If you'd asked me a couple of days ago, however, I
would have disagreed. I had immersed myself in all the technical
details of RSS and installing channel creation tools and was confused.
Let me see if I can break through some of the fog to help you figure
out how to do this. In short, here's what's involved:
1. Use the free WebReference RSS Channel Editor to
set up a channel and list up to 15 articles. 2. Upload the file you've
created to your webserver. 3. Validate the XML to make sure it can be
read by the multitude of news aggregation programs. 4. Advertise your
RSS feed (channel) to various directories and to your site visitors 5.
Maintain your feed by adding new articles using the RSS Channel Editor
Before we look at each of these points, however, I need to briefly
discuss news aggregators and RSS formats.
News Aggregators
News aggregators are the software tools used to read the RSS news feeds
that you and your customers will subscribe to.
Various RSS Formats
There's some controversy over competing RSS format standards. Most
feeds use the related standards RSS 0.91 or 2.0, which are pretty
similar. I don't think it makes much difference what standard you adopt
at first -- the crucial decision is what tool you can find to create
your channel. For now the most accessible tools produce RSS 0.91 feeds.
All the major news aggregators support all the formats. Of course, the
more recent 1.0 and 2.0 standards each offer advantages, but don't wait
until you can produce feeds in these formats. Start now with whatever
standard is easiest for you and upgrade later.
1. Create a Channel
To create a RSS news channel that lists the various articles on your
site or in your e-mail newsletter, you have four choices:
· Construct it from scratch in Notepad. Not recommended. · Use a RSS
syndication tool built into the content management or blogger software
you may be using. · Prepare your feed from a stand-alone tool such as
RSS Channel Editor. · Have a software tool "scrape" your site and
incorporate the most important information it finds there. However,
scraping your site with a tool like MyRSS may produce some pretty
strange results unless the process is customized and the appropriate
sections are marked on your site.
I tried a number of tools and settled on the
WebReference RSS Channel Editor. This program allows you to retrieve
your current RSS file (if you have one set up), and edit it or add to
it, up to 15 articles. The program produces RSS 0.91 output and works
quite well. Another stand-alone program is the RSS Headline Creator
from WebDevTips which produces RSS 2.0 output, but isn't as easy to
maintain your feed as with the RSS Channel Editor.
2. Upload the File
With RSS Channel Editor you click a button "Build RSS" and then copy
and paste the code to a file. The extension you use doesn't really
matter to the news aggregators -- .rss, .rdf, .xml all work. Now, with
your FTP program, you upload your file to your webserver where it can
be viewed and automatically checked by news aggregators.
3. Validate the XML
The next step is to check your RSS file to make sure that it is
error-free. If you build this file from scratch or "improve" it with a
text editor, errors can easily creep in. Of the various validation
programs, I found that FEED Validator for RSS and Atom gave the most
helpful suggestions to fix errors in the code. Another is Userland RSS
Validator.
4. Advertise Your RSS Feed
Once you've checked your code, it's time to let others know about your
feed. This has two aspects:
· Place an XML icon on your website hyperlinked to the URL of your RSS
feed. For site visitors who have news aggregators, this is a clue that
allows them to subscribe to the channel -- either by right-clicking on
the icon and selecting subscribe or some other method. The icon doesn't
need any explanation. · Register your RSS feed with various
directories. Syndic8 is one of the largest and doesn't cost anything.
First, you'll need to register. Then select "Suggest" from the top menu
to give the URL of your RSS feed. After the feed has been reviewed and
approved, it will appear in the Syndic8 directory. NewsIsFree offers
free listings for non-commercial organizations. RSSxpress lists UK
sites.
5. Keep Your Feed Up-to-Date
Finally, you'll need to maintain your feed by adding new articles using
the RSS Channel Editor. Every time you post a new article on your
website, remember to list it in your RSS feed also. If you faithfully
do this, an increasing number of customers and interested visitors will
rely on your RSS feed and will visit you whenever an article of
interest appears in their news aggregator.
Displaying the Feed on Your Home Page
While this isn't necessary or even appropriate in all cases, consider
displaying your own RSS feed on the home page of your website as a
guide to what is new inside the site. There are several tools which
convert RSS to HTML that you can display on your website. Be aware that
getting the various XML and RSS parsing modules installed on your
webserver can be tricky, so you may need to enlist a programmer for an
hour or so to help you get these programs working.
Thought for the day:
To promote your offering on the Internet, it is often necessary to
extend your knowledge and try something new in otder to succeed.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/online-promotion-articles/
pitfalls-of-a-newbie-what-about-rss-feeds-25083.html
About the Author
Steve Castle is a respected Internet Marketer who is committed to
ethically helping others to achieve their financial freedom.
mailto:steve@ask-a-southafrican.co.uk
http://www.ask-a-southafrican.co.uk/pips.html http://www.triseven.ws
http://www.printwisesolutions.com |