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Create Professional RSS Feeds
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Visited: 368 |
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by Sharon Housley November 28, 2007
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| Sharon Housley |
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Sharon Housley manages marketing for FeedForAll software for creating, editing, publishing RSS feeds and podcasts. In addition Sharon manages marketing for RecordForAll audio recording and editing software. |
| Sharon Housley
has written 47 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Sharon Housley... |
More and more companies are using RSS as a means to communicate, so
having an RSS feed that is professional and well polished will help
differentiate your company from your competition. What makes an RSS
feed professional? Follow these simple steps to polish your RSS feed
and take it to the next level...
1. Feed Image
Add an image to your RSS feed. The image will be displayed by many feed
readers each time your feed is displayed. This will help build and
reinforce your brand or image in the minds of people who read your RSS
feed. Adding an image to an RSS feed is relatively easy, and adds a
level of professionalism.
2. Images And Links
Add images and links within the RSS feed. The process of adding images
and links to the description field of an RSS feed is really quite
simple if you are using software to manage your feed, while it may be
somewhat complex if you are hand-coding your feed. Incorporating images
or hot links in the feed's content will allow your readers to explore
further and dig deeper into your content. The added benefit, of course,
are the additional web links back to your site from any sites that
choose to syndicate or display your feed's contents.
3. Validate
Properly formed code is important, in order to ensure that all RSS
readers can read and display your feed. But it is also very important
for another reason... nothing is more embarrassing or unprofessional
than an RSS feed that is broken or stops working. Use software to
manage your feed creation, and validate your feed on a regular basis.
4. Easy To Subscribe
Make your RSS feed easy to subscribe to. Include the traditional RSS
icon, or an indicator site-wide, so that website visitors can easily
locate and subscribe to your RSS feeds. Include basic directions on how
website visitors should subscribe to your RSS feed.
5. Auto Discovery
Add "auto-discovery" code to the HTML header of your website. Many RSS
aggregators include an auto-discovery feature, which allows them to
automatically detect when a website offers an RSS feed. So, if your
website visitors are using one of those aggregators, they will
instantly know that an RSS feed for your content is available from your
website.
Instantly create auto discovery code - http://www.feedforall.com/autodiscovery.htm
6. Favicon
Add a "favicon" to your website. Favicons (short for "favorite icons")
are typically a tiny version of a company or Web site's logo, and
appear in the URL bar of the user's web browser. When a user bookmarks
a specific Web page that includes a favicon, that Web page loads the
customized icon into the user's browser. Because the favicon is usually
displayed next to the web site address, it can act like a small logo or
an icon that visitors can use to remember the web site or the site
address. Feed directories and RSS Search Engines will often use a
favicon beside an RSS feed's listings. So be sure that you have one on
your website; otherwise, you'll have nothing but a generic icon beside
your feed. Webmasters can establish branding by creating a favicon for
their website. Here is a free service from HTMLKit: http://www.html-kit.com/favicon
7. Subscribe To Your Own Feed
Always subscribe to your RSS feed, so you can see what your website visitors are seeing.
While it is not essential to incorporate the above elements in your RSS
feed, the additions will result in a more professional and polished RSS
feed that stands apart from competitors in news aggregators and RSS
directories. Spending a few extra minutes here could easily draw more
attention to your feed.
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