The
7 Steps to Promoting Your RSS Feeds on Your Website
RSS
gets 100% of your content delivered, but it’s no good if no one
subscribes to your feeds.
So
your first order of business after planning and creating your feeds
has to be promoting them to your visitors.
The
only problem is that most internet users still don’t know what RSS
is, so you do have your work cut out for. But using the system
outlined below you shouldn’t have any problems. Actually, after
implementing this system, you should be achieving better results than
the majority of publishers out there.
1.
HOW RSS FEEDS ARE GENERALLY PROMOTED
RSS
feeds are generally promoted using the orange XML or RSS buttons, and
often also with buttons that enable visitors to subscribe directly to
the feed with their RSS reader.
Usually,
if clicking on the RSS button, the visitor only sees a lot of
confusing XML code. They in fact need to copy & paste the link in
to their RSS reader. But since most still don’t know what RSS is,
using this approach will only waste potential subscribers.
To
achieve success, you’ll need a different approach.
A]
Create an RSS presentation page, on which you explain:
-
What RSS is
-
How the visitor will benefit from using RSS
-
Where they can get a free RSS aggregator (recommend one yourself!)
-
How they can install it (provide step-by-step instructions)
-
How they can subscribe to your RSS feeds
-
Why they should subscribe to your own RSS feeds
Then,
on this same page, include the links to all of your RSS feeds.
In
addition to the standard orange RSS button, also include direct links
for subscriptions via MyYahoo! (get it
herehttp://my.yahoo.com/s/button.html)
and other relevant services, such as Bloglines
(http://www.bloglines.com).
There are about 5 RSS readers you should cover with these buttons.
B]
Now promote this RSS presentation page as much as you can using all
of your available channels.
2.
LOCATION AND CONTENT
It’s
all about location, just like with the subscription box for your
e-zine. If they don’t see it, they won’t subscribe. And if you
don’t motivate them enough to check-it out, they’ll just ignore
it.
A]
Promote your RSS feeds directly below your e-zine subscription box,
and always 'above the fold'. Promote your RSS presentation page
(telling your visitors that’s where they can subscribe to your
feeds) on the most prominent locations of your site.
B]
If you’re publishing more than one RSS feed, but rather a couple of
focused topic feeds, promote each of them next to their topics. For
instance, if you’re publishing an RSS feed on E-mail Marketing,
promote the RSS feed at the top of the topic home page, and in every
E-mail Marketing article you publish. These links should actually be
direct subscriptions links to the feeds.
Use
this service to cover all of the important readers using just one
simple button: http://www.methodize.org/quicksub/
C]
Promote your RSS feeds in all of your e-mail messages and e-zine
issues.
D]
As for the content, don’t just say 'Subscribe to receive news from
my site', but rather prepare compelling copy to specifically show
your visitors why they need to subscribe to your content in the first
place and why they should subscribe specifically to your RSS feeds.
3.
ENABLE AUTO-DISCOVERY
Some
internet browsers, such as Firefox, make it easy for their users to
subscribe to RSS feeds. The browser actually asks the user if he
wants to subscribe to the feeds the browser finds on the site the
user is currently on.
Yes,
this is even more powerful than your e-mail subscription form, since
the browser in a way 'pushes' the user with your RSS feed
subscription.
But
in order for the browser to do this, you need to help it out to find
your RSS feed.
Just
include the following piece of HTML code in the section of your
webpages and you’ll be all set:
<link
rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml"
title="RSS" href="ENTER_RSS_URL">
There
are many more techniques and opportunities available to you, from
'direct subscribe' links to actually using opt-in forms, but these 7
steps should get you started in the shortest time possible, and help
you achieve a better visitor-to-RSS-subscriber conversion rate than
the huge majority of sites are achieving today.
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