Ask Egg Bird: Adding Feedburner to a Free Blogger Blog

by swimturtle on January 28, 2009

in Ask Egg Bird, Google, Web

If you are not already a subscriber, this is the perfect time to sign up, via RSS or via email.

I am very excited to post the first answer to an Ask Egg Bird question. Kloe from the lovely blog kloeamongtheturks has asked me the following question (really it’s two or three bundled into one, but we’ll do our best here, ok?):

I would like to know if Feedburner can be used by Blogspot blogs. As the creator of a long-standing blog, I have no idea how many people read Kloe (I’ve actually been scared to know…)
Also, what’s your opinion of Blogspot? Should I be concerned that I don’t own my site? (I don’t need to make money from my blog.)

So, let’s address these questions in order and find out the best way to answer. I must first say that I had some private email exchanges with Kloe because there are step-by-step guides on the Feedburner site that tell you how to put Feedburner on your site, but Kloe had trouble following the steps. And I must say I don’t blame her. I’m fairly savvy and I had to go through the steps a couple of times before I completely understood them myself. I think I’ve got it down now, though, so here goes.


First of all, what is Feedburner? In plain English, Feedburner is a service (now owned by Google) that manages the RSS feeds for people’s websites and blogs. You don’t HAVE to have Feedburner to generate RSS feeds. All blogs and websites with content that is renewed regularly, like newspaper sites or magazines and so on, automatically generate RSS feeds. If you pay attention, you will notice that in the far right-hand corner of the url bar (the address bar) at the top of your screen, when you go to a website, there will be a small orange RSS button right there, and if you click on it, you get the feed. So why have Feedburner at all? Why do you need it? The answer is: TO TRACK YOUR STATISTICS, and, ANALYZE YOUR TRAFFIC. In simple terms this means you will be able to see:

  • how many subscribers you have (and Feedburner will count both RSS and email subscribers)
  • where subscribers came from
  • how many visitors came (not subscribers, new visitors)
  • how long each visitor stayed
  • and many other things of this nature.

The benefits of being able to track and measure the quantity and quality of the traffic your blog or website is getting are immeasurable. When you see that one particular page or series of articles is popular, you know that you should write more like them. Being able to see your statistics will help you improve your site in many ways. Let’s leave it at that for now and tackle the practical solution to the question at hand.

When we say “get Feedburner on our site” we mean use Feedburner as a filter through which our RSS feeds pass to get counted and measured. That’s all it means. You know when you see those people standing at the beginning of a bridge or something with that little counter in their hand, and every time a car goes by the press the clicker? Well, that’s what Feedburner is: it’s that person with the clicker in their hand. So the feeds go through Feedburner and they get counted. Now let’s move on to the actual “getting” of Feedburner on our site.

First, go to the Feedburner site at: http://www.feedburner.com/fb/a/home and click on the button toward the top left of the screen that says “Blogs.” This will take you to the first page where you have to do something. Scroll to the bottom of the page and you will see this:

Type in your blog address

Type in your blog address

Do not click on the box that asks you if you are a podcaster, because you are not, so this does not apply to you. And then click on NEXT. You will be taken to a screen where you simply have to choose between Atom feeds and RSS feeds. Atom is simply another format. We will choose RSS, as you can see below:

Choose RSS feeds

Choose RSS feeds

Once you have chosen, simply click on NEXT. You will be taken to a screen that shows you your new Feedburner feed address. This is important, please copy and paste this address separately from what you are doing on the screen. If you have two monitors, great, just paste it into any Word or Notebook file on the other screen. You can also just write it on a piece of paper. Let me make another little note. You see the red arrow that points at the FEED TITLE? Well, that is what the world will see as the name of your feed in their Google Reader or whatever other feed reader they use, so write it the way you want people to see it, with the right use of capitalization and all that.

See your Feedburner feed address

See your Feedburner feed address

Once you have copied the feed address, the one I highlighted in yellow, you can click on ACTIVATE FEED. Now, I am not going to click on this button because I don’t want to activate your feed for you, since I don’t have access to the administrator page of your blog. I will switch to a fake test blog that I started this afternoon and continue the process on that blog.

So once you activate the feed, you will be taken to a page where you are asked to set up a Google account. I know that Kloe already has one, so it will be easy for her. Incidentally, Google owns both Feedburner and Blogger (her blogging platform), so they will all “play well together.” Nice to know, right?

Here is what will happen next. When you click on ACTIVATE you will be asked to open an account or, if you have one, to sign in. If you are not Kloe and you don’t have a Google account, you can create one. If you don’t know how, just read the post on how to creat a Google account right here on Tech*Tips. If you are Kloe, then sign in, and you will be taken to the Feedburner page that displays all your feeds. Since this is your first one, it will only have Kloe Among the Turks. But it will look just like this:

Your New Feed

Your New Feed

A small RSS gray button on the left, the name you chose in blue and the number of subscribers you have. Of course it is zero at first because we have just started.

Now comes a very important step! Feedburner will measure all the new subscriptions you get from this moment forward, but you want it also to go back and get all the subscribers you already have. To do that you have to access your administrator page, where you write new posts, and plop that string of text that I had you write down in a certain box. Let’s do that now with eggbirdtest and then you will know how to do it in your own blog. So here goes:

Open your administrator page, and click on the tab that says SETTINGS and then on the one that says SITE FEED. You will see the following screen: [IT IS VERY IMPORTANT THAT YOU PAY ATTENTION TO THIS STEP]

the_most_important_stepRemember the FEED ADDRESS that I told you to write down separately? Well, you have to paste it or type it into the window with all the arrows, the POST FEED REDIRECT URL. Read the paragraph I highlighted. This is where Feedburner catches all the feeds that are already going out to your loyal readers, the ones who, like me, have been following you from the beginning, and makes them cross the famous bridge so the little man with the clicker can count them too.

Also, in the upper portion of the screen, where you see ALLOW BLOG FEEDS and the little box currently is set to FULL, it’s up to you. If you want the entire article you post to be in the feed reader of the recipients, then leave it set to Full, otherwise change it to SHORT. That will cut off the feed after about 255 characters. Your posts are generally short, so I would stick with Full, but the advantage of using Short is that people who want to read the rest click on the “more” or “continue reading” that appears at the end of the short post and are taken directly to your site, where they will read other posts and look around. In the case of a commercial website this is advantageous. But in any case, if your goal is to be read, you want people to visit the site itself and not limit themselves to reading the feeds.

I hope this answers the first question, of how to actually “get” Feedburner. And now for the other two:

1. What do I think of Blogger? Well, I think that for a free site Blogger is fine. It belongs to Google and so does Feedburner so they will work very well together. I had a very successful blog on Blogger a couple of years ago and I found it very easy to use. Now it has been enhanced in many ways, I see, and it seems to work even better.

2. Am I afraid that you might lose your content? Well, not really. Your site is not violent or full of sexually explicit content or politically inflammatory rants or anything that could offend anybody, really, so I can’t imagine that Google would ever have any reason to suddenly drop the site altogether. Also, I know that you back up your content, and that is the key thing. If ever something “technical” should happen to the blog, you can simply reinstate it from your backup. As for not “owning” the site, here’s the deal: EVERYTHING YOU WRITE ONLINE IS YOURS. In other words, the copyright of your original images and artwork, even the photos you take of other artists’ work, is yours and no one can take it away. What you don’t own is the actual DOMAIN. the xxx.xxx.xxx.com/kloeamongtheturks part of it. The shell of the house that your content lives in. In other words, Blogger is like a hotel that lets you stay there for free. But if they ask you to leave, you take all your belongings with you.

Kloe dear, I hope this answers all your questions. And for all you other readers, please add your comments and ask any questions you wish to ask. You can ask in the comments, you can click on the Ask Egg Bird button, or you can click on the Contact tab of the site. And if you have a website or blog of your own, then run off and “get” Feedburner on it, right away! :-)

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{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Kloe January 29, 2009 at 1:43 am

OK, Turtle, that was a HECK OF A LOT OF WORK!!! Thanks so much! I’ve just read it once, and am too tired to follow the directions yet, but give me weekend morning coffee and banana bread, and I’m going to do it.
I’m glad we can help and support each other.
love and kisses from SoCal.

Kloe February 2, 2009 at 8:01 pm

Followed your instructions, albeit drinking a glass of wine, but my head is clear… It all went fine til hitting “eggbirdtest…..0″. I never got to that screen.

Anyway, now what? Where are these stats waiting for me? Do I have to go to a feedburner site? I’ll try to subscribe to my own blog. After 2 1/2 years and hundreds of posts, I don’t think I have any subscribers, but have no idea.

Sorry to be so ditzy! K

swimturtle February 6, 2009 at 2:32 pm

Hi there, Kloe, I will write a new post about how to check your Feedburner stats. I did mention at the end of the post that you have to give Feedburner a day or two to actually go and get your feeds and tally them up. But by now you should definitely have results!
Stay tuned and here comes the answer to your new question!

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