Posts Tagged ‘rss feeds’

My Social Media Life is Getting Out of Hand! Manage Your Online Time

Monday, April 13th, 2009

You were told to Twitter, to get a Facebook and a LinkedIn account, to join a few business based social media sites and create a social media campaign to get your name out there. So you did–and now you’re overwhelmed. People want to be your “friend,” they keep answering you, asking questions, inquiring about your small business and you feel obligated to write them back. But there’s that business thing you’re running that’s getting in the way of your social media life! How to manage it all? Create a social media desktop.

A social media desktop will help you keep track of all your posts and who comments at one central place. It will also help you keep track of what’s going on with other social media sites who are also focused on your topics and keywords. What makes it so easy to track is RSS feeds. That’s Really Simple Syndication, which will allow you to follow many sites and keep them in a single place.

Which sites would you like to follow? Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, blogs and news updates from Google or MSN are good choices.

Why is this important? Because a social media desktop will help you start to know how your efforts are paying off. You will get to see a running commentary of what people are saying to you, about you, and your business as well as what’s happening in your field.

The major RSS services are iGoogle, MyYahoo! and Netvibes. You can set up an iGoogle, MyYahoo! or Netvibes homepage, and once you do this, you can list websites, blogs, or social media sites you’d like to follow–and many of them will have an RSS feed icon, which all you have to do is click on it and it will be added.

Your social media desktop can help you streamline your online efforts, but once again, so RSS feed every site you like or you’ll be right back to being overwhelmed. Only list the ones you are compelled to visit again and again. Enjoy viewing them all at once, and at your convenience. That’s online marketing and networking at its best.

Rank Your Blog Or RSS Feed

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

There’s a new service that promises to deliver RSS feeds for blogs based on blog post popularity. AideRSS is being called an “intelligent assistant”. Well, I think my human assistant is pretty intelligent, but that’s OK.

Among the features of this new service are:

  • Filter any blog or RSS feed
  • Customize to your interests
  • Live, best posts widgets
  • Daily digests of top stories
  • Intelligent PostRank filtering

PostRank is an AideRSS service that promises to analyze your blog and rank your blog posts according to popularity using, presumably, all new criteria. That is, criteria that you don’t already get analyzed through Google Analytics. So how does the service work?

(Source) in a nutshell you enter the URL of the feed that you would like to have filtered and we do some math and checking around the web to learn about this feed, its statistics, and people’s reaction to it. We then assign PostRank™ scores to all articles in the feed and provide you with a variety of tools to sort and parse these items of interest into manageable lots for you to scan and digest at your leisure.

That does sound a lot like the way Google does it, doesn’t it? Without more information, I believe I’ll withhold judgment. But I do see two useful applications for this service.

The first application is the sorting of your own RSS feeds. According to the company’s sales page, you can sort your own RSS feeds, the ones you like to read, in ways that most feed readers don’t allow. For instance, if you just want to read the “good posts” from your favorite blogs then you input the data that you consider to be the best criteria for judging good and the service will rank the individual blog posts that come in daily according to that criteria. Sounds like a little bit of a time saver there.

The other useful service is the AideRSS widget feature. You can rank blogs posts according to top rank, PageRank, and have those posts appear on your blog in a widget. I don’t think I’ve seen this service before. It looks interesting.

According to Marshall Kirkpatrick of ReadWriteWeb, the best time to post to your blog is on Thursday between 5-7 p.m.

Luciani’s conclusion: between 1pm and 3pm PST (after lunch) or between 5pm and 7pm PST (after work) are the best times and Thursday is the best day. The worst time to post? Between 3 and 5 PM PST on the weekends – nobody cares.

I’d say this is probably true for the most post. People like to use their weekends to play outside the house, especially in the summer. But I think your weekend statistics in the winter time should be better. I also think peak posting times depend a lot on the type of blog that you are writing and the interests of your blog readers. Right after lunch seems reasonable for most business blogs. But in the evening? Again, it depends on your business, but if you have a local blog on the east coast and you cater mostly to business people who read blogs during the day, I’m thinking 8 p.m. EST isn’t the best time. Some things you just have to take with a grain of salt.