Tip #13: PopURLs.com

Popurls is a site built around the idea of taking multiple RSS feeds from popular sites (digg, delicious, news sites, Techmeme, key blogs, media sites (Flickr, YouTube, etc) and much more.) and displaying them all on one easy to browse page. It is also a dashboard for the latest web-buzz, a single page that encapsulates up-to-the-minute headlines from the most popular sites on the internet.

Popurls live shows a map of the live traffic on the network, indicating what stories are being viewed in which country at any given time. Thomas Marban, the founder of the site, aims to create a website that is completely free to use and empower users to the fullest extent possible in giving them the freedom they deserve with regard to both consuming and creating Internet content.

Nothing beats an all-in-one interface to do your content research than this one. This is obviously a winner and today’s Top Pick.

Tip #12: Search Automator Force

Search Automator allows you to easily discover news articles to related your keyword(s) from some of the best sources online CNN, including, Google News, Yahoo News, and Topix. Search Automator lets you quickly save all of your favorite terms search for easy recall Favorites are even intelligently categorized into image favorite searches, favorite audio searches, favorite news searches, many more.

Advanced Persistent Searches – If you frequently tap into the advanced searching of the search powerhouses out there, you’ll love Search Automator’s ability display to advanced search options a panel, which remains open even submitting after your advanced search, allowing to continue to your search ease, with until you find just what you’re looking for. Search Automator also provides users with suggested relevant or alternate keywords to further refine and tighten research efforts. Such alternate/relevant keywords range from articles to tutorials and from ebooks to training.

Did I tell you it’s free? Download it now!

Tip #11: Forum Search Engines

Forums are by far the most essential information depository in the net today. Active forums can have ongoing dicussions practically 24 7, making them a treasure spot for your content research. It is also beneficial in a way that content is usually presented in a Q&A way, giving way for you to attack your content construction process in a more “reader-oriented” way. Meaning, you’ll be answering what your readers actually want to read, making your content more valuable and making it possible to attract repeat visitors.

You have questions, debates, answers, constructive feedbacks and occasional trolling activities, nevertheless, it’s an excellent ground to perform your research for your new content.

Fortunately, there are a couple of forum search engines out there that allow you to search directly from all the gigantic population of forums out there.

Check them out:-

Tip #10: Online Newspapers

How convenient it can be to have all the newspapers from all over the world at your finger tips, savouring the latest news while sipping your hot coffee. Although nothing beats the feeling of having a printed but just the fact that you can obtain information from any newspapers from various countries, give you an invaluable option of crafting your content right away. Most of these online sites have coverage of newspapers based on regions, so if you need more specific information from a certain region or even country, these sites are exactly for you.

Start gathering information and writing your content…

Tip #9: Diversify Your Content

Depending on your website’s theme, your main content can be either textual, graphical or video based. Most of the time, the majority of your content will be textual, requiring you to write and have it researched should you need more info. To kill this monotonousness , one can diverse the type of content by adding a rich mixture of content. Some of the popular type of contents include:-

  1. Text / Articles (Article directories)
    • FAQ / Questions & Answers
    • Top 10 Myths / Rumours / Solutions
    • Compilation of links to resourceful sites
    • News
    • Etc.
  2. Videos (Youtube, Metacafe, etc.)
  3. Presentations (Flash, PowerPoint)
  4. Podcasts (You can convert your textual content to audio)
  5. Ebooks
  6. Diagrams & Charts (Use Gliffy.com or Microsoft Word)
  7. Create tutorials (Step by Step Diagrams or Videos)
  8. Games / Wallpapers / Free items
  9. Images / Photos
  10. Outline the history of your topic (Google Search Timeline & Wikipedia)
  11. A collection of links / resources
  12. Display RSS Feeds on your website

You can also try to rewrite your content using a different approach…

  1. Write it like a guide, how-to, step by step, etc.
  2. Question & answer
  3. Question based, instead of giving answers, question certain fact or other content found on the net.
  4. Tell readers what NOT to do instead of what to do
  5. A scenario or a story to convey your main points
  6. Checklist style

Other than that, should you be so inclined to write a ultra long post / content, it’s always a good idea to break it up into series of articles so not only it would be shorter, more organised and more absorbable, it also creates repeat visitors.

Tip #8: PostRank.com

PostRank.com offers variety of free tools for publishers and online information consumers to discover the best blogs, news, and articles by topic; to perform comparisons of engagement performance among a group of sites by topic; or to analyze their own site’s content for audience engagement in real-time and over time. PostRank helps online information consumers Find and Read What Matters.

You basically get to search over 100 million blogs for content and read till you drop. Start reading …

Tip #7: FindArticles.com

Review by Wendy Boswell

FindArticles, a property of LookSmart, is a search engine dedicated to finding articles “from leading academic, industry and general interest publications.” It’s an invaluable tool for the casual and advanced Web searcher.

ContentBegins says – In summary, it portrays simplicity and provides a good set of results, through a majority of non paying features. Very informative and one of the good sites out there that can provide ample amount of resources for your content research.

  • Easy and relevant. FindArticles is simple to use, and delivers solid results with a minimum of tweaking.
  • Deep search capability. You can access full-text articles that you can’t find using other search engines.
  • It’s (mostly) free. Most of what you can search through on FindArticles costs nothing; but there are a few paid-access articles (clearly marked).

Read the full article here

Jump over to FindArticles.com

Tip #6: Public Domain Content

Public domain means that the creator of the work, with no strings attached, has given up all rights to the work. It means that you may do anything with the work that you want – read it, publish it, put it on CD-ROM, change it. Public domain works can serve as the foundation for new creative works and can be quoted extensively. They can also be copied and distributed to classes or digitized and placed on course Web pages without permission or paying royalties.

Public domain content will not cost you a dime, and if you want to, you can reprint and sell however you want without having to pay a copyright holder any penalties. Public domain is used to help webmasters who find writing articles tedious, and researching for their articles too much work. The best part is that public domain materials are not restricted to textual based content, but cover images and sounds as well. If you need lots of content, it never hurts to go through this channel to fill up your information database.

A comprehensive list of public domain sites…

Tip #5: Technorati

Technorati is a search engine that indexes blogs. It is for blogs what Google is for the rest of the webas it is the #1 place to go when searching for a topic of interest. It lets you looks for trends, patterns and entries by different people on similar topics or issues. The index will try to capture changes in the blogosphere that are relevant to people who are searching through the blogs. The results should deliver relevant results from authoritative sources, not just from any random sources.

Technorati is a real-time engine that tracks, measures, and ranks authority of blogs based on how they’re interlinked. Its content is more user-generated (people follow their favorites) as anything else and is used in a similar fashion to RSS. However in order for it to follow a webpage an RSS feed is not required. This blog search engine is very famous with bloggers and visitors to find information through other blogs out there.

Having such a huge Blog and RSS database, it’s without a doubt a place you must jump into to harvest further information that you need for your articles, blog, websites, emails, etc.

Check it out…

Tip #4: RSS Directories

RSS directories are popular these days, given the fact that RSS is widely used initially by news sites to allow others to syndicate their news stories. RSS directories can be immensely powerful, with lots of information from various topics, ranging from automobiles to diving. Most RSS directories categorize the large number of RSS data feeds available to make it easier for everybody to find and subscribe to the content one is interested in. One might opt to gather all these information through some freely available RSS aggregators out there. 

Some of the best, most used RSS directories can be found at this site…