Five of the Most Popular Types of Flipboard Magazine
There are two questions would-be MagMakers often ask:
a) What’s the best way to use a Flipboard magazine?
b) Are there models I should look at for guidance on how to curate a great Flipboard magazine?
Truth is, you can use Flipboard magazines to curate and share content in a potentially infinite number of ways. You can also create as many Flipboard magazines as you’d like, so don’t hesitate to experiment.
That said, we’ve noticed that Flipboard magazines come in a few common varieties defined by how the MagMaker relates to their magazine and what they intend to do with it. Here are the five main types of Flipboard magazine we see:
1) The CollectionMag
A CollectionMag is a place to save and organize content that relates to your own hobbies, interests, or passions. The items you add to a CollectionMag may be interesting, or useful, or relevant, or inspiring, or worth revisiting later, but first and foremost, it’s material you curate for yourself — although if anyone else happens to enjoy it, that’s fine too.
For example, Poonammaj really likes soup. She equates it with warmth, comfort and a whole lot of happy things — and it’s always delivered in a bowl containing tasty broth. So when Poonammaj creates a magazine about soup, it feels like a well-curated cookbook:
Dexterking’s “Style Inspiration” is his handsome look-book for men’s fashion ideas:
2) The ThemeMag
A ThemeMag curates content about a specific (and sometimes quirky) idea. ThemeMags are often visual or photo-driven, and they are intended for public sharing and consumption — preferably among like-minded enthusiasts. A ThemeMags is born when a magmaker notices a “particular kind of something” in the world, and the scope of that particular kind of something becomes more compelling or meaningful when you curate a lot of it, all in one place.
PixelArt is a ThemeMag about graphic artwork inspired by 8-bit videogames, and it is very comprehensive:
When one car’s wheels leave the ground, it’s interesting. But when you see a whole magazine of cars that have left the ground, you realize that perhaps some cars would rather to learn to fly:
3) The NewsMag
Think of these as curated news magazines or digital newsletters. NewsMags are meant for general consumption, and they provide a timely, ongoing feed of information for a specific community of readers. A NewsMag can be about a place, a topic, a business, a cause, a hobby, an industry, a brand or a band. NewsMags can include just about any kind of content, and many take advantage of the fact that Flipboard magazines can combine articles, photos, videos, and status updates all in one place.
Curated by a local travel website, Twin Falls Idaho magazine balances hard news with local recreation and lifestyle coverage:
“UX and Usability” provides trade-related information for design professionals:
4) The EventMag
These magazines document an event or experience. “We went here. We did that.” EventMags can combine perspectives, photos and videos from multiple participants or co-contributors. Although the period of active curation for an EventMag may be limited, the magazine itself can live on indefinitely as a shared scrapbook or souvenir.
“Graduation 2013” is a magazine created by the Spring Branch (Texas) Independent School District to commemorate the district’s graduation ceremonies:
In August 2013, Flipboard organized a meetup for San Francisco photographers. After spending 90 minutes exploring the city’s Chinatown; participants shared photos, and we co-curated a magazine to chronicle the event:
5) The UtilityMag
UtilityMags serve as convenient, mobile-friendly replacements for traditional print products: Educational course readers, portfolios, training manuals, brochures and the like. These magazines gather material with a functional purpose, and they are explicitly intended for widespread sharing. UtilityMags are often created by educators, marketers, realtors, creative professionals and managerial professionals.
CA SiteMinder Cookbook is a technical manual full of how-to articles about CA’s web access management tool:
To make it easy for potential clients to see his work, aspiring journalist Sam Richardson has collected a set of his articles into one portfolio magazine:
So there you have it: Five popular flavors of Flipboard magazine.
Of course, some magazines don’t fit neatly into any of these five types, and that’s a good thing. All that matters to us is that you use Flipboard magazines to collect and share the content that matters to you. Experiment. Innovate. Blow our minds. We’ll share the most interesting new ideas we see here.