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Will
The Real Spammer Please Stand Up! |
by:
Mustafa
K. |
If
you have been using opt-in email marketing
for sometime, I'm
sure you might have got accused of spam
at some point, even
after doing everything right.
Yes, I'm talking about people who actually
agreed to receive
your email, blaming you for sending unsolicited
mail.
According to me it's not their fault, as
nowadays it's very easy
to mistake an 'email marketer' for an 'email
bomber'.
The web has grown so wide and huge in the
last couple of years
that it has become hard to differentiate
between a spammer and a
legal email marketer.
Spammers just didn't disturb a regular
email users life but also wrecked havoc
in the Internet
marketing community.
Day after day it's becoming devastatingly
difficult for
permission based email marketers to use
email legally and not
get slammed for illegal mailing.
Even after making sure your email looks,
sounds, smells and
tastes 'Legal', you run a high risk of either
getting blocked or
being labeled as a spammer.
On the other hand, if luck favors you and
your mail does make it
to your subscribers' inbox safe and sound,
what's the guarantee
that it'll get opened and read?
It's a nightmare every marketer would love
to avoid.
Well, you can stop worrying now and have
a sigh of relief. It's
about time all the hardcore spammers out
there had their last
laugh.
The Internet marketing world is abuzz with
a brand new
technology, which could finally send spamming
back to the dark
ages, big time.
If you still don't have a clue of what I'm
talking about, it's
called RSS and it's turning heads all over
the web.
RSS, which stands for 'Really Simple Syndication'
is a new
technology, which enables anyone to syndicate
his or her content
online.
A lot has been written on what is RSS and
how it works. So I
would like to keep it short and sweet, as
I'm sure you too
wouldn't really want to get into the unnecessary
technical stuff.
In simple words, RSS is a way to publish
and receive content
electronically. RSS files are XML based
and are popularly known
as RSS feeds.
What's revolutionary about RSS is, it can
help you distribute
your content directly to your subscribers,
without any spam
filters interfering.
To subscribe and read your RSS feeds, all
your subscribers need
to have is an RSS reader, also known as
an aggregator.
What's more, they don't even have to worry
about giving out any
of their personal details to subscribe to
your feed.
And with a screaming bunch of RSS readers
available on the web
right now (most of them being free), it
wouldn't be very hard to
convince your subscribers to get there hands
on one.
RSS readers are available in both versions,
desktop and
web-based, of which the latter seems to
be the most popular.
Once your subscriber adds your RSS feed
to their favorite RSS
reader, you go 'live' and instantly establish
a direct
connection with your subscriber.
Whenever you have something
new to publish, all you have to do is update
your already
published RSS feed with your fresh content.
As soon you load your feed with new content,
walla! Your feed
automatically gets updated everywhere it's
subscribed.
No mess, no fuss. Just content that works.
Pretty neat huh?
That's the beauty of RSS. No wonder it's
currently being
employed by web honchos like Yahoo! and
MSN to deliver content
to their users.
They even allow their members to add any
RSS feeds of their
choice to their members' area, making them
perfect examples of
web-based aggregators.
Syndicating your content can mean a lot
to you and your
business. By publishing your own RSS feeds,
you could eventually
end up with more leads, more subscribers
and not to forget, more
money in the bank.
Happy syndicating!
About the author:
Mustafa K. is the co-founder of http://www.rapidfeeds.com-
a free online service that helps anyone
deliver targeted content to their subscribers
through RSS. Sign Up for your FREE account
on his site to put an end to blocked messages
and add more subscribers.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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