We’ve all been there: you’re scrolling through your Facebook news feed and end up clicking on a link to an interesting-looking article, only to arrive at a slow-loading page riddled with ads, popups, autoplaying video and tons of sponsored links to unrelated content that have shocking or just plain disgusting accompanying images.
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Anybody who’s used the internet in the past two decades has likely visited About.com. A giant in the early days of the web, About.com was an amalgam of all types of educational content, from “how-to” home improvement articles to pre-WebMD health advice.
A common misconception about content marketing is that it’s only valuable for large brands. Small-to-medium sized
Content is more likely to accomplish its goals when it’s in the right format. Would the content attract more attention and generate more leads as a blog post, ebook, social post, video, infographic, quiz or survey?
Two years ago, many content marketers were hailing Facebook’s Instant Articles (IA) as a potential game-changer in social
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