Posted 09.04.08 | Filed under: Launch/Relaunch

The New Sapient-designed WSJ.com Launches September 16th

The new Sapient-designed WSJ.com launches September 16th. The promise: “lots of wonderful gizmos.”

(via Poynter.org)

This content has been aggregated from external sources. Learn more about linkblogging and my use of it here. Authors, publishers and tipsters are welcome to contact me.

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  • “ Jeff has an incredible grasp for turning complex content strategy questions into simple, understandable, and actionable solutions. ”

Notes on Content

A running report on must-read news, analysis and resources from the content industry. Updated frequently. »

The whole concept of “content marketing” puts downward pressure on the quality of the content. It becomes about quantity, instead of quality.

The job of content should be to attract, engage and delight your readers. That way, they’ll keep reading. And they’ll find your sales pages, because they were impressed by your content pages.

via Nick Usborne, Why I don’t much like the phrase, “content marketing”.

07.29.10 | Advertising & Marketing, Custom & Branded Content

via everyone online, Flipboard for iPad.

07.28.10 | Launch/Relaunch, Platforms & Channels, Products & Services

Packaging is vital to our growth, too. It’s imperative for all our editorial, design and technology staff to improve the product experience with highly relevant and related content, applications or tools. Last week’s record-breaking launch of Best Places to Live is prime example. At its traffic peak, each visitor to Best Places was consuming as many as 27 pages each.

via Chris Peacock, VP and Executive Editor, CNNMoney.com’s brand of business journalism « Talking Biz News.

07.27.10 | Editorial & Programming, Products & Services

shouldilearnprogramming When Should Editorial Folks Learn Programming?

via Mark S. Luckie, Should journalists learn programming skills?: A Flowchart :: 10,000 Words.

When Should Editorial Folks Learn Programming?

07.26.10 | Editorial & Programming, Industry Shift, Organizational Effectiveness

I’ve been curious about the Journal’s video strategy for some time. But when Murray tweeted several weeks ago that they’d established a steady flow of 6 million-7 million streams a month, we started a correspondence that resulted in an invitation to see what it takes to make live television at a newspaper.

via Marion Maneker, Is the Wall Street Journal the Future of News Video? | The Big Money.

07.23.10 | Editorial & Programming, Platforms & Channels, Theory & Practice, Video

The challenge is to really understand that audience and identify the way that compelling content can build a strong relationship, creating new opportunities for monetization elsewhere. In this respect, passion-based products such as Times Plus (or Guardian Extra) that reward keen readers with additional content and offers represent a smarter long-term solution than a simple paywall that drives users into the welcoming arms of your (free) rivals.

via Nick Thomas, Publishers Need Popcorn, Not Paywalls | paidContent:UK.

07.22.10 | Advertising & Marketing, Business Strategy

 

[F]or Slate, long-form [content]’s value proposition is also reputational, rather than strictly financial.

via Megan Garber, “Smart editorial, smart readers, and smart ad solutions”: Slate makes a case for long-form on the web » Nieman Journalism Lab.

07.21.10 | Business Strategy, Content Strategy, Editorial & Programming, Products & Services

Beet.TV: Half of Web Video Publishers Have Syndication Plans in Place.

07.20.10 | Content Strategy, Platforms & Channels, Video

diagram 595 BBC’s Semantic Publishing Model for World Cup 2010

via BBC Internet Blog: BBC World Cup 2010 dynamic semantic publishing.

BBC’s Semantic Publishing Model for World Cup 2010

07.19.10 | Content Management, Technical Architecture

Eun will present the new AOL content structure—a slimmed-down 30-plus sites channeled into 17 “super” networks—at an all-hands meeting today. That’s a major change from the previous URL-based approach with more than 80 distinct sites. Eun explained the strategy and the thinking behind it to paidContent in one of his first interviews.

The new structure is like a newspaper in some respects with the super nets divvied up into our groups—AOL News & Info, AOL Entertainment, AOL Life, and AOL Commerce (plus the AOL.com front page as its own)—but with a TV-like emphasis on programming and production. Nearly all of the content remains but the branding is changing.

via Staci D. Kramer, David Eun Puts AOL On A URL Diet With ‘Super Net’ Strategy | paidContent.

07.16.10 | Business Strategy, Content Strategy, Editorial & Programming, Launch/Relaunch


21stcnewsroomdotted Visualizing the Lifecycle of Digital News Content

via Paul Bradshaw, The News Diamond reimagined as ‘The Digital News Lifecycle’ | Online Journalism Blog.

Visualizing the Lifecycle of Digital News Content

06.07.10 | Editorial & Programming, Theory & Practice

Execution Atom Welchman on Web Execution

Web Execution is the definition, coordination, and support of all the tactics required to produce and maintain a high-quality Web presence.

There are two core sub-functions of Web Execution:

  • Product Management
  • Program Management

via Lisa Welchman, Web Execution (Web Team): A Definition | WelchmanPierpoint.

Welchman on Web Execution

06.04.10 | Business Strategy, Organizational Effectiveness, Theory & Practice

This content has been aggregated from external sources. Learn more about linkblogging and my use of it here. Authors, publishers and tipsters are welcome to contact me.