I’ve had a few queries asking what is going on with my RSS feedcount. As I type this article, my feedcount according to the Feedburner chicklet looks like this – Yeah, 34,015 readers, not bad considering I was around 6,000 a few days ago, then I jumped to around 17,000 and now it’s doubled that number.
The idea was simple – when Yaro landed on her Aweber account, he had all of her old standard WordPress RSSFeed gathered together waiting for him. Yaro had set up her blog blaster(RSS-to-email service) in Aweber a long time ago, all he has done is to transfer to feedburner account her old AWeber email subscribers.
Yaro has stressed how the result is not quite right because he do not has 27000 Aweber subscribers yet. He think that the communication between Aweber and feedburner is far from ideal, so her Aweber subscribers could go down in future, Yaro predicts up to 22000 subscribers max. However, While I’m writing, I’ve already noticed that this post entrepreneurs-journey is passed from 34.015 to 23216 RSS readers.
Other marketers could use this strategy to import more subscribers on their blog, to import their old RSS feed into their feed account and go them into top of blog rankings even if the blog itself doesn’t get that much traffic.
Conclusion
After this, many blogger can ask themselves if feedburner is still the better measure of blog status, like the pagerank. Nevertheless, I think that feedburner still is a good tool for measures the blog status and give bloggers and advertisers a good idea of how a blog is going and how it compares to others.











