content’s sake or are you doing content marketing? Content marketing: publishing and distributing content that drives people closer to a purchase decision. Define your buyer personas. Define the customer journey with funnel stages. Define funnel stages and your audience’s top questions at each stage plus relevant CTAs. Content and customer journey mapping equals your content plan. You can get access to all five episodes in one recording – running about an hour – by going here: http://www.findandconvert.com/upclose2
I recorded this podcast with Guillaume Decugis, CEO of Scoop.it!, at his office in San Francisco. We discussed the process of how businesses generate leads through content marketing. By strategizing content around buyers' various stages in the funnel, lead generation is fueled and conversion is encouraged. Visit our show notes page for more insights into this podcast at: http://www.socialbusinessengine.com/podcasts/3-pivotal-elements-to-lead-generation-through-content-marketing
Guest Host: Wendy Rettenmeier Topic: It’s an all technology show! Top 100 Tools for Learning 2013 (Center for Learning and Performance Technologies blog, Jane Hart) Tech tools we discussed on the show: Symbaloo Padlet Doodle LiveBinder Glogster edu ScoopIt & Paper.li Articles for this Week: The Best Thing to Happen […]
TIC's Aplicadas a la Docencia y al Aprendizaje en Secundaria (umh0460) Curso 2013 - 2014
Curación de contenidos Scoopit. Asignatura: TICS Aplicadas a la Docencia y el Aprendizaje en Secundaria. Máster Universitario en Formación del Profesorado ESO y Bachillerato, FP y Enseñanzas de Idiomas. Profesora: María Asunción Martínez Mayoral. Dpto. de Estadísitica, Matemáticas e Informática. Área de Estadística e Investigación Operativa. Proyecto PLE 2013. Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche. Utilización de Scoop.it para la curación de contenidos, información.
Doubt The Doubts | Crazy Cool People Sharing Great Tips, Tactics, & Tools
Guillaume Ducugis talks about being an entrepreneur.
Essential Creative Apps for 2013 Jenny and Lois discuss their essential apps and give the results of RUC listeners responses. You can listen in the player below or subscribe to the podcast in iTunes Lois's must have apps Stip Designer, Explain Everything, TinyTap, Toontastic, AudioBoo, Edublogs, Educreations, Popplet Jenny's essential apps Explain Everything, Evernote/Dropbox, Bookcreator, iMovie, Keynote, iTalk, Edublogs Survey - 5 most essential apps result If you could only add 5 apps to your iPad.......... 1. Explain Everything 2. Evernote 3. iMovie 4 Skitch 5 Twitter Thanks to everyone who completed our survey. How to choose apps Most apps are Bad? Research (thanks to John Pearce’s Scoopit) Common Sense Media (site for searching for apps for a specific age, subject and purpose, rates age appropriateness also and there is an app)The New Bloom’s Taxonomy/Models for assessing iPad Appshttp://www.educatorstechnology.com/2013/01/new-version-of-blooms-taxonomy-for-ipad.htmlhttp://www.educatorstechnology.com/2012/06/blooms-taxonomy-for-ipad.htmlhttp://teachwithyouripad.wikispaces.com/Blooms+Taxonomy+with+AppsSAMR model curtesy of Greg Swanson's website From Britthttp://www.freetech4teachers.com/2013/01/build-media-gallery-with-your-students.html#.UOtNkoletON What's On TeachMeetMelb, Feb 2nd, Little Markov, Drummond S,t Carlton VIC 3053 MOTM2013, FEB 16 & 17, Melb – Inspire 9 Co working space Cybersafety tips Instagram – Staying Safe Online TIPS When writing contractions like we’ll that won’t move from well use auto flick the exclamation mark to add an apostrophe. Shrinkurl. free Eyeconit free Haiku deck thanks to @iPadSammy WordFoto free or $1.99
Minter Dialogue #42This interview is with Marc Rougier, a friend and a past participant on my French podcast. Today's is in English. Marc is founder and CEO of Scoop.it, one of the darlings in the curation space, helping individuals, brands and businesses to edit and share content in themed magazines. It's a great platform if you've never tried. Come listen to what Marc has to say about it.Meanwhile, you can comment and find the show notes on themyndset.com where you can also sign up for my weekly newsletter. Or you can follow me on Twitter on @mdial. And, if you liked the podcast, please take a moment to go over to iTunes to rate the podcast.Enjoy the show!Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/minterdial)
Scoop.it is a content curation platform you can use to create an online magazine and build your authority in a given niche. View my podcasting scoops herehttp://www.scoop.it/t/podcastsRead more about Scoop.ithttp://basicblogtips.com/scoop-it.html
In this session you will find out why coaching is an effective professional development tool and how the VITAE course could help you become an ICT integration coach. You will do this by using six Web 2.0 tools to access and review the material of this session and decide on your first SMART goal. You will do this by learning by doing and in order to access the necessary links you should have the following ScoopIt page open at the same time: http://www.scoop.it/t/vitae-course
In this session you will find out why coaching is an effective professional development tool and how the VITAE course could help you become an ICT integration coach. You will do this by using six Web 2.0 tools to access and review the material of this session and decide on your first SMART goal. You will do this by learning by doing and in order to access the necessary links you should have the following ScoopIt page open at the same time: http://www.scoop.it/t/vitae-course
Minter Dialogue sur les marques et le marketing digital (minterdial.fr)
Marc Rougier est le Président et co-fondateur de Goojet (un réseau social mobile) qui est éditeur de Scoop.it, une plateforme de curation, actuellement en phase Beta. Dans cet entretien on a discuté de l'intérêt de la notion de curation pour les individus et des marques ainsi que les nouveaux développements en cours.
Minter Dialogue sur les marques et le marketing digital (minterdial.fr)
Rédacteur pour Techcrunch France, Cedric Giorgi nous livre son point de vue des grands évènements en matière de nouvelles technologies en 2010 ainsi que les prospectives pour 2011.