I’ve been mulling the idea of curating content lately. Maybe part of the role of marketer will be to be a curator as much as a creator of content… The Wikipedia describes a curator thus:
Curator is Latin and means guardian or overseer
A curator of a cultural heritage institution (e.g., archive, gallery, library, museum or garden) is a content specialist responsible for an institution’s collections and their associated collections catalogs. The object of a curator’s concern necessarily involves tangible objects of some sort, whether it be inter alia artwork, collectibles, historic items or scientific collections
There’s an art to it you know, and a huge amount of knowledge and skill…
In the fast-burn, short news / attention cycle world of media and marketing we can too easily overlook the value of even the recent past to the present.
As we make more content available we don’t necessarily want to take it offline or hide it away on the basis that it will be useful to some people sometimes and since there are no inventory restrictions, why should we.
Things that have made me think about this idea are:
- Working with an arts organisation I’ve encountered for the first time the role of the curator in bringing together content for exhibitions.
- Seeing how many forgotten – by the owners but not the Google – marketing content microsites there are in the networks around big brands.
- The long tail maxim of “make everything available and help me find it” (it’s the start of the last chapter in the book by Chris Anderson if memory serves).
So I was pleased to see the term being used by the inventor of the latter concept, Chris Anderson on the Long Tail blog recently in a post headlined: Wired’s Long Tail web strategy: the “Three Cs”.
…what I call the “Three Cs”: Catalyze and Curate Conversations.
He’s talking about the long tail strategy of a blockbuster brand (WIRED magazine) and the lessons are – as ever, since we all live in the same networks – directly applicable to marketing also.
On the web, however, we have “unlimited shelf space” (an infinite number of pages, which can be created at close to no cost), so that’s where we focus on the niche as well as the mass. We have room for geeky blogs on hacker subculture and Lego. Obsessive drill-downs. And for loads of user-generated content (best shown in the form of our Reddit news aggregation and voting site).
How does that apply to marketing? Well it reminds us that what’s required is not a decision to either go after niches or mass audiences. That there is a definite role for both – especially if you’re already a blockbuster brand.
Lastly, I was also strongly in agreement with his approach to having a spread of new ideas in play at any one time, knowing that not all will be on the money but sure that some will -“fail fast” being another sound principle of online media / marketing strategy in my book:
Some of these experiments aren’t going to work. That’s fine–“fail fast” is as good a motto as any for online media. Indeed, we were just honored by the Knight-Batten awards for our Assignment Zero experiment in crowdsourcing journalism, which was highlighted as “an excellent example of learning from failure.”
In a time when rapid rollouts and fast innovation can bring huge opportunities failures really can teach you as much as success too.
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