How Yahoo's Recent Facelift Can Mean More Traffic To Your Site
by: Tinu AbayomiPaul
It even surprised me.
Yes, even though I have been pointing out the possibility
since July, and was forced by demand to release my study
findings before my book was even half finished, I was shocked
when I heard the news as well.
You see, I was sure we were at least a year off from this
glorious day.
The News
Yahoo has had a little facelift, which you've probably read
about by now. The real news is more important for your site -
the “My Yahoo!” page looks different too.
On September 28, 2004, surfers who logged in to their
personalized Yahoo area saw an announcement explaining the RSS
and Atom files that show updated information to a website as
content feeds, effectively pushing news feeds into the
mainstream.
The new look to this section of Yahoo was presented as a
full page ad to every single account holder upon first log in
that day, and even now, there remains a notice posted.
When I logged into my page in the "My Yahoo!" section, I
saw a big difference in the number of feeds left to choose
from, as well as in the way they were presented.
Currently, the RSS module boasts "150,000 sources". If your
site isn't one of them, its crucial that you act now. If you
have one and you’re not getting the results you’d like from
your set-up, there are small changes you can implement that
will make a huge difference in your listing.
Best results aren’t as easy as submitting your feed now,
but you’re still within the window of opportunity - if you do
it properly.
What the News Could Mean For Your Site If You Act Now
One of my clients recently called this "the back door into
Yahoo". Whether that statement is accurate as far as getting
included, or receiving an increase in rankings within Yahoo's
search engine via your feed, depends on your site, and whether
you create your feed correctly.
If you could use a daily stream of traffic from even a
small portion of Yahoo's estimated 20 million users, this
could be your final wake-up call. You’ll want to learn how to
create a feed that gets well listed immediately.
Currently, the RSS module boasts "150,000 sources". Yahoo
will still need hundreds, perhaps thousands more, even if it
only intends to list the “creme de la creme” of the
submissions it gets. Being in that group is as easy as
submitting your feed.
Being at the top of the list isn’t. However, you’re still
within the window of opportunity if you take the time to learn
how to do this properly. You can get free details on how to do
that at
helpmerss.com.
“My Yahoo!” RSS Headline module Coming Out of Beta?
If I had to guess, I'd say all signs point to yes. When
that happens, Yahoo's RSS/Atom directory will likely contain
only those who added their feeds early. New feeds seeking to
be included will probably face stricter standards.
If you don't have one yet don’t worry, because it’s never
been easier to make one. If you can cut and paste, there are
tools all over the Net that will show you how- some will even
generate the file for you.
However, there are still certain guidelines you need to
follow with your feed to get a good result out of Yahoo - it's
not as simple as adding your feed now that there are more
competing listings.
Yahoo is still accepting new sources for RSS feeds. Readers
of my last book state that they are getting excellent results
following my instructions, though initial inclusion no longer
occurs at the same rate. Plenty of markets have few feeds
available, or none at all. Your site could fill that void.
That means you still have a chance at a first page ranking.
The traffic I get on a daily basis from My Yahoo readers alone
sounds like I just like to brag.
And I do, but that's hardly the point.
The point is, there's no place you can even go to buy the
caliber of exposure to the quality of audience that reads
feeds. The typical audience that accesses information by feed
are also blog readers. A study this summer estimated that the
69.3% of blog readers are aged 29-50, and that 40% of this
audience are people who have household incomes greater than
$90,000.
The type of surfer that would subscribe to your feed has
pre-qualified themselves as a lead, with a certain level of
understanding and interest in your topic, often on a
professional level. And if you don't spend every post hitting
them over the head with your sales pitch, they can be both
loyal and interactive.
(If you do, they'll unsubscribe from your feed faster than
you can spell s-p-a-m.)
And if you're in the business of providing information you
can use, in a way that shows how you can solve their problem,
it's like preaching to the converted. If your product solves
their problem, and you show that you deserve the trust of this
subscriber, you’ll also find the route to a sale an
increasingly downward slope.
The bottom line - this is the power surfer's favorite toy.
And if your content appeals to them, you need to learn how to
play.
Copyright 2004 Tinu AbayomiPaul
About
Learn how Tinu saw a 75% increase in
both traffic and sales from feeds at
http://freetraffictip.com/rssbook. For free reprint
rights to her articles (and a potential $500 bribe) send a
blank email to
moneyarticles@freetraffictip.com.