The Internet has made it possible for everyone to access data easily. Whether you want to know how much the Ex-PM of Italy is paying his wife in alimony (recently reduced from 3 million Euro a month to a mere 1.4m, that’s how much), what a particularly frugal British princess wore in 1983, 1991 and then again in 2011 (no, I am not letting the cat out of the bag), or who played the most 100+ yard rushing games in the AFC (Barry Foster, duh!) – the Internet has the answer. The Internet has become so synonymous with data that
Via janlgordon
I selected this article from Curatti written by Avinash Nair because it explains how fact checking has gone from just journalism to just about every industry.
Use data journalism to help your business understand emerging trends and industry changes.
How Your Brand Can Better Use Data
As a business it's important to understand both analytics and tracking. I agree that in order to be effective you need to use the same methods that journalists have done in their research.
Nair explains exactly what data journalism is and what this means for your business information discovery process.
Here's what caught my attention:
Selected by Jan Gordon for Curatti covering Curation, Social Business and Beyond
Image: Courtesy of Vanity Fair.
Read full article here: http://ow.ly/JOhq305zJ7j
Stay informed on trends, insights, what's happening in the digital world become a Curatti Insider today