Walking the content_marketing_walk_by_reading_roomSimon Nash
This document provides a summary of a guide to content marketing. It discusses key aspects of creating great content such as knowing your audience, finding out what content works best, and making content spreadable. It also covers changing company mindsets from PR-led to more of a publishing model and defining engagement metrics to measure success. The document is based on insights from various marketing professionals.
The document discusses how employees spend an average of 2.5 hours per week trying to find documents across multiple locations, which is equivalent to 16 work days per year. It notes that an intranet with a simplified structure and easy-to-find content could save employees time and reduce support costs compared to the current model. Specific metrics are provided showing how reducing the number of clicks and pages to find information impacts how long visitors spend on a site.
This document summarizes a lesson introducing students to the book "Life in the Desert" by Melvin Berger. The teacher used a PowerPoint presentation over 4 sessions to visually explain concepts about desert life and make text-to-self connections. Students were able to access the presentation during lessons and review slides independently. The teacher felt technology enhanced the lesson by allowing visual explanation of ideas and engagement of multiple learning styles.
The document discusses delivering a mobile enterprise and outlines six principles for doing so effectively. It identifies four types of enterprise mobility: mobile connectivity, mobile productivity, fieldforce automation, and desktop replacement. It emphasizes that mobile strategies should target true mobile needs, view devices as personal, support a wide range of devices, and start simply focused on key business needs. The overall message is that enterprises need a holistic mobile strategy to empower a mobile workforce.
Walking the content_marketing_walk_by_reading_roomSimon Nash
This document provides a summary of a guide to content marketing. It discusses key aspects of creating great content such as knowing your audience, finding out what content works best, and making content spreadable. It also covers changing company mindsets from PR-led to more of a publishing model and defining engagement metrics to measure success. The document is based on insights from various marketing professionals.
The document discusses how employees spend an average of 2.5 hours per week trying to find documents across multiple locations, which is equivalent to 16 work days per year. It notes that an intranet with a simplified structure and easy-to-find content could save employees time and reduce support costs compared to the current model. Specific metrics are provided showing how reducing the number of clicks and pages to find information impacts how long visitors spend on a site.
This document summarizes a lesson introducing students to the book "Life in the Desert" by Melvin Berger. The teacher used a PowerPoint presentation over 4 sessions to visually explain concepts about desert life and make text-to-self connections. Students were able to access the presentation during lessons and review slides independently. The teacher felt technology enhanced the lesson by allowing visual explanation of ideas and engagement of multiple learning styles.
The document discusses delivering a mobile enterprise and outlines six principles for doing so effectively. It identifies four types of enterprise mobility: mobile connectivity, mobile productivity, fieldforce automation, and desktop replacement. It emphasizes that mobile strategies should target true mobile needs, view devices as personal, support a wide range of devices, and start simply focused on key business needs. The overall message is that enterprises need a holistic mobile strategy to empower a mobile workforce.
Office 365 and SharePoint are evolving fast. A few years ago many of us may have begun modernizing our SharePoint environments - planning an upgrade or a migration to SharePoint 2013 or even SharePoint Online. Since that time many things have changed in both SharePoint Server and Office 365, not to mention within our organizations. New services have been added, and many of those services are improving with each passing month. What approaches, strategies and rollout models are other organizations using? What can we learn from their successes?
Join us for this facilitated and interactive discussion where instead of just looking forward based on the industries most recent announcements, we look back into key changes that we all need to understand better. This discussion will be facilitated by Richard Harbridge, a Microsoft MVP, and internationally recognized expert on Office 365 and SharePoint. Together we will discuss what has changed in the past few years for developers, IT professionals, and SharePoint leads while exploring how organizations are leveraging these services in different ways today.
iFactory and Infomous teamed up to deliver this virtual workshop as part of the FutureM Conference in Boston.
---
In a digital landscape that evolves every moment, it is crucial to communicate information clearly and effectively through visual design. We'll take a look at brand modules, infographics and interface innovations and showcase how (and how not!) to combine compelling content with smart and visually appealing design.
Presenters were Alen Yen, iFactory President/Creative Director; Jeremy Perkins, iFactory Art Director; and Paolo Gaudiano, Icosystem President and Chief Technology Officer.
www.ifactory.com
www.infomous.com
Ethercycle is a small web development firm located in Park Ridge, Illinois. They specialize in responsive design, progressive enhancement, and mobile-first strategies. Their team includes creative director Kurt Elster, software engineer David Jakobik, and lead developer Paul Reda, who have a combined 24 years of experience. Ethercycle works with clients across various industries to build websites, focusing on usability, branding, and technical expertise. They have received positive testimonials praising their design skills, collaboration, and delivering projects on schedule.
The document discusses a company called Idioplatform that analyzes and structures large volumes of unstructured content to enable better use of archives and new content products. It allows customers to be more customer-centric and free from previous constraints. Idioplatform currently powers over 15 million visits per month, analyzes over 12 million topics, and has offices in London, Exeter, and San Francisco.
Gathering Insights part of Designing Experiences in #Office365 #mwcp19Kanwal Khipple
The document discusses personas that could be used to understand key user types within an organization and their needs and goals related to using an intranet system. It provides examples of five primary intranet personas - the Connector, Collaborator, Communicator, Consumer, and Contributor - and describes each with a sample profile detailing their characteristics, expectations, frustrations, and key metrics of success. The profiles are intended to help guide priorities for improving the digital workplace experience by considering users' perspectives.
4 ways fashion and apparel brands can benefit from digital storyboardingPTC
Digital storyboarding empowers fashion and apparel brands to easily capture and share design inspirations, concepts, trends, requirements, and feedback in one central place. Discover the real value that digital storyboarding can bring to your business, and understand the top benefits and use cases for retailers. Learn more: http://ptc.co/9LY730lxSNp
Intranets in the Cloud: What You Need to Know at Unity Connect Online #UCO16 Kanwal Khipple
There is a growing trend of organizations moving to Office 365 to meet their Intranet and portal needs. While many organizations are running their SharePoint portals or Intranets on-premise, in a private cloud, or on public cloud offerings like Azure – many have already started or made the move to Office 365 powered Intranet experiences.
The question for many companies is “should our Intranet be built with Office 365?” and if so, “how should we best take advantage of Office 365 features with our Intranet?”
We’ll give you guidance and recommendations to successfully plan and implement an Office 365 Intranet as well as:
The benefits of Office 365 for Intranets
Why you should consider migrating your Intranet to Office 365
When and how you may integrate Office 365 with your existing Intranet today
Lessons learned and challenges with Office 365 Intranets
A talk I gave on Mobile IA at the University of Washington iSchool's Information Architecture Summer Institute. Presented in Seattle, June 2012.
[Originally uploaded to Slideshare June 21, 2012]
Best of Microsoft Ignite conference 2017 #tspbugKanwal Khipple
This document summarizes a presentation about making Office 365 work effectively. It discusses improvements to SharePoint, Exchange, Skype for Business, Office 2019 and hybrid functionality. It also covers enhanced search, discussions/chats, meetings, forms/processes, access/control, external collaboration, work management, profiles/expertise, analytics and roadmaps. Key points include improved authoring experiences, new hub sites/templates, Yammer integration, personalized search, Teams as a collaboration hub and improved forms, workflows and compliance tools.
David Bausola (Ag8) presents Emerging Technology @ Canvas8Canvas8
The document provides examples of social media frameworks and some design principles for developing frameworks. It describes three example frameworks: Where are the Joneses?, Riot, and Purefold. Each example highlights key learnings. It then discusses four components of frameworks: editorial, technology, commercial, and operations. Finally, it outlines some design principles, including considering the balance between the four components and finding raw material from social media opinions to create value through reuse of information. The overall goal is to move away from an information theory view of communications towards a transaction design approach.
At Techstartupday 2013 we gave a workshop on the importance of digital product design for startups and digital product managers. Together with Ontoforce we presented a behind the scene case study about the process of designing and building the Disqover platform.
The future of designing collaboration experiences #spsottawaKanwal Khipple
Imagine a future where silo'd departments and legacy processes don’t stand in our way. Today’s collaboration needs go from complex collaboration portals to simple innovation hubs and most importantly need to work for our devices. Designing portals to enable a new kind of collaboration and communication is an absolute necessity today.
For the past couple years, I’ve had the opportunity to study how successful teams collaborate and have helped to transform the way teams work and collaborate together. In this session, I'll share what I’ve learned about making effective cross-discipline collaboration possible, and leave you with actionable approaches you can use to unite your team's communication and collaboration needs.
IN THIS SESSION YOU’LL HEAR:
• Why cross-discipline collaboration is essential to future-ready digital design, and how you can play a key role in creating the cross-departmental teams to enable innovation
• Real-life industry examples of what it takes to make effective collaboration possible
• Practical techniques you can use to bridge silos, increase productivity, and deliver better outcomes for your teams
New Tools for your Marketing Technology ArsenalDeb Evans, CFE
The document discusses new tools that can be used in digital marketing strategies for franchises. It describes tools for content curation and storytelling like BizSugar and Scoop.it that can be used to find quality content. Social listening tools like Google Alerts and Talkwalker are recommended to understand customer interests and conversations. Content sharing tools such as SlideShare, Instagram and Vine can then be used to distribute content. The document also outlines infographic design tools, podcasting options, and FranSocial, a private social network for franchise businesses.
During this Morgenbooster, we will dive into the understanding of digital design systems, and why they have become increasingly popular.
What are they? How do they work? What will you gain from building one? And last, but not least we will take you through a couple of tangible experiences and journeys of building such a system.
Throughout the talk we will be sharing experiences from both a design and development perspective.
And hopefully we will all have the feeling of getting one step closer to a design system, which meets all the requirements in modern digital design. A system where all services, assets and communications are designed from one central place to evoke both emotions in a coherent brand experience and support the functional necessities of today’s dynamic business strategies.
What technical communication professionals need to know about the world of Web 2.0, mobile devices, content syndication, and changing user expectations. The future is brightest for those communicators who combine their natural talents with technological savvy. Find out how to differentiate yourself from the competition. If you think technical communication is all about writing, you're in for a big surprise.
This presentation explores how brands can improve their proposition and become more relevant through embedding user experience (UX) and innovation within their vision and culture.
The document announces an ISIS Open House and User Conference from May 2-4, 2010 in Vienna, Austria to showcase the latest features of the Papyrus Platform and focus on empowering business users, and includes the agenda, sessions, workshops and labs to be covered around topics like customer experience, document design, case management, interactive letter writing and more.
TrendStartr is a social platform that lets anyone discover the world through your eyes.
Discover the person behind the mass amount of contents, it’s your social network individualized. We centralize your existing social networks to create help you create a distribution platform that becomes a recommendation engine
TrendStartr is Twitter Visualized, and Youtube Socialized.
TrendStartr is............."Where the World Discovers You"
Web 2.0 101: Understanding Web 2.0 and its Impact on Technical CommunicationScott Abel
The document discusses how Web 2.0 technologies can improve access, management, and reuse of digital content to better support user goals. It notes that Web 1.0 focused on publishing content to websites for users to read, while Web 2.0 aims to help users "do stuff" through technologies like RSS feeds, tagging, wikis, blogs, podcasts and more. It suggests technical writers could use these new capabilities to better serve customers through more engaging and collaborative documentation.
InformeDesign is a free, online database providing evidence-based design research summaries to inform design decisions. It was created in 2003 and contains over 2,300 summaries, but now faces funding cuts that could shut it down. InformeDesign is a valuable resource for designers, helping to differentiate practitioners who use evidence-based design. It covers topics related to office environments like ergonomics and productivity. Support is needed from manufacturers, firms, and individuals to maintain InformeDesign as an important tool for the design industry.
Office 365 and SharePoint are evolving fast. A few years ago many of us may have begun modernizing our SharePoint environments - planning an upgrade or a migration to SharePoint 2013 or even SharePoint Online. Since that time many things have changed in both SharePoint Server and Office 365, not to mention within our organizations. New services have been added, and many of those services are improving with each passing month. What approaches, strategies and rollout models are other organizations using? What can we learn from their successes?
Join us for this facilitated and interactive discussion where instead of just looking forward based on the industries most recent announcements, we look back into key changes that we all need to understand better. This discussion will be facilitated by Richard Harbridge, a Microsoft MVP, and internationally recognized expert on Office 365 and SharePoint. Together we will discuss what has changed in the past few years for developers, IT professionals, and SharePoint leads while exploring how organizations are leveraging these services in different ways today.
iFactory and Infomous teamed up to deliver this virtual workshop as part of the FutureM Conference in Boston.
---
In a digital landscape that evolves every moment, it is crucial to communicate information clearly and effectively through visual design. We'll take a look at brand modules, infographics and interface innovations and showcase how (and how not!) to combine compelling content with smart and visually appealing design.
Presenters were Alen Yen, iFactory President/Creative Director; Jeremy Perkins, iFactory Art Director; and Paolo Gaudiano, Icosystem President and Chief Technology Officer.
www.ifactory.com
www.infomous.com
Ethercycle is a small web development firm located in Park Ridge, Illinois. They specialize in responsive design, progressive enhancement, and mobile-first strategies. Their team includes creative director Kurt Elster, software engineer David Jakobik, and lead developer Paul Reda, who have a combined 24 years of experience. Ethercycle works with clients across various industries to build websites, focusing on usability, branding, and technical expertise. They have received positive testimonials praising their design skills, collaboration, and delivering projects on schedule.
The document discusses a company called Idioplatform that analyzes and structures large volumes of unstructured content to enable better use of archives and new content products. It allows customers to be more customer-centric and free from previous constraints. Idioplatform currently powers over 15 million visits per month, analyzes over 12 million topics, and has offices in London, Exeter, and San Francisco.
Gathering Insights part of Designing Experiences in #Office365 #mwcp19Kanwal Khipple
The document discusses personas that could be used to understand key user types within an organization and their needs and goals related to using an intranet system. It provides examples of five primary intranet personas - the Connector, Collaborator, Communicator, Consumer, and Contributor - and describes each with a sample profile detailing their characteristics, expectations, frustrations, and key metrics of success. The profiles are intended to help guide priorities for improving the digital workplace experience by considering users' perspectives.
4 ways fashion and apparel brands can benefit from digital storyboardingPTC
Digital storyboarding empowers fashion and apparel brands to easily capture and share design inspirations, concepts, trends, requirements, and feedback in one central place. Discover the real value that digital storyboarding can bring to your business, and understand the top benefits and use cases for retailers. Learn more: http://ptc.co/9LY730lxSNp
Intranets in the Cloud: What You Need to Know at Unity Connect Online #UCO16 Kanwal Khipple
There is a growing trend of organizations moving to Office 365 to meet their Intranet and portal needs. While many organizations are running their SharePoint portals or Intranets on-premise, in a private cloud, or on public cloud offerings like Azure – many have already started or made the move to Office 365 powered Intranet experiences.
The question for many companies is “should our Intranet be built with Office 365?” and if so, “how should we best take advantage of Office 365 features with our Intranet?”
We’ll give you guidance and recommendations to successfully plan and implement an Office 365 Intranet as well as:
The benefits of Office 365 for Intranets
Why you should consider migrating your Intranet to Office 365
When and how you may integrate Office 365 with your existing Intranet today
Lessons learned and challenges with Office 365 Intranets
A talk I gave on Mobile IA at the University of Washington iSchool's Information Architecture Summer Institute. Presented in Seattle, June 2012.
[Originally uploaded to Slideshare June 21, 2012]
Best of Microsoft Ignite conference 2017 #tspbugKanwal Khipple
This document summarizes a presentation about making Office 365 work effectively. It discusses improvements to SharePoint, Exchange, Skype for Business, Office 2019 and hybrid functionality. It also covers enhanced search, discussions/chats, meetings, forms/processes, access/control, external collaboration, work management, profiles/expertise, analytics and roadmaps. Key points include improved authoring experiences, new hub sites/templates, Yammer integration, personalized search, Teams as a collaboration hub and improved forms, workflows and compliance tools.
David Bausola (Ag8) presents Emerging Technology @ Canvas8Canvas8
The document provides examples of social media frameworks and some design principles for developing frameworks. It describes three example frameworks: Where are the Joneses?, Riot, and Purefold. Each example highlights key learnings. It then discusses four components of frameworks: editorial, technology, commercial, and operations. Finally, it outlines some design principles, including considering the balance between the four components and finding raw material from social media opinions to create value through reuse of information. The overall goal is to move away from an information theory view of communications towards a transaction design approach.
At Techstartupday 2013 we gave a workshop on the importance of digital product design for startups and digital product managers. Together with Ontoforce we presented a behind the scene case study about the process of designing and building the Disqover platform.
The future of designing collaboration experiences #spsottawaKanwal Khipple
Imagine a future where silo'd departments and legacy processes don’t stand in our way. Today’s collaboration needs go from complex collaboration portals to simple innovation hubs and most importantly need to work for our devices. Designing portals to enable a new kind of collaboration and communication is an absolute necessity today.
For the past couple years, I’ve had the opportunity to study how successful teams collaborate and have helped to transform the way teams work and collaborate together. In this session, I'll share what I’ve learned about making effective cross-discipline collaboration possible, and leave you with actionable approaches you can use to unite your team's communication and collaboration needs.
IN THIS SESSION YOU’LL HEAR:
• Why cross-discipline collaboration is essential to future-ready digital design, and how you can play a key role in creating the cross-departmental teams to enable innovation
• Real-life industry examples of what it takes to make effective collaboration possible
• Practical techniques you can use to bridge silos, increase productivity, and deliver better outcomes for your teams
New Tools for your Marketing Technology ArsenalDeb Evans, CFE
The document discusses new tools that can be used in digital marketing strategies for franchises. It describes tools for content curation and storytelling like BizSugar and Scoop.it that can be used to find quality content. Social listening tools like Google Alerts and Talkwalker are recommended to understand customer interests and conversations. Content sharing tools such as SlideShare, Instagram and Vine can then be used to distribute content. The document also outlines infographic design tools, podcasting options, and FranSocial, a private social network for franchise businesses.
During this Morgenbooster, we will dive into the understanding of digital design systems, and why they have become increasingly popular.
What are they? How do they work? What will you gain from building one? And last, but not least we will take you through a couple of tangible experiences and journeys of building such a system.
Throughout the talk we will be sharing experiences from both a design and development perspective.
And hopefully we will all have the feeling of getting one step closer to a design system, which meets all the requirements in modern digital design. A system where all services, assets and communications are designed from one central place to evoke both emotions in a coherent brand experience and support the functional necessities of today’s dynamic business strategies.
What technical communication professionals need to know about the world of Web 2.0, mobile devices, content syndication, and changing user expectations. The future is brightest for those communicators who combine their natural talents with technological savvy. Find out how to differentiate yourself from the competition. If you think technical communication is all about writing, you're in for a big surprise.
This presentation explores how brands can improve their proposition and become more relevant through embedding user experience (UX) and innovation within their vision and culture.
The document announces an ISIS Open House and User Conference from May 2-4, 2010 in Vienna, Austria to showcase the latest features of the Papyrus Platform and focus on empowering business users, and includes the agenda, sessions, workshops and labs to be covered around topics like customer experience, document design, case management, interactive letter writing and more.
TrendStartr is a social platform that lets anyone discover the world through your eyes.
Discover the person behind the mass amount of contents, it’s your social network individualized. We centralize your existing social networks to create help you create a distribution platform that becomes a recommendation engine
TrendStartr is Twitter Visualized, and Youtube Socialized.
TrendStartr is............."Where the World Discovers You"
Web 2.0 101: Understanding Web 2.0 and its Impact on Technical CommunicationScott Abel
The document discusses how Web 2.0 technologies can improve access, management, and reuse of digital content to better support user goals. It notes that Web 1.0 focused on publishing content to websites for users to read, while Web 2.0 aims to help users "do stuff" through technologies like RSS feeds, tagging, wikis, blogs, podcasts and more. It suggests technical writers could use these new capabilities to better serve customers through more engaging and collaborative documentation.
InformeDesign is a free, online database providing evidence-based design research summaries to inform design decisions. It was created in 2003 and contains over 2,300 summaries, but now faces funding cuts that could shut it down. InformeDesign is a valuable resource for designers, helping to differentiate practitioners who use evidence-based design. It covers topics related to office environments like ergonomics and productivity. Support is needed from manufacturers, firms, and individuals to maintain InformeDesign as an important tool for the design industry.
1. FAST FORWARD: HOW DESIGNERS CAN
MANAGE INFORMATION OVERLOAD
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Effective technology helps creative professionals find, capture,
store, and share content while enabling them to work the way
they want.
• Curated content and aggregation tools save time while
improving content quality.
• A cloud-based approach greatly simplifies content capture,
storage, and use. storage, and use.
THOUGHT LEADERSHIP SERIES
2. TOO MUCH OF
A GOOD THING?
The Internet has become a virtually unlimited source of inspiration for
creative professionals. With the explosion of websites, messaging,
social media, and cloud computing, the amount of available information
is staggering. According to International Data Corporation (IDC),
the world’s volume of digital content is equal to 2.7 zettabytes—2.7
followed by 21 zeros bytes. Ninety percent of that is unstructured data,
such as images, videos, MP3 files, and social media.
Rich, yes. Easy to find, retrieve, and manage? Not exactly.
In the past, fashion trade magazines, travel, and library research provided
inspiration and industry information. Today, creative professionals have
the world at their fingertips. They can scour design and celebrity blogs,
fashion websites, news sites, e-commerce sites, and social media
outlets ranging from Pinterest to Tumblr and Facebook. They can find
music, exhibits, films, and openings of stores, hotels, and restaurants. Searchable Image Library
Research on raw materials, scientific and technological developments,
competitors, retailers, and demographics is much simpler.
can view all of their content and projects. Now it takes only minutes to
synthesize, edit, and assemble content into mood boards. Designers
Yet, thousands of information sources can create a new problem—
can also upload images from their mobile devices—anywhere and
too much raw data. With new sites and social media applications
anytime—and automatically save them to a virtual workspace folder.
appearing (or disconcertingly disappearing) daily, finding high-quality,
Once stored, files are available for access anytime, anywhere, with any
consistent sources of original content is challenging. Traditional Google
device, without having to worry about translating file formats or saving
searches are time-consuming and inefficient. Once found, content has
content on external devices.
been difficult to capture, save, and share. Synchronizing files between
desktop computers, smartphones, laptops, and tablets simply adds to
frustration.
No one—from first-time assistants to senior design executives—has
time to sift through millions of images and thousands of news articles CAPTURE
and then deal with the hassles of keeping good content where it can
be used. Creative professionals crave big picture messages, like
recaps, must-haves, key colors and items, and editors’ picks, to use
INSPIRATION WITH
as a springboard for a season. They can now benefit from innovative
technology to store, manage, find, and share content while enabling CURATED CONTENT
AND EXPERTISE
them to work the way they want.
We’re past the initial giddy phase of Internet growth where every new
STORE AND MANAGE capability was an improvement over old ways of finding information.
Design professionals today need content distinguished by its
CREATIVE ASSETS IN professionalism, consistency, and timeliness. Technology tools and
curated content puts high-quality sources of inspiration at designers’
THE CLOUD fingertips.
GET TRUSTED EXPERT PERSPECTIVES
Cloud-based storage is revolutionizing the way that we store and use Curated content services offer a wealth of relevant, original content
creative assets. For example, image libraries with millions of images for up-to-the-moment sources of inspiration or news. For example,
can be stored and managed cost-effectively. Designers can search Stylesight’s Sites That Inspire offers a continually curated collection of
items and narrow down selections in seconds, and with a click, they websites selected for their leading-edge thinking and creativity.
3. The best sources of curated content are always evolving, often with
information updates and images added daily. Designers can count on
fresh inspiration each time they visit, and combine curated content
with user-generated content, such as Pinterest and Tumblr, with their
own favorites for instant portfolios of inspiration. Fast, easy access to
superior content streamlines workflow to deliver product design that is
on-trend for better sell-through and fewer markdowns.
COLLABORATE WITH
EASY-TO-USE TOOLS
Content in the cloud, curated services, and access to premium content
is enhanced with technology tools that support easy sharing and
Sites That Inspire collaboration. Look for a tool that enables designers to view shared
folders, instantly send images or content to design colleagues, and
A similar feature, Retail & Showrooms, enables professionals to easily edit on the fly—all with a click.
research the latest products from competitors and aspirational brands.
Here, you can quickly skim the six must-know contemporary brands, Global organizations also use private Pinterest, Tumblr, and blog
the most influential footwear trends, or see how Le Bon Marche features to easily and effectively communicate across distances and
celebrated its 160th anniversary. time zones. Other tools that can enhance collaboration include Skype
audio and video conferencing and other conferencing solutions such
Curated content also saves time and highlights important “must-dos” as Go To Meeting and WebEx.
for fashion-related travel. Style Traveler scouts the best offerings from
the world’s leading design cities and delivers top picks of places to
stay, eat, and drink; refined lists of the best local shops sorted by
HOW STYLESIGHT
neighborhood; and exhibits, sights to see, museums and ways to relax.
GATHER FRESH CONTENT QUICKLY
Image libraries make it possible to pull together ideas in seconds, and REDUCES
curated content targeted to specific interests saves hours of time that
would otherwise be spent searching across the Internet universe. For
example, if your interest is footwear, the most pertinent footwear news,
INFORMATION
analysis, trend information, and blogger perspectives can be delivered
directly to your mailbox or personal workspace. OVERLOAD
Stylesight is the industry-leading content and technology solution
for professionals in the style, fashion, and design sectors. Our
mission is simple—to inspire and enable creativity. The Stylesight
platform provides a system for management to inspire creativity with
demonstrable cost savings and return on investment. At the same
time, it provides creative professionals with unmatched breadth and
depth of images, proprietary expert content, curated information, and
tools for search, storing, arranging, and sharing ideas and inspiration.
Our 200+ person team combines proven forecasting and trend
analysis, the industry’s largest image library, and workflow tools to
make the creative journey more inspirational, as well as more efficient
and cost-effective. Today, 3000 companies rely on Stylesight every day
to be their eyes and ears in the most important fashion cities and to
provide the latest trend, business, materials, and sourcing information.
Our mission—to inspire and enable—is changing the face of fashion
Retail Analysis every day.
THOUGHT LEADERSHIP SERIES
4. Stylesight is the industry-leading content and technology solution for professionals in the style, fashion, and design sectors. Our
mission is simple—to inspire and enable creativity. The Stylesight platform provides a system for management to inspire creativity
with demonstrable cost savings and return on investment. At the same time, it provides creatives with unmatched breadth and depth
of images, proprietary expert content, curated information, and tools for search, storing, arranging, and sharing ideas and inspiration.
NEW YORK GLOBAL HEADQUARTERS: LONDON EMEA HEADQUARTERS:
+1 212 675 8877 | sales@stylesight.com +44 (0)20 7613 6280 | uk@stylesight.com
25 West 39th Street, 14th Floor Unit 1G | Zetland House, 5-25 Scrutton Street
New York, NY 10018 London, EC2A 4HJ
HONG KONG APAC HEADQUARTERS: STYLESIGHT CHINA in partnership with CTIC:
+852 2530 0553 | asiapac@stylesight.com +86 21 6278 7201 | china@stylesight.com
702-703 7/F Winway Bldg. 50 Wellington Street 7F32 ShanghaiMart | 2299 Yan-an-xi-lu
Central, Hong Kong Shanghai, China, 200336
For more information visit www.stylesight.com
THOUGHT LEADERSHIP SERIES