Benefits Of Scoop.it For Educated Audience And For Knowledge Sharing

source from www.scoop.it

Scoop.It is a content curation site. You will find the best content on the web placed there, or scooped, by others. It has potential to increase your influence across the web, bring you mass blog traffic, help you meet like-minded, engaged bloggers, and offer you quality material to read on topics that interest you.

“Scoop.It Publishes your topic page with curated content in minutes. Distribute it automatically with your network to build your professional brand. ”   (from www.scoop.it )

“Automate your content marketing and save time. Curate content at scale for all your channels or for your team. Use data science to create better content and beat the competition.”  (from www.scoop.it )

Scoop.it is a content marketing software company based in San Francisco, California. The company operates the Scoop.It platforms, a Content curation service, and markets its content marketing software to businesses.

With the help of  Scoop.it, we can do the following task

  • CONTENT CURATION
  • CONTENT DISTRIBUTION
  • BLOG CONTENT CREATION
  • CONTENT HUB
  • CONTENT PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
  • PREDICTIVE ANALYTICS
  • CONTENT INTELLIGENCE    (from www.scoop.it )

How It Works: Login to https://www.scoop.it/ and use the following instructions:

Choosing Your Scoop.it Topic

The very first step is choosing your Scoop.it topic. If you’re using the platform as an extended branding or authority building strategy, you can’t just grab any old topic and throw it up there. It has to:

  1. Be something you’re passionate about (the more passionate you are, the more likely you’ll be to stay on top of the curation process, as well as be careful with what you’re sharing).
  2. Be something related to your business (if you’re a plumber and curating a topic such as door knobs, you can become a perceived authority in doorknobs… but what good does that do your plumbing business?).
  3. Be something that interests others (otherwise, it’s just a museum that no one visits. Ever.)

Using Relative Keywords to Pull Content: When you read an interesting link from Twitter, you have the option to retweet it. With Scoop.it, there are several ways to grab related content:

Bookmarklet for Casual Curation: When you read an article you think would do well for your Scoop.it topic, click the Scoop.it bookmarklet, enter the information you want and publish. This is a handy feature to have when you’re reading or researching about your favorite topics.

Suggestion Engine for Sifting Through Content: Sometimes you don’t have time to search for content to curate. Scoop.it’s suggestion engine provides you with a list of suggested sites based on the keywords you enter. When you’re ready to add more content to your Scoop.it, simply scroll down the list of RSS feeds.

Adding Your Own Sources for Reliable Content: Everybody has their favorite reads and twitter users or lists to follow. Scoop.it allows you to add your own sources, making it easier to find good content – not quite so much crud to weed through. RSS feeds, Twitter users, Twitter lists, Twitter searches, a Facebook page, and Google News, Blogs, or Video search: these options give you a variety of ways to include your favorite sources in your “suggested sources” box.

 

(Source from searchenginejournal.com )

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