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How To Increase Your Sales Traffic By Publishing
Customer Reviews As RSS Feeds
It is a simple
truth. Yet while many of the biggest players on the web know it,
most webmasters overlook the fact that customer reviews can provide
for a source of constantly updated content that potential customers
would find to be an invaluable source of information.
It is also true that by simply combining customer reviews with RSS
feeds, you too can ride a new wave of shopping (or social)
traffic.
Traffic! It is the one problem that webmasters continually face,
and which can NEVER be fully solved. How to find visitors in a
reliable, repeatable, and cost-effective way. Because without
visitors all your beautiful content might as well be locked away in
a vault--no one is ever going to see it. If the purpose of your
site is to sell, you will sell nothing. If the purpose of your site
is to build a social network, you might remain its only member. You
need traffic to succeed. Lots of it.
In this article I am going to consider just one traffic building
initiative--one that happens to be enjoying a growing wave of
popularity. It involves harnessing the power of RSS (Really Simple
Syndication) feeds to build traffic. You are probably aware of RSS
as a means of syndicating news content. Websites that produce news
have been building XML-formatted news stories for years. These
files are retrieved by other websites, the new stories are
extracted, and the content is placed (on these publisher sites)
before a public ever-hungry for new information. The arrangement
has worked well for everyone. Those who have displayed the RSS
feeds have gained content to feed their visitors. Those who have
produced the RSS feeds have obtained backlinks to their websites,
which has helped to bring in new traffic. In fact the arrangement
has worked so well that webmasters have been encouraged to move
beyond simple news syndication.
This makes a lot of sense. News articles hardly represent the only
content that surfers are looking for. Recipes, shopping coupons,
MP3s, schedules for local events... The list of possible things
that people search for is endless, and if you can provide 'new'
instances of such information, then RSS represents an ideal means
of getting that information in front of the people searching for
it. Sure, it used to be the case that everything you wrapped up in
an RSS feed had to take a very simple form. Every item in your news
feed was reduced to a title, a url (to the source of the
information), and a short snippet, or description, to hook the
reader. But RSS has sprouted wings over the years and now you can
package practically any data structure into a feed that you like.
Because of this there is no reason why we cannot suitably package
customer reviews into a feed.
But what exactly would we put into an RSS-formatted customer
review feed? And is this a good idea? Let me answer the second
question first. Yes! It is a very good idea to package customer
reviews as RSS feeds. Why? Because if you think about it, a
customer review is very much like a news item. It is a packaged
opinion that has been released for the express purpose of swaying
the mindset of someone who is looking for information on the very
topic it addresses, whatever that topic might be. To the person
searching for the information, this review is news indeed, and more
often than not it is welcome news.
So what should go into the feed? Well, a summary of the review,
seems obvious. That can be used as the title element, and a snippet
of the review can be used as the description. But there are other
elements to a review that we have grown accustomed to over the
years, and they can go into the feed too. Pros and cons of the
reviewed item can be listed and highlighted. We can put in a
numeric rating for several different attributes of the item being
reviewed (for example, quality and robustness of the item, it's
ease of use, value for money, and so on). We can put in images too.
Stars to represent the numeric ratings, maybe. A picture of the
item. We could even put in a link to the profile of the reviewer if
we wanted. When we do these things, the final formatted customer
review feed can look very enticing indeed.
Of course, the prospect of collecting reviews, let alone formatting
them into RSS feeds might very well seem daunting to the average
webmaster. But there are low-cost commercial applications available
which will do all of this work for you--for example, the review
engine known as Red Queen at http://www.randommouse.com/redqueen.
Furthermore, you can now upload customer reviews (in RSS format) to
Google Base and make them available to the various Google outlets.
Admittedly these are early days for webmasters hoping to profitably
hook into Google Base traffic sources, but the prospects are
exciting nonetheless.
One thing that seems certain is that customer reviews as RSS feeds
represent an as yet untapped opportunity for webmasters. Customer
reviews have long been profitably used by big players on the web
(Amazon.com being an obvious example) but have not been fully
exploited. By coupling this popular opinion-based source of
information with the technology of RSS syndication, savvy
webmasters who take the reins today are sure to get first mover
advantage on this new means of marketing, and build the traffic
they need to assure the success of their online businesses. And, of
course, there is really no reason why you should not be one of
them!
Stephen Carter is the developer
of Red
Queen, a powerful customer review engine
that allows webmasters to take advantage of
the traffic building potential of customer reviews published
as RSS feeds. To learn more, please see the accompanying
tutorial:
How To Publish Customer Reviews As RSS
Feeds
Provided By: Blogs, RSS and
Podcasting
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