June 5, 2007
To ROR or Not to ROR
By: Melanie Prough
There is a great deal of mystery
surrounding the actual use of the ror.xml feed. I did some heavy
investigating and have decided that ROR (Resources of a Resource) is like
a "Sales Pitch" for the engines that use it. For the engines that do not
it is still a sitemap/content link and a feed....we all know feeds are
hot.
So how is a ROR feed a "Sales Pitch"?
It is a fully disciplined interface to describe everything in and about
your site in greater detail than the sitemap.xml. Ideally the engines can
better comprehend your content for the purpose of accurate indexing. It
can be used to describe, pages, directories, images, events, podcasts,
blog entries, products, schedules, and anything else. It even helps
describe your sitemap and its location if you like. ROR is commonly
accepted for all engines even though it was originally created by Google.
How do I make and install a
ror.xml feed? I suggest until you get a real feel for the language and
format that you use a generator. You can Google it, there are many. I use
up8.org. Then you
upload the file named ror.xml to the root of your site. After the file is
uploaded insert the following link meta tag to make it live.
<link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml"
title="ROR" href="/ror.xml" />
That will give you a standard
content ROR sitemap. I would suggest checking out
rorweb.com, they are the "Authority"
on ROR. They have examples, utilities, and advice.
Then if you get the hang
of it there are places to submit, product feeds, for example.
There is no harm is
making the crawling of your site as accessible as possible. Wouldn't it
just be nice if the engines told us what they used, of exactly what they
wanted? Maybe, but not as much fun!
By: Melanie Prough
[SEOCog.com]
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