We would like to introduce WordPress Expert John Lamansky, who we managed to extract from the lab just long enough for him to compose this brilliant WordPress Top 20 SEO Guide. Got a WordPress blog that you’re eager to supercharge for optimal search engine performance? Read on! We’ll cover pinging, sitemaps, canonicalization, link juice, header tags, slugs, tags, timestamping, social media, permalinks, and a whole lot more! First and foremost: make sure you’re not inadvertently telling the search engines to go away! Believe it or not, some WordPress installations block the search engine bots by default. From your admin panel, go to Options > Privacy and make sure it’s set to “I would like my blog to be visible to everyone.” Some WordPress users restrict comments to registered users, or disable them entirely. While this may be appropriate in some situations, in most cases comments are a very beneficial factor, and a defining mark, of a blog. Comments engage your readers, help you get more “fresh content” SEO brownie points, and give search engines another reason to come back frequently. Here’s how to fully enable comments: Some of us would prefer to have a blog where we talk about anything that comes to mind: cars, movies, photosynthesis, dust mites, you name it. In and of itself, such a blogging style isn’t wrong; however, you can leave search engines clueless as to what your blog’s about and thus for what search queries your blog should appear. And some of your readers might get annoyed in the process as well. If your blog posts are accessible from more than one URL, you could end up with: Starting with version 2.3, WordPress takes care of this and makes sure your content is accessible from only one place. So if you use an older version, either upgrade to the latest version of WordPress, or install the Permalink Redirect plugin. Most code errors are minor, but the more serious ones can cause content misinterpretation by search engines, lower rankings, and rendering errors. WordPress itself produces valid code, but errors can crop up from two other common sources: First check your site for errors. If an error is found, look at the surrounding content to determine the source of the error. If a plugin is the culprit, fix it if you’re good at that sort of thing (the beauty of open source!), or send a quick email to the plugin developer and let him or her know. One characteristic of WordPress blogs is the sidebar, which is typically present on every single page. Do you really need to be passing link juice from every single one of your pages to every single one of those links? If the answer is no, consider adding rel=”nofollow” to the less important ones. Not only do they increase visitor attention and retention, they give you an opportunity to use keyword-rich “alt” attributes, “title” attributes, and filenames. Plus it’ll give your blog visibility in image search engines. Unfortunately, some themes (including the WordPress Default Theme) put the sidebar section titles in h2 tags. Although this makes sense from a strict structural point of view, it also gives irrelevant sidebar headers (”Categories,” “Archives,” “Meta,” etc.) equal weight with your SEO-important post titles. To sum it up: Use a theme that utilizes header-tags properly, or try fixing the theme you have. A ping is a “this site has new content” notification that invites bots to visit your blog. WordPress pings one website called Ping-o-matic by default, which in turn pings others. You can also add additional services by going to Options > Writing in the admin panel. (For example, the pinging URL for Google Blog Search is http://blogsearch.google.com/ping/RPC2) Another Bonus Tip: Once a post is published, WordPress issues pings whenever the post is edited. Try to cut down on after-publishing edits to avoid being considered a ping spammer. XML Sitemaps are search-engine-friendly directories of your blog’s posts and other pages intended to help search engines spider your site. Though pioneered by Google, they’re supported by Yahoo, MSN, and Ask.com as well. The Google XML Sitemaps Generator for WordPress makes creation of these sitemaps easy and automatic. It also lets the engines know when you post new content. There was a debate in the WordPress community not too long ago on the topic of sponsered themes. These themes include paid links (usually in the footer) than can suck PageRank and possibly result in a Google paid links penalty. Stick with WordPress theme directories that don’t include sponsored themes, like the WordPress Theme Viewer. SEO isn’t everything: once you’re high in the SERPs, you need action words to prompt clickthroughs. Put keywords in your title if at all possible, but not if it’ll compromise the click-trigger action title. A WordPress blog is a website too, so the traditional SEO techniques still apply: Ever wondered what the “Post Slug” on the “Write” page was? It’s the text that goes in the URL when you have “Pretty Permalinks” enabled (see tip #2). By default the slug is a “sanitized” version of the post title. However, if your title is overly long or keyword-sparse, you can change the slug through the Post Slug box. Yet Another Bonus Tip: The SEO Slugs plugin can take out common words like “you,” “is,” etc. out of the slug for you automatically. Search engines and visitors love fresh blog content on a steady, regular basis. But for a lot of us, creativity comes irregularly: 10 post ideas one week, none the next. Enter timestamping. When writing a post, click the plus sign next to “Post Timestamp.” Set a date and time, and the post will publish by itself whenever you specify. Search engines will keep coming back, and visitors won’t be inundated with a ton of new posts all at once. Hint: If you’ve timestamped a post, don’t click the Publish button, since that’ll publish your post immediately regardless of your timestamp. Instead, select “Published” under “Post Status” and click the Save button. WordPress 2.3 and above include a tags feature that lets you assign keywords to your blog posts. Once you start using them, then since each tag gets its own webpage, you’ll be generating a ton of your own themed, keyword-oriented internal backlink pages. Adding social media links/buttons like the ones above makes it easy for visitors to promote your quality content (hint, hint). Social media is a great way to build links naturally as well as drive targeted site traffic. Lots of social media sites provide code you can use to generate buttons like those above. Grab your own code from: Here are several great ways to implement deep-linking on your WordPress blog: Most of us would probably be upset if someone used scraping (automated content stealing) to publish our laboriously-written posts as his or her own. But with a little work, you can make the scrapers work for you, not against you. Here’s how to do it, courtesy of EarnersBlog.com: If you use Wordpress it’s very easy to take full advantage of these sites linking to you, all you need to do is create links back to your content within your feed. What you’ll need for this: These plugins simply show your entire post in your feed & also add some related posts in your feed only (which will also increase the amount of people in your feed reading more than 1 post). Like the name implies, this plugin covers a lot of the bases. A must-have for serious WordPress SEO. Sure, you may already use Pretty Permalinks, but are you using the best possible permalink structure? For those of who don’t use Pretty Permalinks, it’s a must-do for WordPress SEO. Permalinks, in essence, are the URLs of your WordPress blog posts. “Pretty Permalinks” put slugs (which should contain keywords — see tip #9) in your URLs instead of the default numbers. To enable or change them, first login, then go to Options > Permalinks. The two options you do not want are “Default” and “Numeric.” Here are my suggestions for picking a “pretty” permalink structure: Here’s the big finale. Problem is, this tip is so important (and lengthy) that it really merits its own post. Here’s a teaser: it entails implementing the powerful siloing technique on your WordPress blog through a combination of plugins, settings, and strategies. Okay, so it was actually more like 23+ tips instead of 20. I certainly hope you gleaned a useful strategy or two in your quest for WordPress search engine optimization. If you enjoyed this post, please social it, email it, link it, or leave a comment! Stay tuned for the “mega-tip” later this week! If your eager to try these techniques out, download our free WordPress SEO Theme, Small Business SEO. John Lamansky is an up-and-coming web developer who has building websites for 7 years and has been working with WordPress for almost 3 of its 5 years of existence. He is experienced with XHTML, CSS, PHP, WordPress, and much more, and looks forward to providing WordPress tips, services, and resources to the blogging community.WordPress SEO Tip #20 — Don’t Block the Search Engines!
Bonus Tip #1 - Are Comments Enabled?
WordPress SEO Tip #19 — Does Your Blog Have a Topic?
WordPress SEO Tip #18 — Ensure URL Canonicalization
WordPress SEO Tip #17 — Check for Valid XHTML
WordPress SEO Tip #16 - Don’t Leech Link Juice!
WordPress SEO Tip #15 — Use Images in Your Posts
WordPress SEO Tip #14 — Does Your Theme Use Header Tags Correctly?
WordPress SEO Tip #13 — Use Pinging
WordPress SEO Tip #12 — Install the Google XML Sitemaps Generator Plugin
WordPress SEO Tip #11 — Avoid Sponsored Themes
Bonus Tip #2 — Write Right Post Titles
WordPress SEO Tip #10 — Use Traditional SEO Techniques
WordPress SEO Tip #9 — Use the Power of the Slug
WordPress SEO Tip #8 — Use Timestamping to Stagger Fresh Content
WordPress SEO Tip #7 — Use Tags for Free Keyword Boosts
WordPress SEO Tip #6 — Integrate Social Media
WordPress SEO Tip #5 — Implement Deep-Linking
WordPress SEO Tip #4 — Make Scrapers Work to Your Advantage
Now, everytime anyone scrapes your blog via your RSS feed & republishes it they’ll be deep linking to 5 or more of your existing posts. Bingo.WordPress SEO Tip #3 — Install the All-in-One SEO Plugin
WordPress SEO Tip #2 — Use “Pretty Permalinks”
WordPress SEO Tip #1 — WordPress Secret: Use Category-Based Permalinks for SEO Siloing
Conclusion
20 Practical SEO Tips to Super-Charge Your WordPress Blog!
Posted by
M. Jawaid
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
at
10:27 AM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment