Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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It's Come to This: A Newsroom Devoted to Brands

It's Come to This: A Newsroom Devoted to Brands | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
NewsCred has launched a newsroom for brands seeking content marketing.


Who says no one's investing in journalism anymore?


NewsCred, a six-year-old New York-based content marketing company known for licensing articles from The Economist and the New York Times to brands, is creating its own newsroom with 500 journalists.


The writers, photographers, videographers and digital artists on contract with NewsCred will be at the disposal of brands seeking original content. The company is being selective about whom it hires. The pay is also decent: a minimum of $500 per blog post and $1,000 per article. The journalists get 100% of the fees for such articles. A NewsCred rep says the content is a value-add; the company's real business is in licensing its software platform, which a brand can use to upgrade their marketing outreach....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Fascinating trend but many questions will arise including ethics, costs, copyright, transparency, credibility, trust, editorial oversight, fact checking, and many of the other issues that have plagued many of the old media or launched several of the new digital media.

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Inside Forbes: Journalism Requires New Models for Both Editorial and Ads | Forbes

Inside Forbes: Journalism Requires New Models for Both Editorial and Ads | Forbes | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

...The media loves to attach labels to trends. When one catches on, the rush begins. Native advertising (the buzzword of choice right now), social advertising, content marketing and sponsor curation all revolve around the notion of brands as publishers. Everyone’s jockeying for position, FORBES included. Marketers want a bigger voice. The media business needs revenue.  The digital world demands change. So, what’s required for this new form of marketing — and for journalism to continue to flourish? Ah, here’s where the fun begins. Buzzfeed talks about viral content. The Huffington Post is into “aligning content and paid advertising strategies.”The Atlantic uses “Sponsor Content Presented By (pick the advertiser). Gawker’s done something similar (it’s actually now talking about a commerce play). As for us, I often talk about brand journalism.

 

BrandVoice is based on the philosophical belief that marketers, with deep understanding of their industries, can offer smart insights, too. In most traditional media companies, that’s a tough sell. Journalists can barely swallow the advertorial — it must be placed in the print or digital equivalent of Siberia. The fact is is, with the click of a mouse or the touch of a screen, the audience can check a marketer’s veracity as easily as it can a journalist’s....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Forbes editor Lewis DVorkin tries to explain Forbes' BrandVoice and contrast with others. Transparency or else though.

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