Note: This article is based in part on the book Non-Obvious: How to Think Different, Curate Ideas and Predict the Future.*

Nearly three years ago, the world learned the story of a retired postal worker who had quietly amassed one of the greatest collections of modern art in the world.

Herbert Vogel and his wife, Dorothy, were already legends in the world of art when Herbert passed away in 2012 at the age of 89. News stories the day after his death told the story of five large moving vans showing up at the Vogel's rent-controlled, one-bedroom New York apartment to pick up more than 5,000 pieces of art. The Vogel Collection, built over decades, would have a permanent home as part of the archives and collection at the National Gallery of Art.

The Vogels had always said the only thing they did was to buy and collect art they loved.

That passion often led them to find new young artists to support before the rest of the world discovered them. The Vogels ultimately became more than collectors. They were tastemakers. And their "fabled collection," as one critic later described it, which included art from hundreds of artists, including pop artist Roy Lichtenstein and post-minimalist Richard Tuttle, was the envy of museums around the world.

The same qualities that drive art patrons like the Vogels to follow their instincts and collect beautiful things are the ones that make great curators.

Museum curators organize collections into themes that tell stories. Individual curators create stories by collecting ideas or items they have a passion for. Either way, the goal of curation is always taking individual items and examples and weaving them together into a narrative.

In other words, curation adds meaning to isolated beautiful things.

I am inspired by curators—and it is a relevant idea for marketing. The business world has been increasingly turning toward curation as a way to add meaning to marketing. I often describe it as the forgotten side of content marketing.

Amid all the discussion about creating great content, who will take on the valuable role of just helping us to find the great content that already exists on the Web or otherwise?

Curators can solve the problem, and they come from all types of backgrounds.

Some focus on art and design while others may look to history or anthropology. Some have professional training and degrees, and others are driven by passion (like Herbert and Dorothy Vogel).

No matter their background, every one of them exhibits the same types of habits that help them to become masters at adding meaning to noise.

Among the greatest skills any of us can have is the curating of ideas—and if we want to learn how to do it, we must practice five essential habits.

The Five Habits of Curators


From NON-OBVIOUS: How to Think Different, Curate Ideas
and Predict the Future

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These Five Essential Habits of Curators Will Make You a Smarter Marketer

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Rohit Bhargava

Rohit Bhargava is the best-selling author of five marketing books, including Likeonomics and the newly released Non-Obvious: How to Think Different, Curate Ideas and Predict the Future. The founder of consultancy Influential Marketing Group, Rohit is also a popular "non-obvious" keynote speaker and an adjunct professor of marketing at Georgetown University.

LinkedIn: Rohit Bhargava

Twitter: @rohitbhargava