Monday, October 31, 2016

How Facebook is pushing you to be more political (FB)

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Facebook wants you to be ready for election day.


Starting this week, the social network will show a voting planner in the News Feed for its millions of American users who are old enough to vote. The new tool will include what's on the ballot in both the upcoming presidential and local district elections.


Facebook product manager Jeremy Galen told Business Insider that the voting planner is designed to help people see where candidates stand on certain issues, especially at the local level.


"We're saturated with media about the top of the ticket," he said. "The rest of the ballot is often the surprising part of the ballot and where they're the least prepared."


Helping voters be prepared is just one example of how Facebook has deepened its involvement in the U.S. political process this year.


From Menlo Park to Washington D.C. 


screen shot 2016 10 12 at 4.30.25 pm


Facebook's political efforts are the result of a two-pronged effort on each side of the country.


The company's civic engagement team works out of its Menlo Park, California headquarters and comes up with ideas like the voting planner that will be shown in the News Feed this week. Once a feature like it is made available on Facebook, the politics and governments team in Washington D.C. works with public officials and campaign staffers to make sure they're all informed and participating.


For example, when Facebook's civic engagement team introduced policy issue explainer cards for candidates' official pages, the D.C. team worked to make sure it was as easy to fact check Jill Stein's stance on legalizing marijuana as it was Donald Trump's stance on immigration.


When the civic engagement team made it possible to "endorse" a canadate's Facebook page, the D.C. team made sure campaign staffers were aware of the tool and that they could choose to feature prominent endorsements on their pages.


Screen Shot 2016 10 31 at 5.35.05 PM


Facebook began its civic engagement efforts when it prompted users to share a message saying that they had voted for the 2008 U.S. presidential election.


For this 2016 election, the company decided to get involved earlier in the process and remind people to register to vote for both the primary and general elections. A prompt with information about how to register in each state at the end of September led to more than 2 million new voter sign-ups across the country.


Facebook's D.C. team also organizes the social network's presence at events like the presidential debates - where it was a live stream partner this year. It's one of the main reasons that every member of the U.S. congress and senate has a Facebook page.


Facebook plans to eventually use the approach its taken in the U.S. to build tools for elections in other countries around the world, according to director of policy communications Jodi Seth.


"We want to make it easier for people to participate and have a voice in the process," she said.

SEE ALSO: Facebook employees wanted to block Donald Trump for hate speech, but Mark Zuckerberg said no


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Amazon's cloud is bigger than Microsoft, Google and IBM combined, researcher says (AMZN)

Jeff Bezos

Amazon Web Services is vastly overpowering its competition in the cloud computing market, says Synergy Research Group.


In its latest quarterly analysis, the market research firm says that AWS accounted for 45% of the revenue generated by public "infrastructure as a service" (IaaS) providers.


IaaS is the cloud market that Amazon helped to pioneer. It's where companies rent computers and storage over the internet, only paying for what they use.


In the IaaS market, AWS is bigger than the next three players combined, which are Microsoft, Google and IBM, Synergy Research says. 


There are, however, different forms of clouds. Amazon is also the leader in another one called "platform as a service," (PaaS) in which companies and developers write and host apps on a cloud. Amazon is almost as big as the next three players combined, Salesforce, Microsoft and IBM, according to Synergy.


Last quarter, AWS's revenue of was over $3.2 billion. Amazon looks to be on track to do about $12 billion in revenue on AWS this year.


A game of scale


Synergy credits IBM for being the biggest "private cloud" provider. The term "private cloud" is pretty much a marketing buzzword that means buying computers and data center equipment the old fashioned way and installing them in a company's own data center. The term also refers to using software and management techniques that make a data center highly efficient, similar to the way the big internet companies (Google, Amazon and others) build and operate their data centers. 


While Microsoft Azure is growing nicely and Google is also gaining traction (and being looked at by many large enterprises), some tech execs think that Amazon owns the market and always will. 


"Amazon won this round. It's game over," Mark Lewis, EMC's former CTO and chief strategy recently told Business Insider. Lewis is now founder/CEO of a storage startup called Formation Data Systems and EMC is now owned by Dell.


One big reason that Amazon is so hard to catch is that cloud computing is all about scale. The bigger a cloud provider's data centers are, the more it can share costs among many customers and the more it can lower costs while still adding more services.


In fact, last quarter, one company that had been trying to beat Amazon since AWS's early days threw in the towel: VMware. Instead, VMware signed a partnership agreement to sell AWS to its customers and make it easier for them to use AWS with VMware's software.


Others believe that Amazon can be bested. Or, if not bested, at least equaled, because the market is young and still growing like crazy.


Synergy estimates that quarterly cloud infrastructure service revenues (including public IaaS, public PaaS and managed private cloud) have now reached well over $8 billion and continue to grow at 50% per year.


The market research firm notes that late comers to the market are growing fast like "Alibaba (particularly in IaaS) and Oracle (in PaaS).”


Cloud market q3 2016

SEE ALSO: Amazon's cloud is an unstoppable train that could do $12 billion in revenue this year


SEE ALSO: This 55-year-old woman made history and $140 million by taking her tech company public on Friday


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Seeking Startup Capital? Ask Your Family and Friends.

Recent studies reveal the most popular ways in which entrepreneurs are financing their new businesses.


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But they automatically start-up when you open them.


Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Why AT&T May Succeed With Time Warner Where AOL Couldn't

Brad Feld of TechStars says the new deal reflects the need to establish linkage between the 'content' and 'network' layers.


Lloyd Blankfein, now in remission, describes the initial moments of his cancer diagnosis (GS)

Lloyd Blankfein

Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein is in remission after announcing last September that he had lymphoma, a type of cancer.


The Wall Street executive confirmed that he was cancer-free in an interview with Carlyle Group founder David Rubenstein on Bloomberg's recently-launched David Rubenstein Show.


"You don't know how you'll react to things until you live through them," Blankfein said in the interview.


He said that while he exhibited symptoms like weight loss, a cough, and aches and pains in the weeks leading up to the diagnosis, he wrote them off as allergies and signs of aging. He even went to the doctor once and was simply prescribed allergy medicine.


It was only a couple of weeks later that he got a full CT scan, Blankfein said, which "lit up like a Christmas tree."


A doctor called to say he had an aggressive, but curable, type of lymphoma.


"The peculiarity of my being a CEO of a public company was, you really can't tell anybody until you tell everybody," Blankfein said.


He and his wife kept the secret, even on the day of his biopsy as he first stopped at a televised press event.


He said he had to wait five days after the biopsy to determine what steps to take for treatment. When he did get the results, Blankfein said, the cancer was so advanced that he "literally went upstairs from the doctor who delivered the results to me - right upstairs to strap on the first of the chemo treatments."


His treatment included six three-week cycles of chemotherapy, he said. The first four-and-a-half days of each cycle, or about 98 hours, involved continuous chemotherapy throughout the night and day. He did not officially take any time off as CEO of his firm.


Now that he's in remission, Blankfein said he does worry about the cancer coming back.


"I should have been worried that I'd get it for the first time. Now I'm on edge because I'm worried about getting it for the second time," he said.


That said, Blankfein was able to break a smile as he described what was going through his head when he first heard the news:


"I'm very reality based. Maybe I'm not that spiritual, I don't know. I just, got very focused. ... I'm kind of a fatalist in some ways. I said, every time I'd ever gotten a physical, and the doctor called up and said there was nothing wrong with me, I was like shocked. So finally, somebody called me up and said something's wrong with me, I said, oh, par for the course."


Watch the full interview on Bloomberg»

SEE ALSO: Goldman Sachs is now using Spotify to recruit millennials


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NOW WATCH: Ex-Wells Fargo employees reveal how some bankers abused customers

If you head out to see Marvel's next superhero movie 'Doctor Strange', don't leave when the movie's over

doctor strange poster


Marvel's newest superhero movie, "Doctor Strange," hits US theaters November 4 (It's already out in the UK). If you head out to see it, do yourself a favor and stay after the credits - all of the credits - for not one, but two teaser sequences for future Marvel movies.


I know, I know. Maybe this isn't your first rodeo and you know that you need to stay after the credits of a Marvel movie by now.


However, it hurts when I'm at 7 p.m. showings with friends and family prior to opening night and am still seeing people get up and go to leave. It hurts even more if I see people stay and leave after the first end-credit scene.


For the first time I can ever remember at a Marvel screening I attended, I had the courtesy of someone telling folks before they headed into the theater to stay until the film's very end.


So this is a quick courtesy reminder I'm paying forward. No spoilers now because there's no fun in that - but they are goodies!


We'll be back next Thursday with a breakdown of both scenes. Until then, get excited. (I think you'll like this one.)

Join the conversation about this story »

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Tuesday, October 18, 2016

How Bestselling Author Jennifer Weiner Writes: Part Two

wf-jennifer-weiner-file-2


The #1 New York Times bestselling author of 12 books, Jennifer Weiner, took a few minutes to talk with me about the writer's life, her new memoir, and Revenge of the Nerds.


Before her prolific career as a novelist, Ms. Weiner started out as a small town newspaper reporter and freelancer, before signing her first big book deal for her novel Good in Bed (2001).


Since then, her books have spent more than five years on the New York Times bestseller list, she has had a novel made into a major motion picture - In Her Shoes, starring Cameron Diaz and Toni Collette (2005) - contributed op-eds to the New York Times,, executive produced a TV series, and published a children's book (The Littlest Bigfoot).



Her latest offering is the memoir Hungry Heart: Adventures in Life, Love, and Writing, and it “… is about yearning and fulfillment, loss and love, and a woman who searched for her place in the world, and found it as a storyteller.”


If you're a fan of The Writer Files, click subscribe to automatically see new interviews.


If you missed the first half, you can find it right here.


In Part Two of this file Jennifer Weiner and I discuss:



  • How creative people see the world through their own lenses

  • Why hard work alone forges enduring writers

  • Why ebooks are indispensable to writers on the go

  • Why you just need to sit down and start writing


Listen to this Episode Now


The post How Bestselling Author Jennifer Weiner Writes: Part Two appeared first on Copyblogger.

Monday, October 17, 2016

Content Marketers Share Their Secrets

content-marketer-secrets


Here's the final excerpt from my new book, 'Master Content Marketing.' Read the other excerpts here and here.


'Master Content Marketing' is now available for pre-order wherever books are sold. When you order today and register for the free bonus materials, you'll get an invite to my exclusive readers-only webinar, Scary Good Content Marketing Tips Direct from 'Master Content Marketing.' Place your pre-order now!


Back in early 2010, I didn't consider myself a writer at all.


But I knew good writing when I read it. Masterful writers inspired me and made me want to improve my skills.


Today, I'm lucky to count many of the people I read over the years as colleagues and friends. Before I wrapped up writing my new book, Master Content Marketing, I reached out to them to see if they'd share some words of wisdom with you.


They responded with tips, techniques, and encouragement. Here's a selection of their answers.


“What do you do to stay excited about your topic of choice after all these years? How do you keep yourself inspired?”


One issue content marketers struggle with is how to keep their interest high even though they're writing about the same topic for months and years. Here's how master content marketers handle this challenge:


For Darren Rowse, it's about the people he serves:


“The thing that continually inspires me to create content for my blog and podcast is regularly meeting my readers both in person and online. Talking with a reader about the dreams that they have and the challenges that they face gives me both ideas for content but also renewed passion for my topic.”


Bernadette Jiwa just has to imagine her readers:


“What excites me is the people on the other side of this computer screen I'm reading from as I type. People I have never met, from all over the world, in places I may never visit who are searching for something. And I have the opportunity to help them with nothing other than 101 keys and an internet connection. Thinking about how the world used to be and that one person I might be able to reach is what keeps inspiring me to keep going.”


Chris Ducker's interactions with his audience fuel his content ideas:


“I stay excited about my topic of choice - and just inspired, in general - by hanging out with my audience and my community as much as I possibly can. I'm a big believer that if you listen to your audience and pay attention to what they are saying, your job as a content creator and a content marketer becomes even easier over the long haul.”


For John Jantsch, empowering others with his content gives his work meaning:


“Most of what I write about comes from doing and helping others do, so what keeps it exciting for me is working with clients and training consultants to work with clients.”


Joanna Wiebe gets inspired by what she finds in her inbox:


“I thrive on emails from people who are new to copywriting. All of their questions remind me that the stuff I may take for granted or think the whole world knows is actually pretty mysterious to a significant portion of the planet's seven billion people.”


Demian Farnworth thrives on the novelty of new topics:


“The challenge of tackling a new subject, uncorking difficult problems, tackling new technology - that's how I stay excited: I conquer and move on.”


Jay Baer knows that our ever-changing marketing environment will provide an endless stream of content inspiration:


“The great thing about creating content about marketing and customer service is that disruption never ends. There's always a new trend, a new best practice, a new case study. There is no end to the lessons and the learning.”


For Joanna Penn, choosing a topic area that was broad enough to hold her interest for the long haul has made a difference:


“I made the mistake of making [my first two blogs] hyper-focused on one niche, where I soon became bored. But by opening up the focus of my blog to basically include anything on creativity - although it is specifically book and writing related for now at least - I was able to give myself unlimited scope.”


Sean D'Souza excavates his topics to find new inspiration:


“I dig deep into the subject matter. I won't stay at the topic level. For example, I'll start with a topic like 'headlines,” but at a sub-topic level, I'll examine how to dig through your testimonials for great headlines. You have to be like a geologist, always digging.”


And Kelly Exeter thrives on continuing her education:


“I read everything I can get my hands on in my area of interest. As long as I'm learning new things, I'm excited about what I am writing about (because I'm sharing what I'm learning) … and that excitement comes through in my writing. The day I feel I have nothing left to learn, or I'm not interested in learning more, that's the day I know it's time to move on.”


“What weird tip can you share that you use to create effective content?”


After you've created content for a while, you may develop your own set of habits that work well for you. Here are the unique habits and methods my colleagues have developed that make content creation easier.


Darren Rowse says it's easier to tap into emotions if he writes with a soundtrack that inspires him:


“Sometimes when I write I find a playlist of aspirational, orchestral movie soundtracks on Spotify and I pump it up loud to get me in the mood to write.


This music has been composed with the intent of making moviegoers feel something. It engages the emotions, and I find that it puts me in a place that makes it easier to write from the heart.”


Kelly Exeter says taking pen to paper helps her sort through her ideas:


“Write your first drafts longhand.”


Sean D'Souza believes giving your brain time to rest makes you a better writer:


“Sleep. I sleep more than ever before. To create efficiency, I don't work harder - I sleep. I'll nap during the day, take weekends off. I'm on full charge when I work, or I don't work.”


Joanna Wiebe finds that this specific writing technique makes her content stronger:


“Leave gaps. Readers and viewers need to have some questions left unanswered. If your whole argument is tied up neatly in a bow or if you hit on every single way to do X in your listicle, then what are they going to comment about?”


John Jantsch reads broadly to find concepts he can apply to his own content:


“​I read articles or even books that are totally unrelated to my field, looking specifically for crossover ideas I can apply.”


Courtney Seiter takes inspiration from children's inherent curiosity:


“Be like a toddler: Ask 'why?' Again and again and again.”


Chris Ducker shared a weird tip he uses to make recording video much easier. First off, he keeps it simple: he records video using his phone camera. And to avoid sounding scripted, he does this:


“I use sticky notes, and I usually have no more than three bullet points that I want to go over in a two-minute video. I just stick the sticky notes to the phone where I'm recording so that I'm not distracted by looking at myself on that reverse camera. I hit record, sit in front of it, and boom, two minutes later I'm done.”


“If you could go back in time and grab your newbie content creator self by the shoulders, what crucial piece of advice would you pass along?”


Everyone starts somewhere, and my colleagues all remember their early days as content creators. If you're just starting out creating content, they have some advice for you in their answers to this question.


Joanna Penn urges you to take heart. Content marketing won't give you instant results, but over time you'll see the payoff:


“Everything takes time, so have patience. It's true that you will overestimate what you can achieve in a year, but in a few years' time, you will look back, and your life will have changed in unimaginable ways!”


Darren Rowse says practice makes perfect:


“Create something every day. The more you do it, the better you get.”


Kelly Exeter recommends getting comfortable with expressing yourself:


“Stop trying to write like other people and just write like yourself!”


Jay Baer is a big believer in video content:


“Get better at video, faster.”


Courtney Seiter says to be courageous:


“Be brave. Make yourself uncomfortable. The scariest stories to publish are the ones that will connect most with people and make you love writing all over again.”


Jeff Goins urges you to cultivate your voice:


“Voice matters more than your topic. It's not just what you say. It's how you say it. Don't just pick a topic; find a worldview, a unique way of sharing your message. Say something worth disagreeing with.”


Sean D'Souza realizes that success doesn't unfold in a straight line:


“People think that you go from good to great. Instead, you go from good to hopeless and then back to good before becoming great.”


John Jantsch says it's not about you - it's about your reader:


​“Make the reader the hero of your story and stop obsessing over how cute and witty your writing is (ouch, that was a bit cathartic!).”


Chris Ducker shares how you can avoid duplicating efforts by thinking about how you'll repurpose your content from the very beginning:


“If I could go back in time and give my newbie content creator self a bit of advice it would be to repurpose, repurpose, and repurpose. Back when I first started creating content, boy oh boy, was I wasting time. Now almost every piece of content that I create is repurposed in some way, shape, or form.”


Karyn Greenstreet says just get started (despite your fear) and let momentum carry you the rest of the way:


Just write. The consistent habit of writing is crucial. Waiting for 'inspiration' will kill you.”


And finally, Joanne Wiebe says … relax! And have fun:


“Don't take yourself too seriously! For the first years of my blogging life, I counted comments and shares on every post, which sucked all the joy out of writing for a living.


Have fun! Don't count! Don't compare! Let yourself screw up, and then do it all over again. Even if it chases away people who said they loved you!”


I think “don't take it too seriously” is a great way to end this article.


Mastering content marketing can be one of the most creatively fulfilling things you'll ever do. Don't forget to have fun!


Remember, pre-order Master Content Marketing at your favorite bookseller to attend the exclusive webinar, Scary Good Content Marketing Tips Direct from Master Content Marketing.


Wise owl art by the amazing D.J. Billings.


The post Content Marketers Share Their Secrets appeared first on Copyblogger.

It would take you over 41 days to binge-watch all the original shows and movies Netflix will release in 2017 (NFLX)

narcos glass raise

Netflix will release a whopping 1,000 hours of original shows and movies in 2017, the company announced during its quarterly earnings on Monday.


That means you'd have to spend an insane 41 days binge-watching Netflix to see it all.


Take a moment to let that marinate. 41 days. That's over a month!


It's also a hefty increase from Netflix's 2016 output of around 600 hours, which was already gargantuan.


Netflix has always seemed confident in its decision to pivot toward original content, which it has repeatedly described as a better bet for the company. But Netflix was particularly rosy about originals in a letter to investors on Monday. Netflix overperformed Wall Street expectations for Q3 soundly, and credited its huge beat on subscriber additions to "excitement around Netflix original content." Netflix particularly mentioned cult hit "Stranger Things" and the second season of "Narcos."


Netflix CEO Reed Hastings also sung the praises of upcoming Netflix original series "The Crown." "We have a show coming up, 'The Crown,' which is some of the most impressive television I have ever seen," he said on Netflix's earnings call. The show, which chronicles the life of Queen Elizabeth II, will be released on November 4.


Netflix CFO David Wells reiterated that eventually Netflix's goal is to have its content have about a 50/50 split between licensed and original work. Wells did not say what the current ratio is, but it's safe to assume that content Netflix licenses from others still accounts for the majority of its catalog.


Here's a chart that shows how Netflix has increased its original programming, measured by hours of content, over the last six years.


NetflixOriginals

SEE ALSO: Netflix stock explodes over 20% on big earnings beat


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Sunday, October 16, 2016

'Trickery wins every time': Russia is using an old kind of military deception

'Trickery wins every time': Russia is using an old kind of military deception

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Former Navy SEAL Jesse Ventura says today's SEALs have changed in a major way

The US Navy just commissioned the largest destroyer ever, a 'technological marvel', the USS Zumwalt

USS Zumwalt 1


The largest destroyer ever built for the US Navy, the USS Zumwalt, was commissioned on Saturday  in Baltimore, Maryland.


The 600-foot guided missile destroyer was named after legendary naval officer Admiral Elmo Russell "Bud" Zumwalt. His daughters, Ann Zumwalt and Mouzetta Zumwalt-Weatherly, joined commanding officer Captain James A. Kirk for the ceremony.


"Zumwalt is today a technological marvel. When deployed, our Navy and nation will have ... a multi-mission destroyer with the stealth survivability and combat power to take on our most challenging missions," Kirk said.


"If Batman had a ship, it would be the USS Zumwalt," Adm. Harry B. Harris, Jr., commander of the US Pacific Command, told CNN.


The USS Zumwalt has a sleek, streamlined appearance and will be fitted with some of the military's most advanced weapon systems. The Zumwalt sports an advanced power plant that Navy planners hope to use to support next generation weapons like railguns or laser systems. 


Additionally, the Zumwalt has a large flight deck that may one day accommodate the Marine Corps variant of the F-35B.


As the Zumwalt was being commissioned, another US Navy destroyer was targeted in a failed missile attack from territory in Yemen controlled by Iran-aligned Houthi rebels, the third such incident in the past week, US officials said. 

SEE ALSO: Iran sends warships to Yemen after the US struck Iranian-backed Houthi radar sites


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NOW WATCH: The US struck radar sites in Yemen after rebels tried to attack a Navy ship with missiles

Thursday, October 13, 2016

The Best Ways to Attract Clients for Your Medical Claims Billing Service

Landing your first client can be the hardest part about starting your own billing service. Learn about the most effective ways to sign up your first – and next – clients.


This One-Person Pizza Startup Has Hired More Than 100 People in Less Than a Year

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