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Please DO Feed the Sites: What Is RSS?

Posted By ptvGuy On 18th November 2006 @ 06:26 In All, browser, coding, content, money, promotion, search engine, SEO, station, RSS, feeds, Web 2.0, support, membership, value, programs, budget, content distributors, eGuide, extensibility, XML, Creative Commons, Tim O'Reilly, Dave Winer, Userland, syndication, Netscape, Please DO Feed the Sites Series | 6 Comments

icon for podpress  Please DO Feed the Sites: What Is RSS? [11:43m]: | Download (4092)

…an indispensable part of standard web development…

Before I begin this discussion explaining RSS to you as if I were this fount of knowledge that clearly recognized its value from the very first moment I saw it, the fact is that my initial impression after a cursory look-over several years ago was that it was only useful to blogs and news-oriented sites. Outside of syndicating teasers of news headlines and blog posts, not a single aspect of its current usage occurred to me, and I never expected it to become an indispensable part of standard web development or to redefine the web as I knew it. So, if you can forgive me that incredible oversight, then we can get on with this…

RSS as an Update Announcer

…users are notified whenever there's new content posted to the feed…

To explain what RSS is and why it has everyone so excited, let me just start out on common ground with something we already know, a traditional website. Traditionally, a website contained whatever content may have been put on it and that content may be static or may change constantly. The problem here has always been that a user had no way of knowing when or if that content had changed other than checking back periodically or being notified by someone.

RSS solved that problem by "announcing" content updates. A site owner creates a special file called an RSS file along with a link to it, and this creates a "web feed." A web feed is a data format used for sending users content updates. Users have the option of "subscribing" to this feed either through a stand-alone desktop application called a "feed reader," through an online content aggregator like Newsburst, or, increasingly, directly through their standard web browser. Once subscribed, users are notified whenever there's new content posted to the feed. That's all well and good, but it doesn't end there.

RSS Web Feeds

…a web feed is actually just an extremely simple text document…

An RSS web feed is actually just an XML-based file that sits on a site like any other file and contains whatever content the site owner wants to put into it for distribution. It can be created and maintained manually or dynamically (preferably the latter.) Part 3 of this series will cover the creation of such feeds. There's not really a lot to it.

I don't want to lose you in the terminology or the acronyms here. An XML document–especially of the type we're talking about here–is an extremely simple text document. The markup has certain similarities to HTML, but where HTML defines how to display the content, XML categorizes the content (for instance, identifying title, description, author, etc.) and does it in a machine-readable format which means that different software on different operating systems on different platforms can easily access and display that content. This is the part that allows for syndication. Numerous applications exist that look for such files, read the content, and parse it back out for use elsewhere.

RSS for Content Syndication

…content syndication is the primary use of RSS…

Content syndication is (by definition) the primary use of RSS. Originally, RSS files listed just the title of a piece, the author, the date of publication, a link back to the original content, and a quick summary to act as a kind of teaser to get you to go back to the original site to read the article–hence the mistaken view that it was only good for blog posts and news headlines. Now it includes syndication of full content–including HTML–along with "enclosures" to contain multimedia content like images, audio files, and video files and that content is being used in ever more imaginative ways. This needn't scare you away from using it.

RSS Content Usage

…the underlying workhorse or building block of Web 2.0…

Primarily, RSS syndicated web content simply turns up in some form of RSS reader for the usage of an individual who wants to remain informed of content updates on your site. However, this syndication of content along with the inherent extensibility of XML allows for a kind of web presence and sharing of content that was never available before. It's the underlying workhorse or building block of the entire "Web 2.0" movement.

Web content stored and distributed in this manner can be accessed and processed in ways similar to database applications allowing your content to simply be replicated elsewhere or become the basis for an application built on the underlying data. It can turn up as content on another website. It's absolutely adored by search engines (practically search bot candy) which will often index it far faster and with better results than equivalent content on a standard HTML page.

Think syndication, not coordination. Simple web services, like RSS…are about syndicating data outwards, not controlling what happens when it gets to the other end of the connection. This idea is fundamental to the internet itself, a reflection of what is known as the end-to-end principle.
Tim O'Reilly, What Is Web 2.0?

As much as I agree with the ideal expressed here by Tim O'Reilly, I tend to take a more pragmatic approach. I encourage you, if you're considering RSS syndication of your content, to set up a Creative Commons License allowing for the distribution of your content while requiring the retention of source attribution and backlinking. It's not that you don't want anyone else to use your content, but you should get something out of it as well. The idea here is not only to increase your web presence but also your underlying user base.

What Is RSS

With all this background in mind, we can get more directly into what RSS actually is. Wikipedia puts it this way:

RSS is a family of web feed formats. The initials "RSS" are variously used to refer to the following standards:

  • Really Simple Syndication (RSS 2.0)
  • Rich Site Summary (RSS 0.91, RSS 1.0)
  • RDF Site Summary (RSS 0.9 and 1.0)

Wikipedia, RSS (file format)

and Tim O'Reilly refines that further (as is his disposition):

RSS is now being used to push not just notices of new blog entries, but also all kinds of data updates, including stock quotes, weather data, and photo availability. This use is actually a return to one of its roots: RSS was born in 1997 out of the confluence of Dave Winer's "Really Simple Syndication" technology, used to push out blog updates, and Netscape's "Rich Site Summary", which allowed users to create custom Netscape home pages with regularly updated data flows. Netscape lost interest, and the technology was carried forward by blogging pioneer Userland, Winer's company. In the current crop of applications, we see, though, the heritage of both parents.
Tim O'Reilly, What Is Web 2.0?

The hardcore purists out there aren't going to be too happy with this series of articles, because my focus, as I start describing how to create an RSS feed in the next article, will be on RSS 2.0, Dave Winer's "Really Simple Syndication." I've chosen that particular "flavor" of RSS because it allows me to really bring home the incredible simplicity of syndicating web content. My point here is to encourage more RSS usage, not scare anyone away.

What Are The Benefits of RSS?

…every single person reading your feed has willingly opted-in…

I've only touched on some of the benefits of having an RSS feed. Things like the inherent search engine optimization are secondary to the incredible expansion of your audience that comes about through content syndication. You reach people that you would never have reached before. You're able to communicate with them and show them the value of your station as a resource.

It's perfectly acceptable to sell advertising on your feed and include membership/support reminders. Keep this in mind always, unlike other methods of boosting membership, every single person reading your feed has willingly opted-in to receive your message. They won't consider it spam.

RSS was designed to empower the user to view the content he or she wants, when it's wanted, not at the behest of the information provider.
Tim O'Reilly, What Is Web 2.0?

Where Do I Get The Content?

…even the tiniest station websites have content to syndicate…

The question of where to get the content to feed out always amazes me–especially in relation to a public television station website. Unless your site is absolutely static, unless there's nothing there that changes, unless it's the online equivalent of a pre-printed brochure, you have content to syndicate. Even the tiniest station websites are not excluded from this, because it's not about having money for great content productions.

If your station updates any of the following items on their website–even if it's only once or twice a month–you have content to syndicate:

  • Program Highlights
  • Station Events
  • Station News Announcements
  • Community Events
  • Newsletters (including RTL and non-member-based eguides)
  • Upcoming Pledge Drives
  • Auction Announcements
  • Etc., etc., etc.

Each of these can be fed into separate RSS files and syndicated separately. Each of them can be used to expand the station branding, presence, user base, message, and support reminders. Each of them will take their own roads through the Internet and reach people you would never have reached otherwise.

Some Final Words

RSS is an incredibly powerful tool easily implemented with enormous benefits going far beyond the station itself. I implore you, if you haven't done it already, then, for the good of your station, for the good of your users, and for the good of public broadcasting as a whole, please, please, feed your site.

Thank you all, code well, and good night.

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6 Comments To "Please DO Feed the Sites: What Is RSS?"

#1 Comment By Ross On 18th November 2006 @ 09:42

Good primer and introduction to RSS.

Even as a tech person, I didn’t really start understanding the value of RSS until I started to use it. Now I check my reader several times a day. I save time by only visiting sites that have been updated, and I am sure there is information that I otherwise would have missed from time to time.

#2 Comment By ptvGuy On 18th November 2006 @ 21:09

I didn’t really discuss that much about the user experience, but the time saving issue is very important. I’m now capable of monitoring numerous websites simultaneously, visiting only the ones with new content that interests me, and even following the comments on those that have them (blogs) so as not to lose track of the discussion.

With that in mind, I think my next article on how to create feeds should have a section on the importance of choosing good titles and catchy (though correct) summaries to draw users from the feed back to the main site. Surprisingly, that only occurred to me just now. That’s definitely something I need to work on.

Thanks for dropping by and helping to kick my brain into gear. :)

#3 Comment By Sally Falkow On 19th November 2006 @ 07:58

Hello

Great article on why a site - any site - would benefit from RSS and content syndication.

We built PRESSfeed to make this process easy for non tech savvy people. It’s a fill in the blanks, cut and paste solution that adds the new content to the site, syndicates it in a feed, and also has the social media elements like bookmarking and tagging.

#4 Comment By ptvGuy On 19th November 2006 @ 17:19

Sally:

Thanks for dropping by. Your [15] PRESSfeed service is a good solution for many businesses, and I definitely think that your [16] How It Works section makes a great followup for anyone reading this article and looking for more information. Even more than that, I want to recommend your [17] blog on “[18] How to use RSS feeds in enterprise marketing and promotions.” It’s loaded with great information including another important use of RSS that hadn’t occurred to me, press releases.

With that said, I should point out here that yours is a paid service. I will probably include it as a paid alternative in my next article on how to create feeds–especially because of the social media aspects included–but I’ll be focusing more on free and open-source services as well as how to do it yourself. The point is to get even more stations syndicating content. If, on the other hand, you’d like to support public broadcasting by making your service available free to us… ;)

#5 Comment By Sally Falkow On 19th November 2006 @ 18:18

Thanks for the kind words. We try to keep putting new content up all the time. The 6 part series on the RSS Adoption feed - [19] http://www.press-feed.com/results/adoption/index.php - came out of questions we were asked at Search Engine Strategies in San Jose this year.

I understand why you would want to steer them in the direction of a free or open source solution, but as so many marketing or PR folk are not techies, we set out to gather all the good elements in one easy to use solution for them.

We are for those who can’t, or don’t want to, do it themselves. Everyone who has done the demo says - Ohmigod I love it! And they don’t balk at the fee.

But it’s not for everyone.

Sal

#6 Comment By ptvGuy On 20th November 2006 @ 00:36

For some stations, yours may well be a viable solution, for others not. I want to lay out as many alternatives as I can and thereby eliminate ALL of the perceived barriers (or as many as possible.)

Some say they don’t have the money; I say that there are a number of ways to do it for free or at very low cost. Some say they don’t have the content to syndicate; I say that pretty much anything they update regularly is content for syndication. Some say they don’t have the expertise; I say that it’s very simple to do it yourself and there are even tools (such as yours) that make it as easy as cut and paste. Etc., etc., etc.

The simple fact of modern life is that it’s something that stations have to do–sooner rather than later. It’s no longer possible to view a station website (or any business site) as an online brochure and forget about it–even if that station serves remote, rural, and low-income areas. More and more mainstream users are discovering the convenience of RSS feeds and ignoring sites that don’t offer them.

Let me just quote you on this subject:

The rapid growth of content syndication and social media requires a new marketing and PR approach. The days when a static business website or a mass media press release could attract visitors and customers are long gone. The use of RSS and social bookmarking sites to manage and organize news and information is on the rise and marketers need to pay attention.
–[20] Sally Falkow, [21] Enterprise RSS Feeds - A Viable Messaging Medium

BTW, thanks for even more great info. Besides that six-part series, there’s a lot more there worth reading. Now I have even more feeds added to my feed reader.

One side question if you don’t mind: How on earth do you manage to write so many different blogs, do presentations and speeches in so many different places, write a number of books, run a business, and still have a life? I look at your work and I’m thinking, “Does this person ever sleep?” :-?


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[15] PRESSfeed: http://www.press-feed.com/
[16] How It Works: http://www.press-feed.com/howitworks/
[17] blog: http://www.press-feed.com/blog/
[18] How to use RSS feeds in enterprise marketing and promotions: http://www.press-feed.com/blog/
[19] http://www.press-feed.com/results/adoption/index.php: http://www.press-feed.com/results/adoption/index.php
[20] Sally Falkow: http://www.press-feed.com/
[21] Enterprise RSS Feeds - A Viable Messaging Medium: http://www.press-feed.com/results/adoption/adoption.php?include=36636

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