RSS and Advertising

Rss_1I want ads.
However, I also want no ads on my TiVo’ed shows, podcasts, emails, web sites or especially in my RSS feeds….unless they’re for something I want or might be interested in.

Just read Robert Scoble’s post which focused on full vs. partial RSS fed posts. What I saw in his post loud-n-clear was this: advertising is intrusive to early adopters (his premise…most readers of feeds in aggregators are early adopters). Scoble is also a pragmatist like I am: people don’t or can’t work for free and content production doesn’t happen without some sort of incentives to make the system work.

As people’s attention increasingly is focused on the Web — and traditional distribution of advertisements wane — there is a level of desperation in ad-land to figure out what is the next smart, targeted, measurable, learning and adaptable method to give people what they want, what they’re interested in, and what people actually welcome.

Scoble continues with some smart ideas on unobtrusively placing links within the RSS feed to content on web pages that have ads on them vs. obtrusive ads inside of the feed itself — whetting the interest of a reader to click-through instead of the old way of shotgun-blasting ads at people — and I find that brilliant. Get creative on giving value, advertisers, and adapt to this new method of people consuming content. (By the way, I find it amusing that in-line RSS ads are just visual noise to me now…and I ignore them inside of an aggregated feed just like I ignore ads on web pages!).

I submit that the cleanliness of an RSS feed is imperative too. When I think about all the mashup’ed sites and aggregators out there already, interstitial ads would destroy the overall look-n-feel and simply add to visual noise (plus, it would be trivial to strip them out making all the effort of insertion be a moot point).

Could a partial solution be in the Microsoft-proposed Simple Sharing Extension to the RSS protocol? Why couldn’t SSE be used to update a stored profile of me based on my actual click-through and consumption of an ad? Based on what I know of RSS protocol and the SSE extension, it would seem that a simple mechanism of synchronizing what I actually view with a constantly updated profile of Steve Borsch (a profile I would own and would reside in my InfoCard repository along with my attention data). Updating synchronously would enable the profile to become more-n-more useful to advertisers so they could deliver what I want, am interested in…as well as how those wants and needs will change over the duration of my online life.

RSS: We haven’t seen anything yet…

Rss
The more I experience the power of Really Simple Syndication (RSS), the more I realize that it is increasingly the lubrication for the gears of the content machine.

Like any successful protocol, opportunists want to bend it to their will and market forces push on it to become better or end up irrelevant to some superior one. Dave Winer’s post today is a positioning statement that proves "the mental doors are wide open" to ideas that favor market forces over the opportunists.

Aggregators have changed my research and analytic life. RSS has allowed me to add multiple streams of consciousness and information which feed my ever flowing, nearing flood stage, river of knowledge…but made manageable because of the protocol.

Think about just one development, tagging, which is sparking services like Edgeio (maybe the Ebay of blogs?) and the increasingly valuable offerings from Technorati (making sense of the blogosphere through clustering and search of them).

At the same time, I am seeing opportunities to leverage RSS absolutely EVERYWHERE. From mashups like Newsvine (news feeds + seeding articles + social promotion = a network customized newspaper) to ScoopGo (ScoopGO! lets you create "Scoops": search engines which search through feeds you choose), the acceleration in capabilities and ideas — all built on top of RSS — are incredible.

No question that at some point in the next few years, Dave Winer will be viewed as the creator of one of the most important market catalysts of the 21st Century.