Inside Social Media https://insidesocialmedia.com Social media strategies & trends Tue, 19 Jul 2022 19:39:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://insidesocialmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/cropped-insidesocialmedia-favicon512b-32x32.png Inside Social Media https://insidesocialmedia.com 32 32 10 top tools for creating infographics & visualizations https://insidesocialmedia.com/2013/03/19/best-tools-for-creating-infographics-visualizations/ https://insidesocialmedia.com/2013/03/19/best-tools-for-creating-infographics-visualizations/#comments Tue, 19 Mar 2013 12:11:55 +0000 http://socialmedia.biz/?p=24401 Looking to create some visually stimulating infographics and visualizations? Check out these 10 tools that make visualization creation a bit easier.

The post 10 top tools for creating infographics & visualizations appeared first on Inside Social Media.

]]>
datavisualization
An interactive visualization at Datavisualization.ch.

Explain complex concepts with stunning visuals

Target audience: Marketing professionals, infographics specialists, PR pros, brand managers, businesses, nonprofits, educators, Web publishers, journalists. This article originally appeared at SEOmoz and is republished with permission.

By Miranda Rensch
Senior Product Manager, SEOmoz

Communicating visually is one of the most effective ways to explain complex concepts and relationships. It can be a great way to explain your services or products and create valuable site content. I often use diagrams and whiteboarding to communicate new features and concepts internally with my team.

Below is a list of tools that you can use to create visualizations or simply to communicate visually with your fellow staff members. Enjoy, and feel free to add your own suggestions in the comments! Check out these tools for creating simple infographics and data visualizations.

piktochart

Piktochart: Create simple visualizations

1Piktochart is a Web-based tool that has six decent free themes (and a whole bunch more for the paid version) for creating simple visualizations. You can drag and drop different shapes and images, and there is quite a bit of customization available. You can also add simple line, bar, and pie charts using data from CSV (a data table or spreadsheet) or enter it manually. You can export to PNG and JPG in either print or Web quality. Note that with the free version, you get a small Piktochart watermark on the bottom of the PNG / JPG downloads.

easelly

Easel.ly: Web-based infographic creation

2Easel.ly is another free Web-based tool for creating infographics. You cannot create graphs using real data with this tool, but it’s really good for conceptual visualizations and storytelling. It has a beautiful user interface and the themes you can start with are gorgeous. The themes support many common purposes: map, flow-chart and comparison/relationship graphing. This tool has the best selection of well-designed objects (people, a bunch if icons, landmarks, maps, animals, etc.) and backgrounds that I’ve seen. Additionally, you can upload your own images with the free version, and download a Web-quality version as a JPG.

infogram

Infogr.am: Data-infused charts

3Infogr.am is another free, Web-based tool with some really nice themes and a great interface for creating simple infographics. This option also allows you to create charts using real data. There are 31 chart options that offer some really cool displays, like a radial bar graph, scatter charts, bubble graphs, and map charts. You can also add your own images and video. When you’re done creating your infographic, you can embed it on a website and publish it to the infogra.am site (I wasn’t able to find a way to download it).

visual.ly

Visual.ly: Analytics meet visuals

4Visual.ly (I know, these visualization tools love their ‘.ly’s!) has some simple free tools worth mentioning, many of which integrate with social networks to analyze Twitter and Facebook data. You can create fun Venn diagrams, Twitter account showdowns, visuals that analyze hashtags and a few others, but there’s almost no customization available. However, they offer a marketplace where you can get connected with visual designers and motion graphics artists who specialize in infographics. The site itself also has a ton of great infographics to inspire you or your designers. There is some serious data visualization eye candy in here, people.

tableau_public

Tableau: Interactive data visualizations

5Tableau has some free tools for creating data visualizations. It’s not Web based, so you’ll have to download the software. Once you do, you can upload a spreadsheet or CSV and create a variety of interactive data visualizations, including heat maps showing density of an activity by location, Venn diagrams to show associations, bar charts, line graphs and others. This tool is for Windows only. See Tableau’s gallery for examples of the types of visualizations you can create or learn more about how it works.

Bonus! Looking for some more fantastically geeky data visualization options?

Datavisualization.ch has created an excellent list of packages, libraries and data visualization frameworks for creating more complex and interactive visualizations using your own data sets and development environments.

omnigraffle-mind-map

Omnigraffle: Wireframe in detail

6Omnigraffle is a desktop application that I use all the time at work. The interface is very intuitive, and it’s quite an effective tool for wireframing in detail. You can customize and stylize objects to the extent that you can use the tool to create whole infographics exactly as you want them using this tool; it’s difficult to do data visualizations with actual data, though. There are tons of free downloadable stencils that make it super easy to diagram mobile and Web interfaces, architecture diagrams and even office or home layouts. This tool has its drawbacks, though; it’s not the cheapest tool at $99 for standard and $199 for the pro version, and it’s offered for Mac only.

basalmiq

Balsamiq: Diagrams of Web and mobile interfaces

7Balsamiq is another nice wireframing tool good for creating simple diagrams of Web and mobile interfaces. It costs $79 for the desktop version; there’s also a free Web demo, which is sufficient for simple diagramming.

rsa-animate

RSA Animate: Make a video

8The RSA Animate series (illustrations done by CognitiveMedia) is a really good example of using visual communication to accompany a verbal explanation of something. You can hire an illustration artist to do something like this, or do it up yourself and draw on a whiteboard while you explain your topic. (This works great in internal meetings too; try it next time you’re trying to explain a concept to someone and see how it goes.) If you hire an illustration artist, deliver the verbal script that they’ll need to animate to and add points where you can see visuals supporting the topics, but give them freedom to explore creative ways to visualize, too.

timeline

TimelineJS: Interactive timelines

9TimelineJS uses a Google spreadsheet with links to YouTube, Flickr, Twitter, Sound Cloud and other media sources to create really nice-looking timelines. You could use this tool to create an interactive visualization of the starting of your company, your client’s company, tell the story of an industry, etc.

presentme

Present.me: Create proposals with A/V

10Present.me allows you to create presentations you record yourself talking next to the slides you’re presenting. This tool might be a good way for people working remotely to share a proposal or concept, or for documenting presentations you’ve given on your blog or site.

Good luck, visualizers! If you have any other suggestions for great ways to communicate visually on the Web or IRL, please feel free to share in the comments!

Miranda Rensch is senior product manager at SEOmozSEOmoz is not affil­i­ated with Socialmedia.biz and has not reviewed this translation. SEO­moz pro­vides the Web’s best SEO tools and resources.

The post 10 top tools for creating infographics & visualizations appeared first on Inside Social Media.

]]>
https://insidesocialmedia.com/2013/03/19/best-tools-for-creating-infographics-visualizations/feed/ 1
How to use content communities to expand your brand’s reach https://insidesocialmedia.com/2012/10/31/how-to-use-content-communities-to-expand-brand-reach/ https://insidesocialmedia.com/2012/10/31/how-to-use-content-communities-to-expand-brand-reach/#respond Wed, 31 Oct 2012 12:32:30 +0000 http://socialmedia.biz/?p=22607 Besides the obvious SEO benefits to having original content, engaging content also helps your customers remember your brand. So having things people find interesting on your site makes it more likely for them to come back.

The post How to use content communities to expand your brand’s reach appeared first on Inside Social Media.

]]>

Use targeted content to take your business to the next level

This is the first of a two-part series. Coming next:
• Build links to your site with video content

Guest post by Julianne Staino
Distilled

“Content is king!” Ah, the wonderfully overused statement that makes me want to throw my monitor at the wall and then hang my head in shame because it’s actually true. I feel like I can safely assume that we can all agree on the increasing importance of awesome content. Recently, it seems like everyone is championing for companies to evolve the way in which they approach creating content. (e.g. Coca-Cola’s 2020 content strategy. If you haven’t watched these videos, I’d highly recommend investing 20 minutes in order to see how big brands are changing the way they think about a cohesive marketing strategy.)

Besides the obvious SEO benefits to having original content, engaging material also helps your customers remember your brand. So having things people find interesting on your site makes it more likely for them to come back.

What if you don’t have a huge fan base to rely on or a marketing budget that has a lot of zeroes?

However, what if you’re not Coke and don’t have a huge fan or customer base to rely on along with a marketing budget that has a lot of zeroes? All this amazing content you’re producing is falling on deaf ears. Of course you’ll most likely push the content through all the various social channels to hopefully gain some traction, but again this will mainly reach people that already know about your brand.

So how do you create excellent pieces of content that attracts a new audience and spreads your brand reach?

Well, if you are a company that doesn’t have time or resources to invest heavily into outreach, you can create content for specific content niche communities. Typically, before I begin working on a creative piece or kick off linkbuilding or produce any form of content for a client, I think:

“Who would want to read/watch/listen to this” and “What 5 sites would link to this?”

By doing this, I’m ensuring that I have a clear understanding of why I’m producing this content. So, by creating content specifically for certain communities, you are targeting a new audience that has an interest in a specific form.

Below I will outline some content communities where you should be targeting to either create content for or place pre-existing awe-inspiring content!

Why I chose these communities

I did not try and form a comprehensive list for each specific niche. I did, however, choose platforms where you can upload your own unique content. By doing this, I tried to cut down on some outreach time while still allowing you to gain brand exposure.

Video

Video content is like the new sliced bread. Where were we before it? Video content is becoming increasingly more important through blended searches and allows brands to break up walls of text. However, when I refer to video content, I’m not referring to basic Q&A video content or testimonials. I’m suggesting you create non-promotional video content that is aesthetically creative (gasp!). The key to video communities (and why most fail) is that they’re too self-serving and brand boosting. Resist the urge!

Who does it well: The Desperados Experience

Vimeo

Dailymotion

YouTube 

I couldn’t talk about video communities without including YouTube! If you have any type of videos, make sure you create a brand channel and upload all of your videos.

Data visualization

Although infographics are great when you have a story to tell, I’ll be focusing on data visualization. If you have market/customer data at your disposal, turn it into something! Whether it’s static, animated or interactive, you should put all that research to good use and get it in front of a data-loving audience.

Who does it well: Uber

Visual.ly

Visualizing.org

Images

Big, high-res images are all the rage and I have to say, I’m a fan! I’ve been seeing ecommerce sites and blogs transitioning from regular thumbnail images to huge images taking up some prime above-the fold real-estate. If you‘re looking to get people talking, linking, and sharing your images, invest in some photography.

Who does it well: Fab

Pinterest 

Tumblr

Long-form

What happened to the good old days when you’d sit down with the paper and read a multi-page piece? Although those instances are becoming few and far between, the resurgence of long-form content is on the rise. People may like getting to the point quickly, but if a story warrants a deep dive don’t be afraid to go there and go all in.

Who does it well: The New Yorker 

Longreads 

Longform

Find a specific audience for your content, outside of your site

By looking to target different audiences for a certain type of content, you are actively pushing your brands exposure and not resting on what you already have. In order to gain new customers you have to be thinking about new opportunities and how you can penetrate different markets. To do this, creating content specific materials is key.

Create content that provides value for that content community

Once you identify a new market, you have to create something of value. If your material offers little value to your new community, you’ll be burning your new-found bridge. Produce something people will actually care about.

Have fun with it!

Not everything should (or needs to be) a sales pitch. Make sure your content falls in line with the tone & feel of previously posted content. If your content sticks out like a sore thumb, you most likely won’t get any traction. Although you might get the urge, or internal pressure, to plaster your company’s name everywhere – don’t. Branding too much will appear as if you’re trying to get something out it (which is not well-received).

Don’t half a** it

If your content stinks and you put it out to a community who is passionate for long-form, they’ll call you out, and you don’t want that sort of attention. Like everything your produce, you should be confident and proud of what you’re putting out. If you’re not, go back and try harder.

Don’t rest on your brand’s laurels

Push your content outside of your company’s Twitter and Facebook accounts and don’t rely on them to do all the work. If you want to grow your audience and your brand, then move outside of what you normally do. Your brand is only as strong as you make it.

Julianne Staino is an SEO consultant at Distilled in New York. You can find her on Twitter at @JulianneStaino. This article originally appeared at SEOmozSEOmoz is not affil­i­ated with Socialmedia.biz. SEO­moz pro­vides the Web’s best SEO tools and resources.

The post How to use content communities to expand your brand’s reach appeared first on Inside Social Media.

]]>
https://insidesocialmedia.com/2012/10/31/how-to-use-content-communities-to-expand-brand-reach/feed/ 0