| Your
RSS Marketing Strategy: Deciding How To Deliver Your RSS Content
by
Rok Hrastnik You're
interested in RSS marketing, but there either seem to be so
many options of how to do it or you've only ever come accross
simple RSS feeds that just don't seem to be the approach you're
looking for.
The problem
with most RSS marketing plans is that the marketer doesn't
really go beyond providing a simple RSS feed for all of his
online news or his blog. But since you've been reading this
column for a while now you know for a fact that RSS offers
so much more.
To get
started the right way you need to correctly plan your RSS
Marketing strategy, starting by deciding how you are going
to deliver your RSS content.
The right
way to go, even if you're only starting out with a simple
RSS strategy, is to provide individual RSS feeds for:
• your
individual target audiences,
• your different types of content and
• even your different content topics.
Think
of this as a consequtive list of how to develop your RSS strategy.
Target
Audiences
Start
by listing the target audiences you want to deliver your content
to via RSS. Each of your audiences has different content needs,
resulting in different groups of RSS feeds that need to be
created for these target audiences. One group for the media,
the other for your employees, the other for the general public,
the other for your existing customers and so on. You can even
go further and divide your master groups in sub-groups, based
on their prevailing interests.
Content
Types
Now consider
the different types of content you want to deliver to these
audiences. For example your latest news, your blog posts,
your how-to articles, your press releases, your podcasts,
the latest posts from your forums, direct communications messages
and so on. In most cases these types of content don't mix
well together. If someone wants to receive your blog updates,
which are full of your company representatives' personal opinions
and commentary, they don't want to receive your corporate-speak
press releases.
If someone
is interested in what's happening in your forum and what the
latest forum posts are, they don't want to receive your how-to
articles in the same RSS feed, simply because these two types
of content are so much different. And so on. Essentially,
you will need to provide separate feeds for each of the different
content types, and you will need to determine what content
types you wish to deliver to each of your target audience
groups and sub-groups.
Content
Topics
Finally
take a look at each individual content type for each individual
target audience and further break that down by content topic,
if needed. And if you're trying to cover many different topics
for each content type, you will need to provide different
RSS feeds for these different topics, because, again, people
interested in topic A are not neccessarily also interested
in topic B.
While
this may sound complicated, it's really simple once you start
doing it.
The point
is, this is about giving your subscribers choice of what they
subscribe to. Instead of forcing them to subscribe to everything,
allow them to subscribe to only what they want and need.
Quite
simple, right?
Just remember
that you should only break this down as far as it makes sense,
keeping in mind the actual content that your target audiences
want from you.
Depending
on your business, you just might only need to communicate
with one target audience, deliver only one content type and
deliver only one content topic for that target audience.
Decide
how you are going to deliver this content
Once you
have your RSS content mapped-out, you need to consider how
you are going to make this content available to your target
audiences. This is especially important since it's going to
influence the tools you need to get started with RSS publishing
One-size-fits-all
RSS feeds
This is
about as standard as it gets --- publishing one RSS feed to
meet the needs of all of your target audiences at once or
publishing multiple topical RSS feeds, which always remain
the same. The easiest to do, can be done with any RSS publishing
tool on the market …
Customizable
RSS feeds
The more
and more complex you get with the different feeds you're offering,
the more difficult it is for your visitors to select what
exactly they want, simply because an individual subscriber
might be interested in 10 of your 100 feeds, but he doesn't
want to be subscribed to that many feeds by your company.
In this
case the best way to go is to also offer your visitors the
opportunity to customize your RSS feed à they decide exactly
what content type and content topics they want to receive
in one or a few RSS feeds they'll be subscribing from you.
The opportunities
here are quite endless, as you can allow them to customize
their feeds based on topics, content types, authors and more.
If this
is the way you need to go because you are offering so much
content via your RSS feeds that it makes it difficult for
someone to subscribe to only one or a few feeds from you,
you will need your RSS publishing solution to support feed
customization.
Search-based
RSS feeds
Search-based
RSS feeds are a subset of customizable RSS feeds, and they
work just like a search engine. You type in a certain keyword
or keyword combinations and the search engine gives you the
most relevant or the latest results for that keyword combination.
You can
do the same with RSS, allowing your visitors to enter specific
keywords and then get the content from you only based on those
keywords.
Personalized
RSS feeds
Giving
users the choice to customize the content they are receiving
from you is one thing, but certain content may actually demand
you to personalize the feed using your subscribers personal
information.
The most
basic variation, used to lift response, is addressing your
subscribers by name or using other data about the customer
from your database, such as his address, previous purchases
etc.
In other
cases a bank might want to deliver information directly relating
to your bank account, directly via RSS, such as your latest
credit card transactions, and so on.
RSS
feeds with content targeting
Now imagine
that you want to create individualized campaigns to individual
subscribers, based on the information you already have in
your database about their activities, demographics and so
on, for example to send a promotion for product A only to
those subscribers that might be most interested in product
A.
In this
case you will need an RSS solution that can pull this data
from your database and then segment your subscribers based
on the actual data.
Autoresponder
RSS feeds
Since
their introduction, e-mail autoresponders have become a relatively
mainstream internet direct marketing tool, although they haven't
really made their way to the world of public relations.
The concept
is simple à a certain action by your visitors on your website
triggers a sequence of e-mail messages, delivered to that
visitor, provided you have his e-mail address, over a period
of several days.
Direct
marketers use this to automatically communicate with the prospect
after a certain action, trying to get him to do what they
want.
The most
common application is offering your visitors a free report,
delivered to them via e-mail. After subscribing they start
receiving consequtive parts of the report day after day or
a every few days, receiving both new information as well as
being exposed to the marketer's promotional message.
Other
applications include autoresponder messages in relation to
transactional e-mail:
• Subscribe
to a free e-mail newsletter. The first autoresponder message
thanks you for the subscription and also gives you access
to one of the newsletter issues. A couple of days later, while
you're still "hot as a lead", you receive another
e-mail, pertaining to the newsletter topic, giving you more
advice or information on the topic and trying achieve a sales
conversion. And so on.
• Complete
a webstore order. The first message thanks you for the purchase
and recommends an additional product at a lower price. The
second message tells you more about the product you purchased.
The third messages makes a special additional purchase offer.
The fourths message gives you some great additional tips,
and so on.
• Start
an online order, but don't finish it. The first message reminds
you that there are still products in your shopping cart. The
second message reminds you again, giving you added inscentive
to complete the order. And so on …
The opportunities
are practically limitless, but you get the picture.
Now simply
transform this concept into the realm of RSS.
Someone
subscribes to your RSS feed. The first couple of content items,
spread-out through the first week, serve as a series of welcome
messages giving the new subscriber access to your top content
and inviting him to actively participate. Your latest feed
updates come through as well, but your new subscriber also
gets the extra treatment (content) in the same feed.
And now
apply this to anything you're doing with RSS, where it makes
sense to follow-up with additional information to your new
subscribers once they subscribe, of course depending on the
feed topic and target audience.
Very few
RSS tools today offer autoresponder capabilities, but some
do.
To
Recap ...
Think
of your RSS publishing strategy and try to establish which
of the these publishing models your RSS publishing tool should
support:
• Topical
or Target Audience Oriented RSS Feeds
• Customizable RSS Feeds
• Search-Based RSS Feeds
• Personalized RSS Feeds
• RSS Feeds with Content Targeting
• Autoresponder RSS Feeds
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the easy way to mastering RSS marketing today. Click here
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