Waarom RSS?
RSS is in een jaar tijd enorm populair onder gebruikers en aan-bieders. Toch zijn er nog steeds mensen die twijfelen aan het nut van RSS. Joseph D. Lasica van New Media Musings heeft de belangrijkste argumenten voor gebruik op een rijtje gezet.
7 Things RSS Is Good For:
-
Saving time. Just as TiVo lets you watch TV more efficiently, RSS feeds do the same for the Web. It lets you speed-read the Net.
-
Convenience: By collecting headlines from dozens of sources on a single screen, RSS (rich site summary)—a combination of push and pull technology—enables users to see at a glance when a site or blog has been updated without having to keep revisiting the site. RSS cuts to the chase: no pop-up ads (at this point, anyway), and you can set your news reader to allow or disallow photos and graphics.
-
Access to a richer pool of material. By building an ad hoc online network of friends, experts and news sources, you cast your net over a wider range of material, expanding the range of news topics tracked.
-
Zero in on the info you want. RSS parses news and information on the subjects you want. The result is a targeted or personalized news experience, giving you greater ability to tailor your consumption of niche and micro-niche topics. A sports junkie could subscribe to a feed for the Tour de France or a favorite baseball team. A job-hunter could subscribe to a feed for openings in digital media. A medical editor or relative of someone with MS could receive RSS updates published to a health database.
-
RSS can serve as an alert service. Instead of using e-mail, you might want to customize your news reader to deliver news on an important subject every 15 minutes.
-
RSS levels the playing field. By flattening out authority, RSS puts micro-publishers and friends on the same footing as major news sites in your news reader.
-
RSS drives conversation. Feeds are a chief mechanism driving timely interactions and can be conducive to an ongoing dialogue.
5 Reasons Why Companies Should Publish an RSS feed:
-
Multiple gateways. It’s another doorway or distribution channel for getting your content in front of readers.
-
Self-syndication. It allows publishers to syndicate content without the involvement of third parties.
-
The predictability principle. By far the most important reason is this: Just as with newspaper subscriptions, RSS subscriptions mean your content is guaranteed to be seen on a regular basis rather than via sporadic pull behavior. On a typical news site, a reader stops by an average of three times per month.
-
Loyalty. RSS can forge a closer relationship with readers if done in conjunction with a weblog or community feedback tools.
-
Future revenue streams. RSS could be a great way of distributing classified advertising and other targeted marketing opportunities as long as the user requests it and finds it useful.
Bron: