Can Paid Content Curation Give Influencers New Revenue

Winfluence - The Influence Marketing Podcast - A podcast by Jason Falls

Categories:

I’ve had the good fortune to have built a respectable audience over the years, creating and sharing content on social networks, writing blog posts and articles, speaking at conferences and the like. My primary platform for much of that time has been Twitter. And the way I built a nice following there was by sharing good content. At one point in time I actually wrote the following on a sheet of paper that I stuck on my office bulletin board: Twitter Strategy -- Share good shit. The more I could become a trustworthy curator of content, the more people would trust me. It worked. Back then, however, social media was different. Short form, snackable content platforms like Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok didn’t exist. Building influence back then involved writing blog posts and sharing content on Twitter. There were also social bookmarking sites that allowed you to save your favorite links to great content in one place. For a content curator, these were a godsend. Unfortunately, social media consumer behavior shifted to those aforementioned shorter-form platforms. When blogs and articles aren’t the same level of currency, social bookmarking and curation becomes less interesting. Even I slowed and sometimes for periods stopped sharing good shit. And then a few weeks ago I received an email from the PR representative for a new startup called Bookshlf. That’s the word bookshelf without the “e” and it’s a .com. So bookshlf.com (just remove the e.) Almost instantly, I was transported back to the time when bookmarking other sites was a big deal. This was a lot like my favorite social bookmarking site from back then -- deli.cio.us. I can save and share links to great content, organized on a virtual shelf, hence bookshelf, and I can then share that shelf.  When I found out they were rolling out a way for someone’s curated content to be monetized, meaning we could make money for not creating original content, but finding good content elsewhere and sharing it? I knew I had to know more. Co-founder Mike Abend and I sat down last week to talk all about social bookmarking, how bookshlf works and what the future holds. Will people actually subscribe to or tip good content curators? Listen to find out. This episode of Winfluence, the podcast, is sponsored by Julius. I mention that software more than others in my book because it’s the platform I’ve been using for a few years now to find influencers, engage with them and manage campaigns.  Julius has powerful filters that let me drill down find outdoors influencers who also love jazz music. Or the content creators who are dermatologists in Chicago. But it certainly also gives me the mega influencers and celebrity influencers I might need to help launch a product or campaign around any type of product. And in most cases, it has contact information so I don’t have to go fishing to reach them. All the elements of campaign management are in the software, too. I love the fact I can assign a purchase price or value to every single social deliverable that is a part of campaign, automatically track it based on when the influencer says they’ll post, and get an ROI report for each element.  You know I wouldn’t say this if it wasn’t true -- You owe it to your brand or agency to do a demo of Julius today. Go to jason.online/julius and request one. That’s jason.online/julius. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices