Why It’s Time for the Content Marketing Haters to Move On in 2013
From http://www.thesaleslion.com 179 days ago
Made Hot by: AmyJordan on December 24, 2012 1:28 pm
Leaders of the previous generation are the slowest adopters of the next one.
Kmart did it. Henry Ford did it. Blockbuster did it. Kodak did it. Sears did it. The list goes on and on.
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Niall Devitt
Niall Devitt advises organizations how to plan, design and implement social strategies that generate real business returns. In 2009, Niall co-founded TweakYourBiz.com …









Comments
172 days ago
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Lyceum, I see your point and there is no disrespect for Mr. Isreal on my behalf.
As I mentioned in my comment on the blog. I hate pop-ups and I refuse to visit a site regularly that shows me 3 pop-ups even if it is Forbes. If it were any other URL people would refer to the site as "spammy".
With that being said, I find it ironic that in the article "journalist" are held up on a pedestal compared to mere "bloggers" who may or may not (like myself) chose to annoy readers with those "spammy" pop-ups. Just my personal opinion....
173 days ago
The term "Content Marketing" is a term that I do not like. I feel it cheapens what is actually going on and makes it appear less than what it actually is. It also doesn't help that low rent SEO's have turned to guest posting as a primary linkbuilding tactic now that the traditional easy routes have been abolished.
Content Marketing is here to stay, I only wish we could give it a better terminology.
172 days ago
174 days ago
173 days ago
As I mentioned in my comment on the blog. I hate pop-ups and I refuse to visit a site regularly that shows me 3 pop-ups even if it is Forbes. If it were any other URL people would refer to the site as "spammy".
With that being said, I find it ironic that in the article "journalist" are held up on a pedestal compared to mere "bloggers" who may or may not (like myself) chose to annoy readers with those "spammy" pop-ups. Just my personal opinion....
174 days ago
I do think Shel Israel knows what he is talking about. From WikiPedia:
"Shel Israel (born August, 1944) is a writer and speaker on social media issues. He co-authored with Robert Scoble the book Naked Conversations, How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers (John Wiley & Son 2006).
He has completed a second book called Twitterville on business uses for Twitter, published in September 2009. He has contributed editorially to BusinessWeek, Dow Jones Co, and FastCompany.TV."
I left the following comment on Forbes:
Shel: You are such "nice guy," so I don't understand the use of the word "hate" in your title. ;)
I will not call myself a regular mainstream journalist anytime soon. Please feel free to label me a "citizen journalist." I think that Forbes magazine is an esteemed publication and I have belonged to the Forbes blog network.
I wonder if the editor missed the word "not" in the following sentence:
"Now with Techcrunch, Huffington Post and the hordes of us here at Forbes, there really is much difference between those of us who post on the internet and those who originally published on paper."
I use the word "conversational marketing" in order to describe social media. So, keep the conversation going! I hope I have added at least $0.02 to this thread! ;)
174 days ago
177 days ago
Ti
177 days ago
178 days ago
Yep, unless there is a change in customer behavior mighty soon, content marketing is here to stay. This isn't just a buzzword. It's a simple explanation of the way stuff increasingly gets found on the Net. Thanks to Ileane for sharing the post with the BizSugar community and thank you for this thoughtful post!
177 days ago
177 days ago