BP Caught Altering Oil Spill Photos by John Aravosis of AMERICAblog
Jul 21, 2010
Yahoo! News was quick to jump on the hot story that John Aravosis of AMERICAblog (syndicated by Newstex and previously discussed in this article about John’s conversation with President Obama) broke on Monday that showed an oil spill-related photo that had been doctored by BP.
BP responded by taking the photo down from its website, but the story wasn’t over yet. John followed up on Tuesday with another photo that BP had altered.
Kudos to John for catching BP’s error in judgment and showing that bloggers offer Authoritative Content that plays an important role in the world of publishing!
Be sure to follow the links above to see the altered photos in John’s posts along side of the originals.
Social Media Marketing GPS – Free eBook Now Available
May 31, 2010
Toby Bloomberg, of the Diva Marketing Blog, launched a new free ebook this month called Social Media Marketing GPS. It’s the first business book written on – not about – Twitter. Tweet interviews were conducted with 40 social media marketers including people from Dell, Comcast, Marketing Profs, and BlogHer and put together into this free ebook in a narrative that takes the reader from the importance of social media to ethics to the social enterprise, tactics, sponsored conversations, and blogger relations.
As Toby explains, “the goal was to create a comprehensive body of knowledge that could serve as a roadmap (GPS) for developing a strategic social media plan. My thoughts were if this could be accomplished in a series of 140 character tweets it might help ease the apprehension for people new to social media, while at the same time, providing a review and offering some interesting ideas for those more experienced.”
A number of the people interviewed for the ebook are bloggers and online publishers whose content is syndicated through Newstex, including:
- Toby Bloomberg of Diva Marketing and @tobydiva
- Ann Handley of Marketing Profs Daily Fix and @marketingprofs
- BL Ochman of What’s Next Blog and @whatsnext
- C.B. Whittemore of Flooring the Consumer and Simple Marketing Blog and @CBWhittemore
- David Meerman Scott from WebInkNow and @dmscott
- Nancy White of Full Circle Associates and @nancywhite
- Neville Hobson of NevilleHobson.com and @jangles
- Susan Getgood of Marketing Roadmaps and @sgetgood
You can download Social Media Marketing GPS for free here.
True/Slant Acquired by Forbes
May 26, 2010
The big publisher news out this week is about True/Slant, a Newstex publisher, which will be acquired by Forbes. True/Slant is a unique Web site offering original content news tailored to both the “Entrepreneurial Journalist” and marketers who want a more effective way to engage with digital audiences. The acquisition of True/Slant by Forbes clearly communicates that True/Slant is a respected publisher of Authoritative Content.
True/Slant Founder and CEO Lewis Dvorkin, who spent several years working for Forbes earlier in his career, will join Forbes as chief Product Officer on June 1, 2010. In his new role at Forbes, Dvorkin will lead all Forbes editorial areas. According to the press release:
“Forbes mission and message will not change. There will be new opportunities for people inside Forbes; new opportunities for audiences to have a deeper relationship with Forbes; and new opportunities for marketers to engage with our important audiences.”
And in the words of Dvorkin as published on the True/Slant blog, The Copy Box:
“The news business remains in tremendous turmoil, searching for both credible journalistic experiences and profitable models: High cost, high quality journalism is staring into the face of low cost “content farming.”
The True/Slant team is quite proud that it helped lead the way in producing high quality content in an efficient manner. Now, we are incredibly excited about moving our ideas and passion on to the bigger stage of Forbes.com and all of Forbes Media’s other properties.”
You can read Dvorkin’s full blog post here.
David Donoghue Wins Kogan Award from Chicago Bar Association
May 10, 2010
Newstex Authoriative Blogger David Donoghue of the Chicago IP Litigation Blog and partner in Chicago’s Holland & Knight law firm won the Kogan Award in the online category from the Chicago Bar Association’s (CBA) annual Herman Kogan Media Awards Competition.

The Kogan Award is the highest honor of the competition which honors local journalists and legal affairs reporting, and as the winner, David received a trophy and a $1,000 scholarship, which he can donate to a journalism school of his choice.
David’s win came from the entry of his “Northern District of Illinois’ New Local Patent Rules”, which he published on his blog offering analysis of the new laws related to local patents and the potential impact those laws will have on future litigation filings in Chicago.
Congratulations, David!
And the Pulitzer Prize Goes to – ProPublica
Apr 13, 2010
Congratulations to ProPublica (whose content is syndicated through Newstex) for reporter Sheri Fink’s 2010 Pulitzer Prize win for Investigative Reporting.
ProPublica is a non-profit investigative news organization that began publishing in 2008. The content produced by ProPublica is shared free-of-charge with news organizations that need help supplementing their own content following deep reductions in their reporting staffs. Sheri Fink’s series for ProPublica was published on both the ProPublica Web site and in New York Times Magazine and told the story of how one New Orleans hospital’s staff struggled and the difficult choices they were forced to make in the days after Hurricane Katrina.
ProPublica has more news on the Pulitzer Prize front, too. ProPublica reporters Tracy Weber and Charles Ornstein were named finalists for the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for an article they wrote that was published on the ProPublica Web site and in the Los Angeles Times about the oversight of nursing in California.
ProPublica has been getting noticed and recognized through numerous awards aside from the prestigious Pulitzer Prize. For example, ProPublica reporter T. Christian Miller (along with Los Angeles Times reporter Doug Smith and photographer Francine Orr) won the online reporting award from Investigative Reporters and Editors and the Selden Ring Award for Investigative Reporting for a project they did that told the stories of civilian contract workers in Iraq and Afghanistan. You can read more about the awards ProPublica has won here.
Newstex is proud to be able to syndicate the authoritative content from ProPublica.
U.S. Treasury Department Meets with Financial Bloggers
Nov 23, 2009
Earlier this month, the U.S. Treasury Department acknowledged that blogs provide authoritative content when they invited approximately 20 financial bloggers to a two-hour round table discussion. Eight of the invited financial bloggers attended the round table on November 2, 2009 with the Treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, and other senior Treasury Department officials.
Among the financial bloggers in attendance were several whose authoritative content is distributed through Newstex, including:
- Michael Panzner of Financial Armageddon (read my interview with Michael from earlier this year here)
- Yves Smith of Naked Capitalism
- David Merkel of The Aleph Blog
- Accrued Interest
You can read their blog post recaps of the round table discussion with the Treasury Department officials in the following posts:
- Curious Meeting at the Treasury from Naked Capitalism
- My Visit to the Treasury from The Aleph Blog Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7
- A Few Observations of My Own from Financial Armageddon
- Financial Regulation: How Would You Have It Work? from Accrued Interest
According to an article in The New York Times, the financial blogger audience surprised the Treasury officials who found them to be better informed than the groups the Treasury officials are used to talking to.
That’s just one more verification of what we already knew — bloggers can produce highly Authoritative Content!
Image: Flickr
President Obama Talks to Bloggers about Health Care Reform
Jul 24, 2009
If you’ve ever wondered whether or not blogs are a source of authoritative and influential content, then that question was answered this week when President Barack Obama held a special conference call with a group of bloggers to discuss health care reform.
Some of the bloggers on the conference call with President Obama syndicate their content through Newstex Blogs On Demand, and we’d like to give them special recognition today on the Newstex blog. You can also follow the links below to read more about their experiences on the historic call.
John Aravosis of AMERICAblog
David Dayen of D-Day
Jane from Above Average Jane
(you can read more about Jane from Above Average Jane in this Newstex Blogger in the Spotlight post)
We truly live in an amazing time where authoritative content from sources outside of traditional news media are getting the recognition they deserve. Newstex is proud to make the content from these blogs available to a wider audience through Newstex Blogs On Demand licensed syndication.
Image: Flickr
How the Economist Uses Niche and Focus to Survive and Thrive
Jul 2, 2009
The days of newspapers and magazines trying to be everything to everyone are over thanks to the overwhelming amount of information freely available online. However, the problem in the 21st century is finding relevant and useful information hidden in the cluttered online world. Let’s face it — Google searches don’t always deliver the exact information you’re looking for.
It’s no secret that newspapers and traditional media like print magazines have been struggling over the past decade with many completely repositioning their brands and content (e.g., Newsweek, Time), adjusting their delivery frequency (e.g., U.S. News and World Report, Playboy) or moving to web distribution only (e.g., PC Magazine, Blender). However, as the majority of traditional media organizations struggle to find ways to remain relevant and profitable, one brand has remained strong despite the shift in consumer media consumption habits. That brand is The Economist whose advertising revenue was up in 2008 and print circulation numbers have remained fairly steady over the past several years (via The Atlantic Online).
How has The Economist remained relevant as other media organizations have lost their way? Simple — niche and focus.
First, The Economist is written in a manner that appeals to a niche audience rather than for the masses. In the digital world, people can find very specific content through Web searches (albeit, the search process could take a significant amount of time). These days, people have less patience to accept and consume content that is written with broad appeal in mind. They want content that is meaningful to them, and they spend less time on the “extras” that non-niche publications provide. For example, why should a person read through an entire entertainment magazine when they really only care about one singer or actor? It’s faster and more satisfying to go to the sources where that person can find a wealth of highly relevant information than to leaf through the many irrelevant pages of a broad appeal periodical. Most often, that source these days is online, but a few traditional newspapers and magazines continue to survive using niche audience strategies.
The Economist also syndicates its blog content through Newstex, which gets its content directly in front of niche audiences who are looking for the authoritative content that The Economist delivers. Unlike other publications that push their content across a myriad of sites on the Internet, The Economist has chosen a more focused distribution approach that caters directly to the niche audience they know finds it useful.
Which leads us to the second part of The Economist’s strategy…
Second, The Economist has a narrow focus — far more so than many of its competitor magazines. In marketing theory, the law of contraction tells us that a brand will be stronger if it contracts rather than expands because doing so gives it a narrower focus. A wide, everything to everyone focus actually weakens a brand. By focusing on what you do best and delivering the best with every customer interaction, your brand will grow stronger organically, and organic growth is much stronger than artificial growth.
There has been so much buzz both online and offline about the fate of newpapers and printed periodicals of late. Let’s hope there will be room for both in the 21st century. However, there are lessons to learn from The Economist for both offline and digital content publishers: find your niche and focus on it through a variety of digital touchpoints such as blogs, video, and more.
Image: Flickr
Newstex eBook – The Truth about Blog and Twitter Syndication – Now on Amazon Kindle
Jun 26, 2009
If you have a Kindle wireless reading device from Amazon and enjoy reading books and ebooks on your Kindle, then you might be interested in hearing that the new ebook from Newstex, The Truth about Blog and Twitter Syndication, is now available on Amazon Kindle.
The Truth about Blog and Twitter Syndication is available at the lowest price point available through Amazon Kindle, $0.99, which includes free wireless delivery. You can follow the link to download the ebook for your Amazon Kindle.
You don’t need to have an Amazon Kindle to read The Truth about Blog and Twitter Syndication. If you’d prefer, you can view the free ebook here.
Authoritative Content from GlobalPost
Jun 19, 2009
We all know that traditional news media is struggling. Not only is the competition from new media such as blogs, online video, Twitter, and so on threatening traditional news outlets, but more and more consumers are becoming disheartened by the obvious political leaning of major news organizations. GlobalPost is changing all of that with its new media journalism born of traditional news values.
GlobalPost is a new media leader combining the best of traditional news and new media by forging a new type of news site. GlobalPost was built by veteran journalists who came from top news organizations such as Hearst, Tribune, New York Times, and major media backgrounds. The site has grown into a major international news site, linked and sourced regularly by numerous leading news organizations, and is a backbone wire feed for major news outlets around the world.
What makes GlobalPost unique? Take a look at some of the highlights of the GlobalPost business model:
- More than 65 correspondents/writers covering over 45 countries (see the map below for correspondent locations – they live where the work)
- Independent, objective coverage with “ground truth” — stories are written by in-country professional journalists
- In-depth analysis of important global issues by professional journalists
- Web-based business model
- International syndication service available in print and online
- Free content as well as additional premium content available by subscription

GlobalPost has 3-part a mission:
- “GlobalPost is embarking on a bold journey to redefine international news for the digital age. To get there, GlobalPost is relying on the enduring values of great journalism: integrity, accuracy, independence and powerful storytelling.”
- “GlobalPost follows no political line. GlobalPost encourages its correspondents to write with a strong voice and to work hard to unearth facts, but we leave opinion on the opinion pages.”
- “GlobalPost is proud to be an American news organization with a decidedly American voice. We also intend to seek out and tell the truth as we find it. To quote the great American newsman and foreign correspondent Edward R. Murrow, we aspire always to report the news “without fear or favor.”
Sound interesting? It is. That’s why Newstex is very happy to be partnering with GlobalPost to syndicate GlobalPost’s Authoritative Content to end-user customers around the world who need access to quality content from top sources.
You can learn more about GlobalPost in the Newstex Publisher INsider, and be sure to check out the GlobalPost website.





