Posts Tagged Feed
Social Media Marketing Tips – Adding an RSS Feed on Blogger
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on December 14, 2009
AdvancedIncome.com Social Media Marketing Tips – How To Add an RSS Feed To Your Blogger Blog Social media marketing is the process of marketing your site or business via social media. Social media is online media where news, photos, videos, and podcasts are made public via social media websites through sers. It’s generally with a voting process to make media items become “popular”. Social Media Marketing Expanded Definition Social Media marketing is the using of information that transforms …
YouTube RSS Feed Secret
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on November 28, 2009
ZeroDebtPartnership.com — YouTube RSS Feed Secret is a short video showing you exactly how to create RSS feeds of tagged YouTube videos with almost no effort.
Google Reader – Rss Feed Reader
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on November 27, 2009
www.thirtydaychallenge.com Google Reader is hands down the rest rss feed reader available. Find out why here: www.thirtydaychallenge.com
Adding An RSS Feed To A Drupal View
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on November 26, 2009
This tutorial shows you how to create an RSS Feed display using the Views module in Drupal 6.
Multiply Your Wordpress RSS Feed Power
wordpress site rock! I mean it is simply multiplying your efforts and it costs nothing. I have personally noticed a traffic spike just from the utilization of these multiple feeds and the ease of use for your website visitors is also a great benefit of using these wordpress blogging techniques. So go ahead and watch the video and learn how to setup multiple rss feeds for your wordpress blog today. To Success, Nick Simpson WebmasterBusinessPlan.com … wordpress rss feed “multiple feeds” blog …
Submit Your RSS Feed To RSS Directories
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on November 25, 2009
www.thirtydaychallenge.com Find out how submit your RSS Feed to the RSS Directories: www.thirtydaychallenge.com
What You’re Not Doing With Your RSS Feed
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on November 24, 2009
RSS feeds have yet to hit the mainstream, but they are
beginning to appear on prominent web sites including CNN, MSNBC,
Yahoo, and even Google. While many sites are now publishing
their own RSS feed, they fail to pursue the important step of
promoting it.
RSS feeds have been growing steadily in popularity throughout
the year. They have begun appearing on almost every news related
source, and now even corporate web pages. While more businesses
begin to cater to the opportunity of creating an RSS feed, many
do not fully understand their exact usage. It is as if
publishing an RSS feed will magically create traffic and pull
constant visitors to their site. Maybe they believe the web
search engine robots will pull and distribute the feeds.
However, the truth is that most major search engines today do
not yet incorporate RSS feeds into their main search engine
results. They may completely skip over the RSS feed link when
spidering a site. However, there is a world available that these
new RSS users are not yet aware of. It is the world of RSS
search engines.
As the major search engines continue collecting standard web
pages and try their best to keep updated with the new content,
the RSS search engines are quietly churning away on pings,
feeds, and new content by the second. They have a different way
of collecting feeds than the major search engines and their
users have a different way of sifting through the content.
Most RSS search engines require you to submit your RSS feed
directly to them. They will then begin spidering your content,
making it available for searches, and refreshing your feed as it
is updated. Users are flocking to the RSS search engines for new
content. With their RSS reader software tuned to specific
keywords in the search engines, they can now pour through much
more content than they previously could with a web browser. This
opens tremendous opportunities for your products and ideas to be
heard. RSS feed publishers should become fully aware of the
importance of RSS search engines in order to maximize the
results of their feed.
There are over 100 RSS search engines available and the number
grows each month. Submitting your RSS feed to each one is a
necessary task. From small search engines to large ones, each
one can provide you with potential RSS visitors and they
certainly add up. Promoting an RSS feed should be considered no
different than promoting a web site.
You may have created and published an RSS feed, but that doesn’t
mean people are actually reading it. Submit your feed to the RSS
search engines and watch your readers grow. Your web site
traffic is sure to follow.
About the Author: ksoft is a software company specializing in
Internet products, including RSS Submit http://www.dum
mysoftware.com/rsssubmit.html, software for submitting RSS
feeds, podcasts, and pinging blogs to over 65 RSS directories.
This article may be freely distributed on all forms of media so
long as it is published with the author source intact.
Resources: 1. Automated software for submitting RSS feeds,
podcasts, and blogs, http://www.dum
mysoftware.com/rsssubmit.html 2. Complete listing of RSS
submission sites, http:
//www.rss-specifications.com/rss-submission.htm 3. Software
to create, edit, and publish RSS feeds, http://www.feedforall.com
including RSS Submit http://www.dum
mysoftware.com/rsssubmit.html, software for submitting RSS
feeds and pinging blogs to over 65 RSS directories.
Your RSS Feed Might Look Like Spam
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on November 24, 2009
RSS feeds seem to be the breakout technology for the year. With
more users turning to them for driving traffic to their site,
it’s no wonder that a trail of RSS feed spam is following in the
wake. A careful editing of your RSS feed could make the
difference between being classified as genuine content or RSS
spam.
RSS search engines are just beginning to pick up steam. As more
RSS feeds become searchable, the number of visitors will
increase and spam is sure to follow. It is an unfortunate side
effect of free communication. While RSS users can typically
unsubscribe to feeds they deem as spam, browsing with keywords
in an RSS search engine is where the problem arises.
RSS spam largely consists of three main types most often found
in the RSS search engines. The first type is keyword stuffing.
Keyword stuffing involves filling each RSS feed article with
high-value keywords for a specific topic. The articles are not
intended for human visitors, but instead for search engine
robots to direct traffic to a target web site. This RSS spam
technique is nothing more than an adaptation of the typical
keyword-stuffed web page, often banned by major search engines.
The second type involves RSS feed link farms. These RSS articles
often contain very little content, if any, other than a simple
keyword. Their main attraction is the feed title. Clicking the
feed title takes the user to a blog containing tens or hundreds
of other blogs and RSS feeds, each directing to more links
within the farm. The goal of this type of RSS spam is to trick
the user into clicking advertisements or directing them to a
product web site.
The third type is the creation of fake RSS feeds. These appear
as legitimate, but often duplicated, article content. Whether
they provide value or not is certainly debatable. These feeds
are usually created in mass, using automated scripts, and appear
similar in nature to the link farms. By attracting the users to
seemingly valuable content, they hope to gain advertisement
clicks or product web site traffic.
Your RSS feed might happen to fall into one of these three
categories. While you may currently be experiencing increased
traffic from the RSS search engines, these directories are
working on filtering out the RSS spam techniques. However, you
can still take advantage of RSS feeds and their power by
following an RSS-friendly guideline.
Refrain from using automated scripts to create online content
used by your RSS feeds. Instead, write your own original
thoughts, product descriptions, and reviews. It takes a little
more time, but the search engines will value this content much
more highly, your visitors will appreciate the unique content,
and the subscription count to your RSS feed will grow. It is
also important to keep your feed updated with changing content
as opposed to using a static feed, which remains the same.
Search engines value dynamic feeds and will likely rank you
higher as a result.
There are tools and services available, which aid in keeping an
RSS feed updated with your changing content. Such services
include FeedFire for converting your web site content to a
periodically updated RSS feed or software such as FeedForAll for
creating and editing RSS feeds.
A successful RSS feed is very much the same as a successful web
page. It may take a little more time to digitize your thoughts,
but the end result is well worth the effort. By avoiding the
tricks in RSS feed spam, you can help make the difference in
quality of feeds and enjoyment in your readers.
including RSS Submit http://www.dum
mysoftware.com/rsssubmit.html, software for submitting RSS
feeds and pinging blogs to over 65 RSS directories.
How To Make An RSS Feed
Posted by Jon in WordPress RSS on November 23, 2009
This video shows you how to make an RSS feed both from coding and using freeware. Click the link below to view the XML used in this video: www.tinkernut.com







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