Newstex Blog
What's the real story about the future of the media industry?
A new book by Ann Handley of MarketingProfs and C.C. Chapman of Managing the Gray, Content Rules, teaches readers how to create blogs, podcasts, videos, ebooks, webinars and more that engage customers and ignite your business.
Each year, Technorati conducts a survey of bloggers and uses the data collected to create an annual state of the blogosphere report.
While Twitter started out a few years ago as a social tool where people could communicate in real-time via short snippets, the team behind Twitter believes the site has evolved into something quite different -- a news site.
Elections are now open for the 2010 Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA) Content Division Board, a volunteer group of industry executives that works closely with the division’s leadership to direct our activities and initiatives.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is enacting new guidelines that bloggers and Twitter users need to be aware of. The new rules go into effect on December 1, 2009, and anyone who violates them could face fines up to $11,000 per violation.
Last month, I wrote a post on the Newstex blog called New Twitter Statistics Tell an Interesting Story where I talked about research conducted by Sysomos on 11.5 million Twitter accounts.
A new research report from Sysomos, a social media analytics company, was released in June and provides interesting insight into the world of Twitter.
A new report from comScore shows that 78.6% of the total U.S. Internet audience viewed online video in April 2009. That's up 16% over March!The average online video viewer watched 6.4 hours of online video in April.
Many bloggers publish sponsored reviews on their blogs where they review products for payment or simply in return for being allowed to test drive a product or service.
Newstex President Larry Schwartz spoke at the SIIA NetGain Conference this week about cloud computing and how Newstex leverages the cloud to support its business model.
In an article on The Wall Street Journal website this month, journalist E. Kinney Zalesne shares his take on one of the hottest jobs in the United States -- professional blogging.