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Michael De Monte declares war on newspapers. And Twitter.

Tuesday, October 9th, 2012

In the second of the two-parts, ScribbleLive co-founder and CEO discusses media in the digital age and why he hates live tweeting

The technology business is unforgiving. Change moves quickly and businesses that don’t keep up won’t survive. Michael De Monte has made a point of not only staying ahead of the curve, but driving change. “I helped hammer the nails into the coffin of the typesetter industry in the early 80s,” he says. The CEO and co-founder of content management and publishing company ScribbleLive has been on the cutting edge of new media for more than 30 years and has no intention of slowing down. Born and bred in Toronto, De Monte was involved in desktop publishing before it revolutionized the publishing industry, and was working on Internet start-ups before slick browsers and search engines made the web accessible to school children and mommy bloggers.

After De Monte’s stint with CTVGlobe Media’s online production team, two things became clear; the proliferation of the social web meant that readers with increasingly short attention spans demanded more coverage of breaking news and events at exponentially greater speeds and newsrooms did not have the resources to meet those needs. As a result, outlets that were fighting to keep up with the changing media landscape looked to crowd-sourced content on platforms such as Twitter to fill the void.

This, according to DeMonte, is where online outlets went wrong. “The news-consuming public demands real-time updates of breaking news stories but they are hungry for authoritative, quality content,” says De Monte. “They are not interested in uninformed rumors that online editors pull in from Twitter to fill the white space in reporting. Consumers are looking for content that offers value, and if they’re not getting it from traditional news sources, they will look elsewhere.”

That is why De Monte and his business partner Jonathan Keebler created ScribbleLive and the Syndication Marketplace, which allows online outlets to syndicate news content from expert sources in real-time.
“We are not a technology company,” says De Monte. “The minute we call ourselves a technology company, we’re dead. We’re a content delivery company. We offer news organizations the opportunity to contextualize and monetize authoritative coverage of globally significant events as they happen, and measure engagement with that content to the second.”

That same lack of accurate measurement, authority and ability to monetize content is exactly why De Monte is taking on platforms such as Twitter as a source for news.
“I can’t understand why a news organization would ever allow one of its journalists to live-tweet,” says De Monte. “Live tweeting does nothing to drive page views; it functions only to build the journalists’ personal brand capital. Media outlets need to focus on building their own brands in order to survive.”

De Monte believes that effective media companies can use Twitter, Facebook and the like to give a nugget of information that drives readers back to their websites for the full real-time coverage. “All of those eyeballs staring at Twitter streams  are not monetizable,” says De Monte.  “Content producers need to understand this.”

Original Content is King & Michael De Monte is the Kingmaker – Part 1

Monday, October 1st, 2012

In a two-part profile, ScribbleLive co-founder and CEO gives his frank appraisal of media in the social age and his very unCanadian vision on how they can adapt to survive (and conquer).

When asked to give the Reader’s Digest version of his life, Michael De Monte, CEO and co-founder of the Canadian content management company ScribbleLive says simply, “We are awesome.” He is not shy about advocating for his business, nor is he afraid to offend when outlining why media outlets need to abandon the Social ship and look to authoritative voices to fill the content gap. De Monte created ScribbleLive to do just that.

The self-taught entrepreneur with more than 30 years of experience in the ever evolving content and new media space, founded ScribbleLive with his business partner Jonathan Keebler in 2008. Their technology enables online publications and corporate clients to create, publish and syndicate real-time news and information through a digital medium, creating a rich user experience for their digital and mobile readers. Some of the biggest news agencies in the world including Reuters, AP, CBS  and CNN use the ScribbleLive’s platform to push original, real-time coverage of the days’ most important news.

De Monte doesn’t deny that a sound digital strategy is critical to success for news organizations. In fact, as the one-time Director of Online Production for CTVGlobe Media, one of Canada’s largest privately owned media conglomerates, De Monte was the standard bearer for change in the early days of the social web. He does, however, think that most traditional publications are using the online space ineffectively.

“When the social web started to encroach on newspaper sales, publications rushed to platforms like Facebook and Twitter without any real strategy,” says De Monte. By doing so, many publications have made two Internet-sized tactical errors; they rely too heavily on crowd-sourced content and they have stalled in their quest to monetize social and owned platforms.

“The publications that continue to struggle as the online news industry matures are the ones that allow digital experts to dictate social strategy instead of allowing editorial staff to drive real-time content and provide their sales team with new opportunities. It is not enough to engage readers on Twitter; outlets must find a way to monetize those interactions. The publications that do this successfully will thrive in the digital age; the ones that do not will disappear.”

ScribbleLive allows online publications to do exactly that. By using our Syndication Marketplace, content producers have the opportunity to create real-time content and provide new revenue streams, and content consumers can offer readers original, authoritative coverage as it happens.

Recently Mashable syndicated their coverage of the Apple iPhone 5 announcement more than 80 media outlets around the world, extending their brand while receiving outlets were able to provide coverage of an event that would have been otherwise unavailable, or worse, based coverage on unreliable social fodder.

ScribbleLive is poised to create a new ecosystems of content creators, distributors, brands and journalists that emphasize original, real-time content.

ScribbleLive and The Associated Press partner to offer real-time news platform and services

Wednesday, September 19th, 2012

San Francisco, September 19, 2012 – ScribbleLive, a leader in real-time content creation,

publishing and syndication, announced today that it will offer a version of its LiveSyndication
platform in collaboration with The Associated Press that will enable digital publishers to present
new forms of real-time news coverage.

The AP edition of ScribbleLive’s LiveSyndication technology will allow publishers to access
live content from the news agency and also produce live coverage of their own. The platform
provides editorial workflow and publishing options that are expressly designed for real-time
delivery of news.

“We were excited to work closely with AP to develop a platform that meets their unique
challenges as a global leader in news and reporting,” says Michael De Monte, CEO of
ScribbleLive. “This new platform gives AP and its customers the opportunity to be forerunners
in the real-time news and content revolution. It’s just one example of how our innovative
technologies, such as LiveSyndication, are helping major brands reach their audiences on a
global scale.”

AP has participated in the development of the ScribbleLive platform and intends to offer
new services to its customers based on the platform’s real-time functionality. In contrast to
conventional news coverage, where developments are captured and delivered in story form,
the new platform enables a running style of coverage where developments can be reported and
delivered incrementally as news unfolds.

“This is a great combination of innovative thinking from both companies,” said Jim Kennedy,
senior vice president for digital products at AP. “It will help us and our customers fill in the gaps
that exist in traditional coverage and give digital news consumers an even more immediate view
of stories as we cover them.”

The two companies said they expect to offer packages that include both access to the platform
and live coverage from AP. ScribbleLive also offers access to the platform separately to news
publishers worldwide.

In the coming weeks, ScribbleLive and AP will offer a series of webinars to AP subscribers to
introduce the platform and the coverage it enables. AP also plans to create new services to be
featured on the platform as it rolls out. The platform and content packages will be offered with
both ad-supported and licensing subscription models.

About ScribbleLive
Driven by the growing demand for real-time news and event coverage, ScribbleLive has
established itself as the market leader in real-time content with a feature-rich platform that
powers liveblogging, real-time journalism and on-the-fly storytelling. We also create new
revenue opportunities for news organizations through content syndication and advertising to
drive billions of real-time updates each month for hundreds of major digital sites, corporations
and NGOs around the world.
ScribbleLive is a privately owned company based in Toronto, Canada. Its investors include
Summerhill Venture Partners and Rogers Ventures.
More information about ScribbleLive can be found at www.scribblelive.com

About The Associated Press

The Associated Press is the essential global news network, delivering fast, unbiased news from
every corner of the world to all media platforms and formats. Founded in 1846, AP today is the
largest and most trusted source of independent news and information. On any given day, more
than half the world’s population sees news from AP. On the Net: https://www.apvideohub.com
and www.ap.org

For more information contact:
Sean Rosenthal
ScribbleLive
416-364-8118 x 2090
sean@scribblelive.com

ScribbleLive named one of Canada’s top new growth companies

Friday, August 31st, 2012

PROFIT Magazine has announced their 13th annual hot 50 list earlier this week, highlighting Canada’s growing young companies. The list was ranked according to the latest two-year revenue growth, we came in at #6 with a growth revenue growth of 1,061%.

Some of the stats are out of date now: we currently have 42 employees and have opened a new office in the United Kingdom, in addition to our original office in Toronto. We were all incredibly excited about the news and have been passing PROFIT’s glossy pages around the office. Our CEO, Michael De Monte, was also delighted, stating “it’s a real honour to appear in the top 10 of Profit’s Top 50 new growth companies in Canada. We have a great team and 2013 promises to be even better”.

We look forward to making the cut next year and continue to be one of Canada’s top growth companies.

No limits: ScribbleLive featured in the Financial Post

Monday, August 27th, 2012

ScribbleLive founder and CEO Michael De Monte was interviewed by the Financial Post last week for a story on varying levels of free services within larger companies. ScribbleLive was mentioned as working with customers who are taking part in our free trial period to provide value and give them an idea of the powerful features of the platform.

Michael had this to say about ScribbleLive’s trial period, and how it benefits our customers:

“For one month, you get absolute access to the technology with no limitations,” he said. “Sometimes we even reach out to the customers that are testing and turn on more services.

“We’ve found that this model is a much, much better place to position ourselves and convince customers to go to a paid model.”

If you yourself are interested in one of our full-featured free trials, you can sign up here.