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5 Reasons Why Your Site
Needs to Publish a News Feed
By Tinu AbayomiPaul (c) 2004
It seems like everyone is talking
about RSS Feeds. They've been around for years but the buzz is
up about them as the technology continues to go mainstream. Some
people are reportedly abandoning their browsers and viewing the
web through their readers - but they hardly represent the
general public yet.
So does your site need one?
This question is somewhat like asking if your
site needs a newsletter. Sure, the sky won't fall tomorrow if
you don't get one today, but once you realize the benefits of
having a news feed for your site, and try it for yourself, you
may become an addict like the rest of us.
Reason #1: More frëe traffïc to your site.
I'm not exaggerating when I say that a
frequently updated feed can bring you massive amounts of traffïc
in a short time period. This won't be true forever.
Here's a
snapshot in PDF format, of just the feed-originating traffïc
to a new page of my site for the first 24 hours it opened.
Not exactly a stampede, but here's the good
part.
On the fourth day, the feed traffïc doubled,
and all other traffïc continued to rise at the same rate.
That's my fifth active feed of the twenty I
have spread out over four sites, and I get similar results each
time. In thirty days, that would be at least 5,000 new targeted
visitors - again, this is not counting my present traffïc, or
those who try my feed and stay subscribed, nor does it factor in
what happens when the traffïc doubles again.
I can't promise you the exact same results, no
one can. But you should know that my feed is targeted towards a
crowded market - if you know how to set up your feed properly
and correctly apply your keyword research, you could have better
results.
Those visitors, from the first hour of traffïc
to today, resulted just from submitting my feed to the list of
directories I compiled from many sources and studied. Some bring
great frëe traffïc to new feeds, some are better once your feed
has matured.
You can often get better placement in feed
directories and in Yahoo's RSS Directory than you could from
your results in a regular search engine, and often, inclusion is
instant.
Reason #2: It's a hands-off way to update
your audience.
What if you could run your newsletter without
the hassles of maintaining your list, removing bounced
addresses, finding new subscribers, formatting the content you
find, altering your content to keep from being blacklisted, and
after all that, wondering if all the various blockers mistakenly
kept your message from getting through?
If that sounds like heaven, you can be one of
the angels as soon as an hour from now.
When you supplement your current newsletter
with more frequent updates via feed, you will be able to push
out updates to subscribers to your news channel or feed more
frequently and more efficiently.
With all the new frëe tools available, even if
you're all thumbs when it comes to making a web page, if you can
fill out a 'form', you can create a feed.
Reason #3: Get visitors to clïck through to
your site whenever you update
If you haven't used a feed reader before, you
might be confused about the connection between the feed and your
site and why it can result in an increase in traffïc. I'll
attempt to explain this to you in words, but I suggest
downloading a news aggregator (also known as a feed reader), and
looking at the results of your favorite site's feed through a
reader after you read this for the full effect.
You can use
my main
feed if you don't have one to view.
If you don't want to have another application
up while you're surfing, you can try Pluck , a frëe application
you can use for more than just feeds that integrates with
Internet Explorer - get it at
http://freetrafficdirectory.com/pluck - it will take you
right to the downloads page.
You can also do this from
My Yahoo!, by changing your page to include their RSS
Headlines console, still in Beta testing.
To summarize, visitors see the headlines they
want to read, view the summary, and click-through to your site
to read the rest of the news, either in a new window, or without
having to leave the application they are in.
And when you update again, the reader will
notify them that you have new headlines, and/or populate the
list of items you have available. This can keep your audience
coming back.
If you had trouble following that, come to
this page for a one minute tutorial:
http://www.freetrafficdirectory.com/members/postt95.html
Reason #4: Recycle old content.
If you have a list of your older articles,
some older product reviews, site suggestions, or archived
newsletters, you can use those to build content to populate your
feed with information. As long as this news is still relevant,
you can recycle this content to attract new visitors.
Reason #5: Its so easy it's crazy not to do
it.
Before the last few months, there weren't as
many frëe tools online that made the process of starting and
publicizing a feed so effective and user-friendly.
The bottom line is, now that you can get all
those benefits from filling out a form, saving the file,
uploading to your server, promoting it once, and updating it
from time to time, it's insane not to do so.
You already have to update your site from time
to time. You might as well get all the benefits of having a news
feed too.
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