Polyvore Blogger x iFabbo Blogger Workshop Event Recap

This week I attended a blogger workshop thrown by Polyvore and iFabbo (an international organization for fashion, beauty, and lifestyle bloggers) at La Boutique (an adorable store in San Francisco’s Jackson Square).

The event was focused on making sure fashion bloggers understood how easy the site is to use for posts. With millions of site users uploading millions of sets (digital collages), what better place to be inspired or create inspiration?

Presentation introduction
With Lona (and my favorite jacket in the room) of StylePal.com
With the adorable Santina, of StylebySantina.com (and ModCloth!)
Some of the gang with Eugenia from Polyvore

I’ve used Polyvore a few different ways, including most recently running an HP sponsored contest and creating a post series (steampunk themed) for Pretty Innovative.

How do you use Polyvore?

Digital Fashion Trend: Content Curation

I’ve recently been involved in two conversations about curated content; discussing how it works, if it works, and if it’s the next big thing. I’ve also noticed that some of my favorite go-to fashion sites have content curated by their users. And just a few days ago, e-tailer Rue La La released a customer curated boutique. Fans of the brand’s Facebook page had the opportunity to vote for their favorite picks, which were then displayed on the Rue La La website.

Needless to say, this is one hot topic of conversation in 2011.

Defining Content Curation

An article I found from online marketing blog TopRank, includes insights about curated content by 10 thought leaders.

Paul Gillin, Consultant and Author of The New Influencers and Secrets of Social Media Marketing, defined content curation as, “the process of assembling, summarizing and categorizing and interpreting information from multiple sources in a context that is relevant to a particular audience”. He went on to suggest that this will be “absolutely essential” to content marketing’s future because of how media is evolving.

Another point discussed in the article was about who should curate the content. David Meerman Scott, author of New Rules of Marketing & PR and World Wide Rave said, “… the challenge is how can you do it in a way that’s interesting. You have to make a decision: Do you let the machines do the aggregation and the selection or do you let humans do the selection. It’s a huge decision, humans or machines.” What Scott was referring to of course, is the aggregation of data that sites like Expedia and Google have been doing for years.

I agree with both thought leaders. Content curation has to have some human element involved to work properly, otherwise the data is really just as aggregated as it has been for years. And, in age where you can quickly bookmark your favorite articles and post live updates from events from Twitter categorized by hashtags, the online world is only getting increasingly full of “stuff”. It is becoming increasingly important to implement savvy ways of sifting through the clutter to find and organize the information you really want.

Since online content is forever growing in volume, and the media landscape is expanding far beyond traditional publications (New York Times, Elle, etc.) to user generated content, it may be only a matter of time before the “go-to” sites for news (and online fashion inspiration) are more often than not, curated sites.

Curated Fashion Sites
Everlane: This site brings creative thinkers with good taste together. Each creative has a profile page, which shows their favorite menswear items found across the web. The company’s next step is to launch a store, for which these people will choose what’s actually sold. According to the site’s About Me page, they aim to bring boutique shopping online.

Paper.li (The Pretty Innovative Scoop): Paper.li lets Twitter users turn their newspapers into digital newspapers. While my paper, The Pretty Innovative Scoop, shows content that select people in the fashion and tech scene tweet, there are a growing number of fashion related digital papers, like the popular The Fashion-Tweets Daily.

Polyvore: This site is an online social shopping hub where users can bring in content from across the web to create “sets”, namely fashion looks. With 6.5 million monthly unique visitors, Polyvore is chock full of creative styling ideas that can be found in the form of digital collage.

Club Monaco’s CM Culture Club:Retail brand Club Monaco created this addition to their site about eight months ago so that each month, employees around the globe could share photos of their favorite styles, foods, and people. The page also features content added by well respected industry thought leaders in fields such as fashion and media.

Things to Think About

  • Can content be fully curated electronically after initial setup is complete?
  • Do all of the above sites fit within the scope of what curated content is all about?
  • How do you feel that curated content will fit into the media landscape in one year from now?
  • What other fashion websites curate content in a unique way?

Polyvore’s Blogger Network Gets a Mini Makeover

Hey fashion bloggers, if you haven’t heard, Polyvore has upped the ante on set embed options so you can resize your sets before posting on your blog. And, the Polyvore Blogger Network now has a new home on the Polyvore site so bloggers can keep up to date on blog related developments.

As a member of the Polyvore Blogger Network, I’ve been added to their email list about blogger specific contests and information about upcoming meetups (when’s the next one in San Francisco?!).

After five years, Polyvore has 6.5 million unique visitors per month who create a plethora of digital collages featuring a super wide range of brands, celebrity style icons, and much beloved fashion bloggers.

Connect with me on Polyvore so we can inspire each other.

Polyvore Introduces The Mini Editor… and a Chance to Win $1,000!

Polyvore, a social shopping site for digital collage enthusiasts, just introduced The Mini Editor. If we haven’t met, you probably haven’t heard me talk about this site yet, so first, let me explain what it is. Based in Mountain View, California, Polyvore is a “virtual styling” website that claims to have over 6 million users who’ve created more than 20 million fashion sets (and I believe it!). Every time I log in, I see the top trending sets others have made, works that my contacts have created, and new items from brands of all price points (from Target to Ralph Lauren).

So now, what’s The Mini Editor? It’s a new tool that Polyvore just introduced, that lets you create sets right here on my blog using some of my favorite items.


Even cooler? You have a chance to win $1,000 towards your fall wardrobe (thanks, Visa!) by entering the Fall Wardrobe Styling Challenge. Just create a set on here and you’re entered. Here are the official rules about how we’ll help each other out.


http://www.polyvore.com/cgi/embed?font_family=Arial%2C%20Helvetica%2C%20sans-serif&font_size=12&lid=582359&link_color=%230088CC&oid=942103&sig=75683445d60f1468b72d0852544b9153&size=536×570&title=The%20Mini%20Editor&uuid=3CLrWSGv3xGP9uKAdrrQYQ
Powered by Polyvore