Excerpted from article by Heidi Cohen:
"Content curation is like a great editor who brings his unique taste and understanding of his target audience to his selection of the best content for his readers. He provides context for the content so that it’s more than collection of information.
Content curation chooses the most relevant, highest quality digital information to meet your readers’ needs on a specific subject. It involves a process of assembling, categorizing, commenting and presenting the top content.
Content curation is a core content marketing element for the following three reasons:
- Offering your audience a combination of original and third party content provides a branded -context for your work.
- Curating other people’s content positions you and/or your organization as a tastemaker in your field.
- Creating sufficient content is a marketing and business challenge.
Here are twelve attributes your content curation strategy should have to insure success.
1) Has defined, measurable goals...
2) Targets a specific audience...
3) Contains red meat content, not filler...
4) Follows “the less is more” theory...
5) Incorporates original content...
6) Adds real value...
7) Has a human touch...
8) Provides branded context for your information...
9) Involves a community...
10) Offers information in small chunks...
11) Sticks to a schedule...
12) Credits its creator...
Content curation puts your original content in a branded context for your target audience..."
Each attribute is analyzed with more information. Read full article here: http://heidicohen.com/12-attributes-of-a-content-curation-strategy/
Selected originally by Jan Gordon on "Curation, Social Business and Beyond" here: http://bit.ly/lBeRSF
Via janlgordon, Giuseppe Mauriello, Merril DeFiddes
This is a really good article about content curation. There is nothing wrong with doing content curation, as it provides insight from multiple sources. As this article points out, the trick is curating content that adds value to whatever it is that you are adding the content to. In my case, it's my blog. I've followed most of these guidelines instinctively, because I want to provide quality information to share with fellow technical communicators and e-learning specialists.
Read this one carefully, as it's chock full of good advice.
--techcommgeekmom