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How Do You Like Your Feeds?

Posted by on Dec 4, 2008 in Blogging, Networking

RSS feeds are great for lazy and (sometimes) unorganized people like me who can’t possibly remember to visit all the sites I like. I’ve tried signing up for feeds a few ways - adding to my Internet feeds lists, signing up for emails, and adding them to Outlook. I must say having Outlook manage my feeds was one of the best things I’ve never done. Neither solution is a win-win, so I don’t sign up for email RSS.

Sorry, Email RSSers

I’ve tried, for the sake of the blogs I love and their email subscriber stats, to like RSS via email, but it’s not going to happen. I just don’t like getting emails that aren’t specifically addressed to me. Even though I signed up for the subscription, I still get that spammed feeling when an RSS email shows up in my inbox. I could sign up using my spam-only email address, but then I wouldn’t get the updates.

I Love Outlook’s RSS Integration

These days, I’m using Outlook to improve my productivity on several fronts. I use ‘Notes’ to manage my ideas. ‘Tasks’ to manage my work. I have several different ‘Rules’ set up for routing email going to different email addresses. And I use Outlook to manage my RSS Feeds. It’s one of the best things I’ve done.

No more spending minutes or more visiting separate blogs to get the latest posts - or to feel that I’ve wasted precious time when there is no latest. Instead, I can easily tell whether there are any new posts because the feed name is bold with the number of posts in parenthesis like Writer’s Brew(1). I love it. Thankfully all the feeds I’m subscribed to have their full posts in the RSS rather than just the first paragraph. Otherwise, I wouldn’t be subscribed.

Are RSS Subscribers Deadbeats?

I used to wonder if blogs benefited from RSS subscribers, since there was no real page view gain, and quite possibly a loss. A recent post on Problogger.net solved that conundrum with 6 reasons that’s it’s nothing to worry about, if it’s done right. My favorite: “A subscriber that never visits is better than a one off visitor who never returns.”

This isn’t a sales pitch for Outlook at all - though I encourage Outlook users to try out their feeds integration. It’s more of a way to encourage you to find a way to manage your RSS feeds in a way that isn’t cumbersome or time-consuming for you.

Are you subscribed to any RSS feeds? How do you get your updates?

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