The Three C's Of Social Content – Which One Are You?

The Three C's of Social Content – Creation, Curation and Cultivation. In looking at online content, particularly that shared on social networks I've come to the conclusion that there are generally three broad categories of social content. I'm going to expand on this premise in this and a couple of upcoming posts and certainly the later posts will be colored in part by the responses I get to the original concepts that I outline here.
The Three C's of Social Content – Creation
While seemingly self explanatory, content creation seems to generate a lot of controversy. What constitutes content creation? Is it something wholly original, can it be something that is inspired by other work? Can it be an adaptation of existing work?
I honestly don't think there is a hard rule for this. I have a personal opinion about what I consider original work and therefore content creation, but that is just my opinion. I happen to think that for content to fall into the Creation category it needs to be wholly original in nature. Now that of course would mean that 99% of everything I write wouldn't fall into that category because it is, in one way or another, inspired by other external influences. I write about things I have seen online, in real life, about books I have read, commercials I have seen etc. However, I would like to think that my interpretations of these external influences is unique and therefore original.
I occasionally create images, either for this blog or for Google Plus posts that are based on words that I have seen in other places – I consider those not to be original content. Yes, I have used the words in a way that might well be original, but the emotion that is being evoked is not original. I didn't create that response originally, the words that I have chosen have already done that.
The Three C's of Social Content – Curation
Many social networks have really become social curation depositories. Google Plus particularly strikes me as being this type of network. While I do see plenty of original content there I also see much that is the collecting and resharing of content. Sometimes grouped together in an organized manner, sometimes not so organized. I personally tend to think that truly curated content has at least some form of index to allow it to be found quickly. Pinterest is a great example of a social network that focuses solely on content curation – to the point of having indices that allow users to quickly find content that they are looking for.
The point of content curation was of course originally a selfish one. I find something interesting that I want to refer to later and I want some way of finding it later, browser bookmarks and then bookmark sharing sites were great forms of this. The rise in popularity of sharing these pieces of curated content led to more sophisticated sharing strategies, ones that focus on carving a niche based on the content of others.
The Three C's of Social Content – Cultivation
This is the last form of Social Content in my observation. When a publisher – someone who posts content of any kind to a social network focuses on a specific niche to attract or nurture an audience it can best be described as content cultivation. The content itself is less important than the impact it has on the end goal of audience development. Frequency, density, imagery, time of day, all of these things start to play an increasingly important role in the social content cultivator's arsenal.
Which type of Social Content do you consider you produce?
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