Aside from embedding cute cat videos in every story, it’s a delicate process to figure out what content does well across social networks. As this year comes to a close, we decided to take a look at the Washington Business Journals stories that did well across three popular networks: Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
The results were a definite surprise. Each network attracted a mix of stories from our coverage areas this year. While big events were popular on each platform, there wasn’t much overlap.
Here’s a look at the WBJ’s top 10 stories from Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn:
- Washington and Lee University to offer free tuition to some
- The Delta Theta Sigma convention, by the numbers
- Closing the door on the master bedroom
- Rumors files for Chapter 11
- GMU to shutter Mason Inn
- 10 CEOs you should follow on Twitter
- The ugliest church in D.C. will be knocked down
- Gallaudet University to launch $450M campus plan
- National Harbor scrambling to adjust to life without water
- Shoes Cup and Cork closed, up for sale
- Scenes from the Navy Yard Shooting
- Top 10 jobs for college graduates in 2013
- Stadium Club makes it rain: Bill paid, lien lifted
- A glimpse inside the new interior of the Old Post Office
- The ugliest church in D.C. will be knocked down
- D.C. police nix House of Cards motorcade shoot
- Michael Saylor on the iPhone5s, mobile ID and the new biometric war
- D.C. laughs at Nationals $300m roof pitch
- Three more large retailers bail on living wage bill
- Jack Nicklaus to take up residence in Loudoun County
- CSC looking to dump 1 million square feet of space
- What can General Motors CEO Daniel Akerson teach you about leadership?
- Layoffs arrive at BlackBoard
- Rebuliding BlackBoard: How Jay Bhatt plans to resurrect one of D.C. tech’s original startups
- Contract missteps could cause major troubles for VAs small business contracting program
- Tour Choice Hotels’ new Rockville headquarters
- Microstrategy tackles Tableau with free data visualization
- Transportation Department faces huge shortfall in acquisition workforce
- Why Cigna isn’t joining Md., D.C. health exchanges