I hate to say this and it goes against everything that I have written and wanted to think for the past few years, but full text feeds can REALLY hurt publishers.

The most important thing to a publisher is their content, and their content generally is what supports them in making their living. The problem with feeds and syndication is that advertisers, value not only the content, but also the brand behind that content. There is no brand behind a feed. Weird to say but oh so true. (The trenches of ad sales and trying to make a living for large independent publishers can really take the internet purist out of you.)

The famous quote from Zeldman now rings true on Madison Ave.

Q: If you offered an RSS feed, I could read your stuff without visiting your site.

A: If you stored your groceries on the sidewalk, we could eat your food without sitting across the table from you.

The problem with the average publisher that makes their money based on impressions and the brands that support these impressions, is that some very valuable readers are no longer stopping in for a visit. They are choosing to eat the groceries on the sidewalk.

Now I know the argument of syndication and the power that it can provide to increasing your site audience, loyalty, etc. and that is why I do believe in syndicating your feed. The only discrepancy here is that I think the best way to do it is with partial text feeds.

There, I said it.

The best Full Content Feed Revenue Model I’ve seen is John Gruber’s “Membership-Only RSS Feeds“, but this model is difficult to execute and wouldn’t work for most audiences or publishers.


2 Responses to “Content without Brand is Bad for the Bottom Line”  

  1. Gravatar Icon 1 Jules

    Websites’ content silos will start to fall depending on two factors: (1) quality control over the distribution (so videos/text feeds don’t wind up on “inappropriate sites”) and (2) monetization of distributed content. Especially (2), which is already starting to happen on the web and cross-platform.

  2. Gravatar Icon 2 Wayne Smallman

    I use my feed as a loss leader. I balance the convenience to my feed readership against growing my overall traffic.

    Since adding full-fat feeds, I’ve seen the number of subscriptions increase, and the number of click-thrus climb quite steeply, too.

    Additionally, if you’re using something like FeedBurner, and you hit the magic number of subscribers (which incidentally, I have no idea what that number is) then you get invited to their FAN (FeedBurner Ad Network,) which is where you begin to monetize your feed readership.

    There’s also an opportunity for the likes of FeedBurner here, to make the feed experience a richer and more engaging one, while not becoming a full-blow web log.

    An experience that stops people clearing your stall out of fresh fruit…

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