RSS Publishing: Not Just For Blogging Anymore

Written by Trina L.C. Schiller


Web logs, channel ezines, what'srepparttar difference?

Web logs, or blogs, are a communication medium, gaining in popularity, through which RSS [Really Simple Sydication] technology has been introduced torepparttar 124743 populous. However, blogs and RSS are not synonomous. RSS technology is what gives life torepparttar 124744 blog. and, has been around for awhile. Blogging is a relatively new use forrepparttar 124745 system. RSS has been used byrepparttar 124746 media for quite some time, to bring Internet travelersrepparttar 124747 news, stock updates, and such. But blogging has brought it intorepparttar 124748 mainstream, making it a bit more user friendly forrepparttar 124749 average traveler.

Put simply, a web log is a interactive, virtual diary, that can be read by anyone, and commented on, by its readers, as well. The technology, drivingrepparttar 124750 blog, is capable of so much more.

Publishing an ezine through a channel feed is another use that is picking up steam. Seeingrepparttar 124751 benefits of channel publishing, more and more ezine publishers are either supplementing or replacing their email systems of distribution.

Since channel subscription is not subscriber bot friendly, and requires that one physically subscribe torepparttar 124752 channel of choice, without email reliance, it isrepparttar 124753 only true 100% opt-in method for receiving information. Subscription forgeries cannot occur. Opting out is as simple as deletingrepparttar 124754 channel from your computer. It is instant and non-publisher dependent.

Channel publishing also makes permanent, what used to end up inrepparttar 124755 trash. Even ezines that manage to make throughrepparttar 124756 filters and intorepparttar 124757 inboxes of readers, eventually wind up atrepparttar 124758 virtual curb, when it has been read. Not so with channel publishing. Articles published on a channel are given an item number and become a permanent archive ofrepparttar 124759 channel. This allowsrepparttar 124760 reader to refer back to it, shouldrepparttar 124761 need arise, at any time, without having to storerepparttar 124762 piece on their hard drive.

Should You Be Linking For Traffic Or rankings?

Written by Gary mchugh


Should You Be Linking for Traffic or Rankings? By Gary Mchugh

Just for a change, rather than a technical article, I would like to tell you a story. To begin, imagine your website is a little country bar, now let's go back to whenrepparttar internet began, and reciprocal linking was being done properly. Now just sit back and picturerepparttar 124742 following.....

There you are running your bar, it's a fairly busy little bar with plenty of regular customers. You also get other customers who come from all directions. Some make their way to your bar using allrepparttar 124743 little country back roads (from links on other websites), others come onrepparttar 124744 big highway (the Internet) fromrepparttar 124745 big bars inrepparttar 124746 city (The Search Engines).

Your customers usually stay and have a beer or two (read a few pages of your site), then decide they'd like to try somewhere different. Because you realize your customers are bound to leave at some point anyway, you recommendrepparttar 124747 bar downrepparttar 124748 road, telling them it is a great bar too. You even show them a little leaflet you made (your link section), which gives them directions on how to find it.

The bar downrepparttar 124749 road also has his regulars, plus a few visitors from you, and a few fromrepparttar 124750 bars inrepparttar 124751 city. He knows you send him customers, so when his customers have had a drink or two, and fancy going somewhere different, he returnsrepparttar 124752 favour, recommends your bar and gives them directions how to get there.

In fact, there are 10 little bars in your area that are all doing this andrepparttar 124753 local back roads are alive with customers going from bar to bar (The World Wide Web). Occasionally, when someone comes fromrepparttar 124754 big bars inrepparttar 124755 city (the Search Engines), you recommendrepparttar 124756 other local bars and all your friends benefit from that visitor too.

Then one dayrepparttar 124757 big bar inrepparttar 124758 city sent allrepparttar 124759 local bars a letter saying: "We are a much bigger bar than you, we have thousands of customers, and they are all looking for nice little country bars like yours. We would be glad to recommend your bar, however, we need to know that your bar is popular before we tell our customers. The busier your bar is,repparttar 124760 more customers we will send you. We will of course be sending one of our employees to see just how busy your bar is (Search Engine link spiders).

Great you think, more new customers, more business, more profits. Oh no! Wait a minute! If you send your customers torepparttar 124761 bar downrepparttar 124762 road, he would be busier than you, and get allrepparttar 124763 new customers fromrepparttar 124764 city. Better stop sending them there. So you stop recommending his bar, and hiderepparttar 124765 little leaflets that gave directions. (You feature your link section only with a tiny little text link right atrepparttar 124766 bottom ofrepparttar 124767 page.)

You can't get rid of your leaflets, orrepparttar 124768 other bar may take you off his leaflet, then whenrepparttar 124769 employee fromrepparttar 124770 city visitsrepparttar 124771 other bar he will think you are not popular, because you are not listed. Maybe you could changerepparttar 124772 title of your leaflet, so it doesn't look like directions to other bars, that way your customers won't pick it up. (Call your links page "resources" or "partners").

Now, when your customer has had their first beer or two, you don't recommend your friend, and they don't findrepparttar 124773 leaflets, so they don't know there is a back road that leads to other bars. The result? They takerepparttar 124774 highway (the Internet) and go back torepparttar 124775 big bar inrepparttar 124776 city where they came from (The Search Engine).

Cont'd on page 2 ==>
 
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