Many internet marketers are still wondering whether  to start marketing with RSS or not. It seems that not even all the case  studies, hard metrics and benefits available can’t convince them, or  everyone would be jumping on the RSS wagon by now.
Just as an overview, here are some of the benefits marketers are missing out on by not marketing with RSS:
A]  100% delivery of their marketing, relationship building and educational  messages to their subscribers, customers, prospects and partners.  E-mail isn’t getting delivered, but with RSS you will achieve 100%  delivery.
B] Increased search engine rankings and quick content indexing, and increased traffic from other RSS-enabled online sources.
C] Getting your internet content published on other websites.
D] Generating new subscribers more easily and quickly.
E] And much much more …
Even  if you don’t believe that RSS is being used by enough people right now,  that’s still no excuse to not start using it as a vehicle to generate  more traffic to your sites.
But, soon all of this will change, too.
As  it was widely predicted, Microsoft is integrating RSS support in the  next version of its Internet Explorer, and perhaps even more important,  it's making it an integral part of its long-awaited Longhorn operating  system.
What does this mean for marketers?
A] By being  integrated in IE and other Microsoft software, RSS will achieve mass  penetration. For marketers this means that RSS will finally become one  of the standard tools of mass communication and content delivery.  Furthermore, internet users will start to expect RSS from marketers,  probably even more so than e-mail newsletters.
B] Marketers will  no longer (eventually, of course, when most of the world starts using  the latest software versions) need to explain how to get an RSS reader,  but will be able to focus only on presenting their business and benefits  to the end-user.
C] Broader RSS integration in Microsoft's tools  will enable for additional RSS uses, far beyond basic content delivery  in the form of stories, podcasts and products. Marketers and developers  will be able to deploy rich interaction applications to make  communication and business/personal interaction more fluent, easier and  more effective. In essence, for many advanced marketers the capability  of marketing with RSS will mean their either “in” or “out” of the game.
D]  This is now official. Marketers need to start taking the lead and  implementing RSS feeds accross all their communicational innitiatives,  from PR to direct marketing and sales.
And to top all of this, Google just recently started serving Google AdSense ads in RSS feeds as well. 
The deeper meaning behind this is four-fold:
A]  The new "program" is the perfect opportunity for RSS publishers to  monetize their RSS feeds. With inclussion in Google's standard  "runnings" of AdSense ads, publishers can expect to monetize on RSS  immediately.
B] This is yet another reason for publishers to  start publishing their content via RSS, especially since it won't cost  them anything or very little, but will provide them with an additional  source of revenues. With the low-cost aspect of RSS, we can expect a  flood of new publishers to set-up RSS feeds of their content to generate  additional AdSense clicks.
C] With RSS ads included in feeds, more advertisers will become aware of RSS and its marketing potential.
D]  Using RSS advertising publishers are now not only creating an  additional revenues source, but are in fact making sure they don't lose  ad revenue opportunities.
We used to refer to RSS as the future.  Well, that future is now. If you’re not ready to start marketing with  RSS, time just might run you over. As well as your competitors …
 
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