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Our most popular stories of 2012 |
Our top 10 posts of 2012 crystallize the year's major trends for media companies. The big-picture themes were about transition and transformation. The micro-trends involved how publishers are leveraging tools (HTML5), techniques (curation) and social platforms (Pinterest) to attract and retain audiences. |
FULL ARTICLE | - eMedia Vitals |
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Lotame and DG's Peer39 streamline integrations for publishers |
Audience data plus semantic page data will offer publishers the ability to more effectively target advertising across platforms, hopes DG and Lotame. The companies are partnering to offer a combination of the two types of information. |
FULL ARTICLE | - PRWeb |
The tablet revolution in numbers |
You've been investing in tablet content and apps, but it seems that all that work is for very little payoff since tablet owners are still a relatively niche audience. That could all change after this holiday season, as reported numbers indicate that tablets are becoming more mainstream. |
FULL ARTICLE | - The Media Briefing |
SEO trends for 2013 |
Search engine optimization remains important for audiences to find your content, and it is evolving right along with the rest of media. Here are 7 areas that are vital to SEO success, including mobile search and tag management. |
FULL ARTICLE | - Website Magazine |
Infographic: 6 tips for being more visual with social media |
Social media platforms are focusing more and more on visual content in order to grab eyeballs and convey messaging. Here are 6 tips to make your social media content more visual and, hopefully, more interesting to audiences. |
FULL ARTICLE | - Entrepreneur |
How to download your Instagram photos and kill your account |
Are you panicking because your editorial team has been using Instagram, and now some of your publication's image content is in danger of being sold by the platform without your consent after mid-January? Never fear, here are steps to take in order to download those Instagram images (if necessary) and delete your publication's account. And by the way, Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom denies your images will be sold: http://read.bi/12zJfw3. |
FULL ARTICLE | - Wired |
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