Blogging tips & www social trends
27 Nov
Think about it.
You have a blog. A good blog. And you write a lot.
You have a growing number of readers, coming to your site via their preferred rss feed reader.
One day you write a really good article.
You post it, and immediatly it has great exposure and visibility: is on top of your homepage and it appear inside your feed, so search engines and people are aware of it.
Your article is so good that a lot of people digg it and reddit it and you get a lot of backlinks from other bloggers. You’re very proud of it, because it’s an article that really is useful for your visitors.
But what happens to the same post after three months?
It’s gone. It disappeared from your homepage, it disappeared from your rss feed, it disappeared from digg and reddit.
You still have all that backlinks, but where are they? They’re in articles that are lost in the archieves of other bloggers.
What can you do?
There’s an intresting idea by Chris Pearson to change the default layout of the standard blog, he says
The idea is good, and it somehow bring a to a blog something good from the old “web 1.0″ site style, but still I’m not 100% convinced.
Here are my doubts:
Now, I have an idea.
Let’s also use the rss feed itself to highlight our best content.
Suppose you have two rss feeds: One for the recent entries, and one for the past content. A user can subscribe to both, and the first one will be a standard rss feed, while the past one will be a sort of “You may have missed” feed. You can change the articles listed in the “You may have missed” feed once a week,for example, allowing the readers to discover the hidden treasures of your blog. You may keep the most important articles while changing the others. This way you’ll give a lot more exposure to all of your posts, and you push them directly to the reader.
On the site, there can be also a “You may have missed” block on each of your pages, so the user can easily reach all the best content in a couple of clicks.. but changing the “missed” list make this block useful also for the returning visitor.
There are a lot of other possibilities, as using a random articles feed, injecting older post in the default feed or something else, but the idea is the same:
Use the media your average reader likes most to deliver the content he will like most.
What do you think? Can this be a good way to give the readers a better experience on your blog?
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