2013-05-20

Newsle Shows Influencers in the News



Brainchild of Harvard sophomores, Axel Hansen and Jonah Varon, Newsle made the news back in 2011, when the beta-by-invitation was reviewed by Techcrunch. And then, again in late February 2012, when it finally exited stealth mode, opening for public use. It was featured on the Huffington Post, Mediabistro, and a wealth of other sites. So how did I miss it? Too busy, I guess. But now, that my account is live, I cannot help but share the newsle with the world.

Mig on Newsle.

My personal profile on Newsle even allows me to submit news that Newsle couldn’t discover.

Newsle is by far the best news aggregator ever created, because it focuses on people. I’ve always believed that people make the news, and while other news aggregators focus on topics, Newsle gets things right. The beauty of Newsle, however, is that it helps you filter results about people on categories – like, tech, business, authors, journalists, athletes and so on.

But the true value comes from Newsle capability to aggregate news about people in your close social media circles on Facebook and LinkedIn, or about your Gmail contacts. This feature shows you who are your most “famous” friends (meaning those who appear in the news more often), the trending people that make the news, and the most famous people in fields like business, technology, politics, and so on. When you click on a user’s avatar, you land on a user’s page, which shows the latest news about that person, similar people, and Twitter feeds.

Following social media friends on Newsle.

Do you want to see where your social media friends are in the news? Newsle brings a comprehensive feed.

Newsle will automatically notify you on news about your friends, but you can also choose other people to follow, if you are interested. Sure, you argue, you could do the same with Google alerts. Not quite. For starters, Google alerts doesn’t have such a pretty UI, and it requires you to go through a time-consuming process of “creating” a special alert for each topic of interest (aka: keyword phrase). Then, the results are many times irrelevant.

Relevant for More than Newshounds

Newsle is surprisingly relevant, and it even helps you find “related” people – not as in “relatives,” but as in “with similar interests.” This is a great way to finding like-minded professionals. Following their news keeps you up-to-date, in-the-loop, with what’s new in your industry.

Someone, somewhere, wrote that Newsle seems most useful to newshounds. Maybe. But I find it equally valuable to discover people, although I still cannot figure out how to contact them directly on Newsle. Fortunately, their Newsle profiles are linked to the social media profiles they provided when they joined the network (Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter) so contacting them is not impossible.

Another good value I see in Newsle is that it gives each user a Newlse rank, which shows how prominent that user is in the news. The rank is calculated based on how often the user is in the news, how prominent those news sources are, how much coverage refers to the user, and how many different sources mention that user. Basically, the higher the Newsle rank, the more influential that user is.

Brian Solis on Newsle

Influencers like Brian Solis usually have a higher Newsle rank.

This is how you can identify industry influencers, and act to become one yourself. If you follow what they are doing, and where they appear in the news, you can develop a good strategy for yourself. For many PR professionals, Newsle should be a must.

Ronn Torossian on Brand Angelina Jolie

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Angelina Jolie courtesy Gage Skidmore

Small Company Perspective on the FleishmanHillard / Edelman Debate and the Future Direction of Public Relations

Marketing, editors and public relations professionals all have the same goal, but how they develop the messaging is completely different.

public relations

Our World in Pictures This Week: May 12, 2013

From Hot Rod icon Dean Jeffries’ passing, to UK Prime Minister David Cameron’s visit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, this week had its share of ups and downs. In keeping with our weekly series of photo reviews, here’s the week of May 12th in review.

Dean Jeffries - Courtesy George Barris and Kustomrama

People Switch to Traditional Gifts for Mother’s Day, Moms Prefer Daily Help

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TheBusinessofGiftGivingOnline-1_zps2d29c62e

Russia the Ally, All Old Soldiers Salute You Today

Today is just another day for most people in the world. But 68 years ago events spiraled ever chaotically and frenzied, into a future our forefather’s could not imagine. As an American, and as a citizen of the world, Russia’s celebration of victory in World War Two today should, I am sure, be all of ours – the people of the world. The so-called Great Patriotic War the Soviet Union and Russia won, was a victory for all of us.

Vladimir Putin reviews the troops.
Mihaela Lica Butler About Mihaela Lica Butler

Mihaela Lica-Butler is senior partner at Pamil Visions PR and editor at Everything PR. She is a widely cited authority on search engine optimization and public relations issues (BBC News, Reuters, Yahoo! Small Business Adviser, Al Jazeera and others), with an experience of over 10 years in online PR. Follow Mig on Twitter or send her an email at mig [at] pamil-visions [dot] com.