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Raise Your Website Traffic with RSS - Blogs and
YAHOO! Part 2.
By Kamau Austin
In our first part of this article, we raised the question of whether
blogging and its distribution tool, RSS feeds, are really useful for
Internet and Search Engine Promotion. Are RSS feeds and blogs really the
next big thing in web marketing, distribution, and content creation—or
are they just hype?
There is a lot of hype around RSS, blogs, and derivative technologies
like podcasting. But are they really useful to the serious Internet
marketer or are they just the subjects used by marketers looking to
create new products to grab our hard-earned marketing dollars.
We also covered the objections and reservations from some Internet
marketers about the usefulness of RSS feeds and blogs to the bottom-line
of their ebusinesses. This can be contrasted to our discovery of people
like Willie Crawford and companies like Weblogs, which generate 6- and
7-figure incomes from blogs, RSS, and related technologies with Google
Adsense.
To illustrate if the typical Internet marketers—not just web gurus—can
benefit from blogs and RSS feeds, I promised to share my experiences
with my new sites not yet optimized for the search engines.
With virgin websites, I could observe the traffic pulling power of
blogging, pinging, and RSS. If you would like to read or familiarize
yourself with Part 1 of this article, you can read it at…
http://www.searchengineplan.com/articles/feb06-rss-prt1.htm
To test the effectiveness of the ability of RSS feeds and blogs to
attract and drive traffic to my web properties, I did some quick and
insightful research on the topic. Brandon Hong’s Marketing Rampage with
Blogs and RSS was the resource best enabled me to understand the
techno-jargon associated with blogs and RSS feeds. Believe me, I have a
10-year background in information technology, and I can’t make heads or
tails out of the alphabet soup served up by tech geeks on blog and RSS
media.
Plus, I run a very busy SEO consultancy and virtual real estate (VRE
Adsense™ and Affiliate Sites) side business, so I don’t have the time to
muck around in nebulous articles on these topics.
If you even remotely feel like me about the complexity of blogs or RSS,
do yourself a favor and obtain Brandon Hong’s multimedia ebook of
screen-capture videos.
You can read a full review of the book at…
http://www.searchengineplan.com/articles/hongrss.htm
I have been blogging for almost 3 years, but RSS feeds have been harder
to grasp in terms of development and marketing. The easiest way to start
blogging is to setup an account with
www.Blogger.com or
www.Bloglines.com. Blogger will actually walk you through the
process.
Experienced web designers should not have a problem setting up a
www.Blogger.com account. Blogger.com is actually a good initial
choice because it provides an easy setup for RSS feeds. The setup can be
done by going to the Settings Tab in Blogger, clicking the site feed
link, and filling out the forms.
The next issue to consider is the complex RSS compatibility issue. You
can sidestep the decision about whether to go with RSS version 2.0 or
Google’s Atom standard by “burning your RSS feed” or making them more
compatible with all popular RSS formats with a third party service like
Feedburner.com.
After creating your RSS feed in Blogger, you should have it burned in
the Feedburner.com service; it will guide you through the process. The
optimized Feedburner.com RSS feed is then ready to be submitted to the
major RSS directories.
I would suggest creating a few descriptions of your blog and then
submitting both your blog and RSS URLs to the appropriate RSS and blog
directories. My firm fast-tracks blog and RSS feed promotion by
submitting them to about 90 directories that specialize in this type of
media—including Yahoo! and MSN RSS content services.
Both the Blogger.com service and, more extensively, Feedburner.com can
be configured to ping the major RSS and blog directories. This means
they signal or alert these directories whenever you update posts on your
blog in real time. Perhaps most importantly, you get traffic statistics
about your RSS subscribers and readers.
The results of my RSS and blog traffic research over the last 3 months
are amazing! I have been totally blown away by the research. I am
excited about RSS and blog usage, despite the good and bad news:
The bad news: According to a White paper on blogging, sponsored in part
by Yahoo!, 88% of Internet users don’t know what RSS technology is and
96% of Internet users stated they do not use it!
The good news: 27% of Internet users experience RSS feed content on
their My Yahoo and MSN web accounts, although they don’t realize it!
Moreover, 4% of Internet users actively use RSS feeds. This means 31%,
or almost one-third (1/3), of Internet users in the U.S. read RSS feeds.
With almost 150 million U.S. Internet users and 600 million net users
worldwide, you do the math on the large numbers of people reading RSS
feeds even if unwittingly).
More positive stats on RSS and blog usage, according to the Pew Internet
& American life project:
- (1) Fully 19% of online Americans ages 18-29 have created blogs
- (2) 11 million American adults say they have created blogs
- (3) 27% of Internet users reported in November that they read blogs
This translates into 32 million American adults who read blogs
This information shows that RSS and blogs are growing technologies for
serious Internet business people to adapt into their marketing mix.
My personal research over three months showed that when I regularly
updated my blog sites, burned RSS feeds pinging the major directories
increased my traffic a whopping 25%!
Blogs, RSS feeds, and articles distributed regularly to major host sites
and distribution services actually rivaled the traffic of my highly
optimized top-ranking SEO and VRE sites. More importantly, traffic from
blog, RSS, and article-driven traffic actually made twice as much income
in sales and Adsense™ revenue than my traditional SEO sites.
Needless to say, once a skeptic, I am now a big believer in the power of
RSS feeds and blogs to boost my bottom-line. I will leave you with a
controversial statement for a SEO and Searchpreneur©.
Dr. Jakob Nielsen recently referred to search engines as “the leeches on
the Internet.” He feels “Search engines extract too much of the Web's
value, leaving too little for the websites that actually create the
content. Liberation from search dependency is a strategic imperative for
both websites and software vendors.”
With Yahoo! and MSN soon to enforce email postage, according to a recent
article by the New York Times, RSS and blogging may become the best and
latest arsenal for small business to continue to survive and thrive in
the Internet economy.
To stay informed on the latest blogging, RSS, and SEO developments,
visit
www.searchengineplan.com/blogs/seoblog.htm.
Kamau Austin is publisher of
www.eInfoNEWS.com and runs
www.SearchEnginePlan.com. He is author of Always On Top -- How to
Get the Highest Search Engine Ranking for your Website. See more about
his strategies at
www.AlwaysOnToptheBook.com.
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