Thursday, November 29, 2012

Why You Really Ought To Be Using RSS Feeds - A Quick Guide


RSS stands for Real Simple Syndication. This is a technology which is making it easier than ever for website owners and bloggers to stream content from other sites on their own sites or blog. It is also a great way for individuals to manage their favorite blogs and websites. The technology which RSS uses works by streaming new content released on individual blogs and websites through a feed reader. These readers can be displayed on other websites and blogs or read by individuals who want better management and organization of online information.

As you might have already known, the best way to keep search engines and your fans/visitors happy is to update your site regularly with fresh content, regularly and consistently. A great way to keep a constant stream of fresh content posted is to have RSS feeds of other websites(related niche) to that of your own. You may need to do a little programming to get this RSS feed streaming on your website, but thereafter, the process is all set.

Whenever you send out an RSS feed you do not send out the complete text or everything of your new content. Rather, you provide others with the headline, a brief summary, and then links they can click on to visit your site for the full version. You get this started by sending out an RSS file which is a text file in XML coding language. This coding language will then be translated by your subscriber's feed reader.

If there is someone out there who would like to have content streamed to their website, they would have to, firstly, find the URL to that exact RSS file. Thereafter, do the programing. They get to choose their own scripting language to read the RSS file, the content in it.

You can do this to scroll content from other websites onto your own site or you can even have your own blog posts scrolled onto other websites that you own, drawing traffic to the blog. The great advantage here is being able to update your website whenever the blog is updated.

One question you may be asking at this point: Why would you want to allow other websites to stream your original content on their websites? The catch is, when they do this, they give you credit and offer links back to your website. These links are incredibly valuable in terms of increasing your ranking with the search engines. In a nutshell, they give as well, your website and blog massive exposure to new visitors.

So, with more websites running your content through RSS feeds, the more increased traffic you get to benefit from!

If you are using a blogging service such as Blogger or WordPress, you would have already then taken advantage of RSS feeds. This is one of the simplest ways to have streamed content. These blogging sites automatically create an Atom file when you release new content. An Atom file is simply a type of RSS feed, or usually known by experts in the industry as atom.xml.

Another option is to use RSS files of your own creation to stream content from your website or blog on different platforms. This strategy is to create RSS files with reference to the information of the articles in the article or resource section of your website. Every time you add an article or resource text, you update your RSS file. This, although may seem like a hassle, it actually increases your chances of your content to be picked up by other websites.

Once you get started with RSS feeds, it is also beneficial to start posting updates to RSS directories. You may want to use a pinging service, so that every new RSS file is pinged out to different blogs and RSS directories automatically. When you do this, it gives your website or blog increased exposure.

What Is RSS? And Why You Must Have It   Are RSS Feeds Important?   What Is an RSS Feed and How to Generate Mass Traffic Using Them?   Explained: Really Simple Syndication   How to Properly Get More Subscribers for Your RSS Feeds   



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