As we all know organic traffic is always best, but availible only for the best! Now we’re gonna go over trough a crash-course of some basic SEO.
First you’re gonna need the All In One SEO Pack. If you have trouble uploading and activating the plugin see this video.
Once you’re done with those two steps login to your blog, go to “Settings” and from there to “All In One SEO Pack”. What we’re actually after here is to change the <title> values so that they are more keyword rich and SEO-compatible.
Title Tags
Here is the title syntax we are going to follow:
Website Title | Category > Subcategory - Item
Below you can copy paste those values in your plugin settings:
- Post Title Format: %blog_title% | %category_title% – %post_title%
- Page Title Format: %blog_title% | %page_title%
- Category Title Format: %blog_title% | %category_title%
- Archive Title Format: %blog_title% | %date%
- Tag Title Format: %blog_title% | Tags – %tag%
- Search Title Format: %blog_title% – %search%
Also, check all the “noindex” options below and “Autogenerate Descriptions:”.
SE-friendly URLs
Last thing to do is to tune your URLs to be more Search Engine-friendly. While in the settings section, switch to the “Permalinks” tab. There you will find various options for URL formatting.
By default your link depth shouldn’t be more than 2 steps, which means:
www.root.com/folder1/folder2/
While if you are running WordPress for a blog it’s not a problem to use the default year-date formatting. For any other projects I suggest experimenting with the “Custom Structure” option. It allows you to type-in your variables, thus forming a new URL structure. If you don’t know which ones to use exactly consult with the All In One SEO Pack settings tab.
Here’s what I used for one of my sites:
/products/postname/
Note
Switching to those options takes no more than 10 minutes. And it is always worth to spend some time on improving your site’s structure. Don’t underestimate small settings, because they can make a big difference.