How to optimize your blog’s RSS feed

Your RSS Feed is sometimes the only way your visitors experience what you have to offer on a regular basis.

It serves to inform and entertain, but is also an essential tool for driving traffic back to your website and improving your overall search-engine ranking.

If all your feed does is show a poorly formatted excerpt of your posts, the hundreds of visitors who are not hitting your main site everyday will have no reason to read your content or share it with others.

When optimizing your RSS Feed, you have to consider the kind of content you curate. There are several reasons why you may want to use your feed to generate clicks. You may have a product, feature or art-directed element to your full site that needs exposure, or your content may be largely image-driven.

Here are some simple tips for optimizing and RSS Feed that will improve its functionality and get it to produce positive results for your site.

1. Use Feedburner

feedburner

Feedburner is not just a fad application you should use because it is a part of Google’s app offerings. It has serious power and provides extensive traffic analysis and optional ad delivery mechanisms that you won’t find anywhere else for a cost of zero dollars.

Feedburner integrates several of the core functionalities you need for your RSS Feed to be successful. Activate SmartFeed and the Title/Description Burner to start.

2. Give your feed a strong title

In most cases, your feed will inherit the name of your website. If that name is ambiguous or starts with a Z, your feed may not get the attention it deserves.

Try to start your feed with a letter that occurs earlier in the alphabet, as most readers are alphabetic. Make sure it contains keywords that relate to what your content has to offer, or provides enough detail for your readers to remain familiar with it. For example” Shadowy Ramblings of an Artist” would be better phrased as “Art & Remablings of John Scott.”

If you don’t want to change your website title, you can give your Feed its own title under the “Title/Description” option of the Optimize tab in Feedburner.

3. Enhance your blog with Feed-boosting plugins

If you took my advice on #1 and have your feed setup in Feedburner, there may be a plugin available for your CMS or blogging platform to help direct feed traffic through Feedburner for the most impact. Below are links to some of the most common:

Blogger

TypePad

WordPress

4. Write content with high SEO value

Using descriptive keywords in your post titles, adding “ALT” descriptions to links and tagging your content properly will help search engines index your content faster. If you are writing an article on the medicinal qualities of the spearmint herb, an optimized title would be “Spearmint medicinal qualities for healthy living.” This title places the important keywords at the beginning, and adds a “hook” phrase to the end that targets readers interested in healthy living, who may not have otherwise cared about mint.

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If you use WordPress, the Yoast SEO plugin is a complete solution for your blog that includes feed optimization settings and a simple addition to your post editor for creating alternate titles and keywords intended for your feeds and search results.

5. Always use fully qualified URLs when linking to other sites or content on your own site.

A fully qualified URL contains “http://” and your domain, rather than an internal path such as “../blog/?=234” or similar. Some websites may not be able to syndicate your feed if your links are not properly set. This includes making sure links to external sites always open in a new window or tab by using target=”_blank” in your link tags.

6. Include ALT text for your images.

Not only does this ensure your feed meets accessibility standards for screen-readers, it allows your images to be properly syndicated. This is critical if you publish a photoblog or other image-centered content.

7. Separate images from content

If you have an art-directed blog or your content revolves around photos, you will want to drive readers back to the main site to view your content in its full glory. Consider removing images from your feed or only providing a post thumbnail, and offering a separate feed for images. This method optimizes your content feed for mobile devices and drives users who are interested in your visual content to your main website.

8. Add a footer to your RSS Feed

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Use an RSS footer to add social bookmarking links, copyright information, related post links, author information, or ad graphics to the bottom of each post. This tactic dramatically increases the number of clicks to other articles on your blog and keeps your content circulating. Most social bookmarking plugins for WordPress offer an option for adding themselves to your feed. FeedBurner also provides footer options for adding email subscription and social links with the FeedfFlare optimization.

9. Ping regularly

Pinging notifies various search engines that your feed has been updated and invites them to come index your content for higher visibility. The Yoast SEO WordPress plugin, along with many other quality SEO plugins, includes an option for pinging some services automatically when new content is published on your blog.

If you are using a different platform, or want more control over pining, you can use a free service like Ping-O-Matic or Feedshark. Add your Blog Name, Site URL and Feed URL, then select the engines to ping. If you opt to use FeedBurner, PingShot is available under your Publisize tab and provides a similar service.

10. Get backlinks

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It does no good to have an awesome feed if no one is reading it. Help boost your feed’s popularity by submitting it for syndication across scores of networks.

Before doing this, it is a good idea to make sure everything else I’ve covered above is in order, especially the copyright information in your feed footer. Additionally, add a link back to your website, even if the feed already links individual items to the original post on your blog.

Have you taken the time to optimize your site’s RSS feed?

Vail Joy

Vail Joy

Written exclusively for Webdesigner Depot by Vail Joy. She is a freelance designer and tech blogger with a deep interest in all things web-related. She also enjoys writing for WIX, the free website builder.

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