Newstex Blog
How mobile app dependent are we? That's one of the questions that Apigee, the API company, wanted to find out when it surveyed 760 smartphone owners in the United States, United Kingdom, France, Spain, and Germany.
Have you surveyed your audience lately? If not, how do you really know that they're satisfied with your content? There might be big or small changes that you could make to your content which could open the doors to greater success.
It used to be that Authoritative Content publishers only had to battle low quality online content published by content mills on blogs, in article directory sites, and on websites owned by the companies behind those mills.
Are you wasting time on activities that are causing you to decrease your content publishing productivity? February is Time Management Month, so let's take a look at five activities that commonly decrease content creation and publishing productivity and ways to recoup that lost time.
The massive volume of information available to audiences online has changed the world and made it easier than ever for people to educate themselves about any topic.
As an online content publisher, you spend a lot of time creating Authoritative Content that is useful to your audience. You also spend time ensuring that your website or blog, where your online content is published, is well-designed.
Facebook might hold the top spot as the largest social network of active users by a very wide margin, but the battle for second place is heating up.
Pictures and videos just got bigger on Twitter. Yesterday, Twitter rolled out some updates to make it easier for users to view photos and videos on profiles and in search results.
Next time you want to reference a Twitter update that you made or another Twitter user (with a public Twitter profile) published, don't just retype the text or take a screenshot and add it to your article.
If you publish Authoritative Content online, it's likely that you'll be contacted at some time by someone who wants to interview you as a story source. If your content is high quality, your reputation will grow.
If you're over the age of 40, you probably remember a time when there wasn't an Internet. Email didn't exist, and many people didn't have video cameras let alone smartphones and the ability to upload and share videos with the world within seconds.
The landscape of media will continue to rapidly evolve in 2013, and Josh Stearns, Journalism and Public Media Campaign Director for Freepress, shared three critical media issues with PBS that he believes cannot be ignored in the coming year.