RSS as a Change Agent
by Rok Hrastnik
Published on this site: July 15th, 2005 - See
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To better understand how RSS is changing the way companies
and individuals deliver and consume content on the macro scale,
let us first remember how content is traditionally delivered
and consumed.
People subscribe to e-mail newsletters or e-mail update services
to get content delivered directly to their inboxes. It's (or
better yet, was) convenient, easy and simple.
But, in order to get content delivered to their inboxes,
they must first reveal their e-mail addresses, which are basically
ID numbers that allow anyone who knows them to send whatever
they like to these ID numbers.
In a perfect world people would only receive the content
that they requested and only from the people that they wanted
to hear from the people that can provide them with relevant
information, specific to their interests and current situation.
But this is not a perfect world.
Since the "ID number" allows anyone to contact
anyone, people have very little control over who actually
does contact them and what information they send them.
In a way, it's a "perfect democracy" that just
doesn't work. Because, in reality, we don't want to hear from
everyone that thinks they have something to say to us. In
reality, we only want to hear from a very limited circle of
people and receive very limited types of content categories.
But, for the sake of the argument, let's presume that we
are actually getting information only from the people that
we want to hear from. Unfortunately these people still have
the power to send us whatever information they like, not just
the information we want to receive from them. Basically, they
have the power to push any kind of content to our e-mail inboxes.
We can either unsubscribe, if they give us this opportunity,
from their e-mail service or continue to receive their content
as it is. One of the problems with this is that unsubscribing
can be a rather tedious process, definitely not a two-click
affair, and some people even doubt that the unsubscribe feature
will actually work.
This is our reality.
We are, more or less, forced to receive content we mostly
don't want to receive, and for the content that we do want
to receive, we also have to put up with much information we
don't want to get.
This is the "democratic" nature of e-mail and many
marketers and publishers have been abusing it for a long time.
It's not the medium's fault of course; it's just that people
are who we are.
And now enter RSS in to the picture, a "new" channel
that users need to proactively add to their content consumption
mix, including proactively adding content publishers they
want to hear from, thus eliminating the "democracy"
of e-mail, conversely, limiting our "content diet"
only to the publishers we actually want to hear from.
But there's more.
One of this channel's characteristics is that it's extremely
easy to remove content publishers you don't want to hear from.
Now, all of us have very limited time for online content
consumption. It's always been this way, but with e-mail content
consumption we usually don't even bother ourselves with unsubscribing
from the content we don't want to receive, since we already
receive hundreds of SPAM e-mails per day anyway, so why bother
with unsubscribing from a few e-mail lists and the few additional
e-mails we receive per week. Most people don't even know anymore
what they subscribe to since they have no unified view of
all of their e-mail subscriptions.
However, this new channel, RSS, is quite different. Here
you have an exact view of what you subscribe to. You see exactly
which content publishers are on your list and you can remove
any of them immediately, without even a second thought. It's
quick, easy and comfortable.
Compare this with the relative difficulty of unsubscribing
from e-mail lists, and even with the e-mail mindset where
you just don't care to be bothered anymore with unsubscribing,
since you don't have a view of what you subscribe to anyway.
This new channel takes the democracy right out of content
delivery for publishers and brings it back for end-users.
If RSS content publishers want to keep and grow their readership,
they cannot afford to do the things they could have easily
been doing with e-mail.
Instantly, all the content needs to be highly relevant. You
can no longer afford to send out blatant advertising messages
or too much content that is of little interest to your target
audience. If you want to survive you need to tailor all of
your content specifically to the needs of your target audience.
RSS content delivery must in nature be more relevant than
content delivered by e-mail.
RSS content publishers know this and most are providing exactly
this, very relevant content, usually more relevant than what
most e-mail publishers are doing, since they are taking in
to consideration the specific characteristics of the channel.
And there are more publishers like this every day. And eventually,
even those that use both e-mail and RSS to deliver content,
change the way they are delivering content using e-mail. Their
entire content production becomes more relevant to the user's
needs.
It's quite easy to imagine the larger-scale implications
of this.
Since more and more publishers are starting to offer more
relevant content, that also raises the bar for other content
publishers, even those not using RSS.
Our expectations are increasing every day. We are no longer
content with mediocre content, we actually expect and even
demand more relevancy.
And so the circle is completed.
Early RSS publishers have started raising our expectations
of what to expect from internet content and have thus affected
our internet content consumption habits. Users, in affect,
are starting to demand more, which in turn forces other publishers
to comply with the increased demands.
This process has just begun and still has a long way to go,
but it has begun and will not stop.

Rok Hrastnik is the author of Unleash the Marketing
& Publishing Power of RSS, acclaimed as the best and most
comprehensive guide to RSS for marketers by leading RSS experts.
The complete guide on RSS for marketers: http://rss.marketingstudies.net/index.html?src=sa12

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