The publishing business model is undergoing a transformation. More and more digital content creators supplement their advertising dollars with revenue directly from the reader through “digital products” – for example, content behind a paywall (known as “paid digital memberships”), webinars, ecourses, ebooks, etc.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.
In the world of tech, there has been a lot of news about the rise of chatbots and why people should care. Picture yourself asking a chatbot on Facebook or Slack, “Remind me to schedule a tweet about our product launch” or “Tell me what keywords our #1 competitor is raking for.”
What’s crazy is these already exist, and the potential for new bots to change the way we work and live is enormous.