What Is RSS?
By Kim Bloomer
Recently I did an interview with a well known
email Internet Marketer. He wanted to share with his readers a
viewpoint on what RSS is from someone who is using it in place of
traditional email marketing. Of course this interview was geared
towards other Internet marketers so they all somewhat “get” what
RSS is, at least in theory.
So, what IS RSS? Again, I find myself laughing, as
I did in that interview because I’m fairly new to this RSS
business myself. RSS is really an acronym for REALLY SIMPLE
SYNDICATION – well at least that’s ONE definition and the one I
tend to use.
Many people have heard the word syndication tossed
around in other media venues, but not when it comes to the Internet
until recently. Although RSS has been around for quite some time, it
is finally coming into the mainstream like a snowball rolling
downhill growing and gathering momentum.
Why? And really, what is RSS? First of all
everyone who uses the Internet either in business, personal use, or
both, have all come into contact with spam, viruses, spam laws, and
heard a lot about it in the media.
This whole mess has been extremely frustrating to
those who make a living using the Internet, especially by direct
email marketing methods.
A lot of “fixes” have been tried and are being
implemented to try and combat the ever growing frustration and
hassle associated with delivering email newsletters to subscribers.
This is where the “why” comes into play with RSS. Before I tell
you what RSS is, let me explain a bit about email newsletter
marketing.
Normally an email newsletter is sent out to a
“list” by those who have supposedly opted in, or requested, to
receive that newsletter. In fact, most list managers now require
double opt-in.
“Double opt-in” is just a way of saying you
signed up for the newsletter, then received an email asking you to
“verify” your subscription – the sender wants to make doubly
certain you are the one who signed up for that newsletter.
You were sent the verification email by an “autoresponder”.
An autoresponder is an automatic email sent to you by a service the
sender uses and pays for to handle verification and other responses
to subscribers. That is done to alleviate having to send out a
personal email to every single subscriber which could become
extremely tedious and time-consuming otherwise.
Still problems persist, because after all of that
many subscribers still “forget” they signed up and file spam
complaints, which can lead to investigations, IP bans and even
shutdown and confiscation of all related lists, websites and
software.
Granted, there are some mass-mailers out there who
deserve this, but the typical newsletter publisher is trying to
deliver helpful, desired content and guards their list very
carefully. If you’re fortunate enough to get your newsletter
through to your subscribers, what happens then?
Well, typically, once a subscriber receives your
newsletter, they read it and then naturally delete it once they’re
done reading it. So, you, the email marketer and publisher have gone
to all the trouble to put together a newsletter, comply with the
spam laws, etc., only to have your hard work deleted all the while
dealing with spam issues, paying for list management services and/or
paying for autoresponder service.
A much better, more viral method of online
marketing can be done with an RSS feed. Let me explain that in terms
that we can all understand (me included!):
Whenever we watch a television series, that series
is called syndicated programming. The series is produced once,
filmed once, and then put out to all the subsidiary stations across
the country airing on the same day at the same time according to
each time zone. So, the work is done once but duplicated all across
the nation on hundreds of affiliate television stations.
RSS on the Internet works on the same concept. You
input the “work” once, and every single website that carries
your syndication code then receives the information you just input
once. As you update your feeds those feeds are automatically updated
on every single website that has your syndication code.
Another upside to this is that your news does not
get deleted by the reader – only you can delete it! Another plus
is every website that carries your code gets regular content
provided whenever you update your feed automatically. This all keeps
those hungry search engines happy too.
So, you provide the content you want to market to
your subscribers by providing them the links to your RSS feed from
your website, meaning you don’t have to send that out by email
either.
You can have your code posted on your website for
anyone to read, and also offer it to webmasters to input into the
websites they manage. No link swapping is necessary in this case
either as links are not viral like syndication code.
It’s the difference between offering someone a
Lear jet in place of a horse. It’s much better to offer your
syndication code in a “swap”.
So, now you’ve avoided the spam hassle because
anyone reading your feed is doing so willingly and you have not sent
them anything by email so no subscription is necessary.
You are providing content so not only are your
readers happy, your website is happy, other webmasters are happy
because you’re providing consistent content without them doing a
thing, and you’ve only done the work ONCE!
No one is deleting any of your work, except you if
you choose. Your work is also staying on the Internet forever. The
search engines are way happy too!
So, before you start that email newsletter
campaign, why not consider an RSS feed instead? It can be a much
more dynamic option for you!
Kim Bloomer publishes several RSS channels using
the Quikonnex system. Kim and Cathy built and manage the
International Virtual Women’s Chamber of Commerce (IVWCC) RSS
channel. For more details on what she does and to subscribe to her
RSS channels go to http://KimBloomer.com
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