Photography Blog Keyword Rich URLs: Video

July 14th, 2010 @ admin

This lesson focuses on getting keywords into your blog URLs, because the URL is the 2nd most important thing Google looks at for keywords when considering your rank.

WordPress Permalinks

If you have a WordPress blog, like I do, the first thing you want to do is under settings go into your permalinks and you want to change the default, which is just using numbers in your post URLs. Or change the default from this date structure which is putting a lot of folders and numbers in your URL, which is not helpful for search, and you want to use a custom structure.

When I type /%postname%/ percent slash in the custom field for permalink, that’s putting the keywords of your post title into the URL. You can also choose /%category%/%postname%/ and what that does is puts the keywords of the post after the category of the post into the URL. Either one of those would insure that you’re getting the headline of your post into the URL. So step 1 is setting up your permalink settings. Note: this changes the URLs of your existing posts, so anyone linking to them from outside your own blog will get broken links. Read my post PhotoBlog Permalink Redirect URLs Using htaccess on how to avoid this.

Then in an indidual post, the title of my post will automatically be put into the URL. You only want quality keywords in there. I remove unnecessary keyword that I’m not trying to rank for. Instead I focus on the 4-6 keywords (that I want to rank for) relating to each post. If you’re using well-named categories, that can be a benefit as well since the category keywords will show up in the URL.

Blogger URLs

Blogger accounts don’t give you full control over the URLs. But what it does do, is whatever your title of the post is, it’s going to take the first few words of that title and put it into the URL. As long as you’re using quality keywords into your post headlines those are going to make it up into the URL of the post.

Blog SEO Zen for Photographers and VendorsHope that helps, for more tips on blogging search engine optimization, look for my ebook Blog SEO Zen for photographers.

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Wedding Photographers Guide to Blog Optimization

June 29th, 2010 @ admin

Google looks at keywords on your blog and the links pointing to your blog when considering it for a good rank in search engines. When someone searches for a wedding photographer, let’s say in San Diego, Google wants to find pages that are about “San Diego wedding photographer.” If you have a page that’s about wedding and portrait photography, or Los Angeles wedding photographer, you have less of a chance of ranking well because that is not what the user searched for. Specific pages are good. Assuming you have a page that’s only about “San Diego wedding photographer,” Google will consider you for rank against the hundreds of other pages on the same topic. The way to the top is by getting links to your blog. The site with the most quality links typically rank #1.

So what can you do to your blog to rank well? The first is getting that key phrase, in this case “San Diego wedding photographer,” in the right places on the page. I’m talking about page titles, URLs, the first paragraph of text, and text behind your images. Those are the main ones. Sometimes this is not an easy task. First you have to focus on one single phrase per page. Where most photographers go wrong is optimizing for too many things. So my best advice is this. Before you write each post, consider what you want to rank that post for. That is the phrase to use in the right locations. The trick is figuring out how to control the keywords in places like your title and URL. Some simple setup of your blog infrastructure can quickly and easily get the right system in place. For example if you have blog posts where the URLs are generic post numbers, or the date you posted it – your blog is not taking advantage of getting keywords in the URLs. If your blog posts add the blog name at the end of each title – you’re including a lot of extra keywords in your titles that dilute your ability to rank. My ebook called Blog SEO Zen for photographers talks about how to set up all of these things.

When you’re thinking about what to rank for, smaller terms are better. It will be easier to rank for Ritz Hotel wedding photos in San Diego since there are very few pages on that exact topic. Focus on locations, venues, or wedding-style with your keywords.

The next step is simply to get links to your blog so that your blog appears more popular than other sites that talk about the same thing you do. There’s tons of ways to get links. For example, I’m creating this post for a site that is not my own, and for doing this favor I get a link back to my site. Guest posts and articles are just about the best links you can get when your out there manually building links to your site. Other link generation ideas include getting yourself out there in photography communities, establishing social bookmarking accounts like Digg or Delicious, and submitting to key blog directories like Technorati. I suggest plenty more link locations in Blog SEO Zen.

Lastly I want to mention that a self-hosted blog with WordPress.org has the most SEO features. WordPress offers the ability to control your titles, URLs, plus search-specific plugins like the All in One SEO Pack and Google XML Sitemaps. I also use a paid program called Scribe (I’m an affiliate) which analyzes each post I write for SEO efficiency. WordPress should easily be able to outrank any blog on Typepad or Blogger.

I hope that helps you get started with blog optimization. The quickest way to get everything you need to know is in my ebook for photoblog SEO.

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8 SEO Plug-ins for WordPress Photoblogs

June 19th, 2010 @ admin

These WordPress plug-ins add to the blog’s SEO foundation by focusing on specific tasks. When you see what these fellas can do you’ll see why WordPress is so powerful. For help in getting setup read the ProPhotoBlogs post about WordPress Plug-ins.

This is the kind of can’t miss ranking information I deliver in Blog SEO Zen, a 35-page guide for photographers and vendors to getting a page 1 Google rank.

All in One SEO Pack

This plug-in adds fields for title and description to each page and post on a blog. It also has a default meta data screen where you can override the theme meta data and any mistakes the theme developer may have made. Both of these options are essential for telling Google what each page and post are about since both the title and the description show up in search results.

Configuration of the All in One SEO Pack is essential for success. First complete the fields for Home Title and Home Description. Later you’ll learn more about how to write a quality title and description for a blog site.

All in One SEO Pack Title

Next, make edits to the title formats for other pages. This insures that nothing appears in the page title except for the page name. For example, it is essential to remove the blog title from the end of posts because that clutters post titles with non-essential keywords.

All in One SEO Pack Configuration

Lastly, take notice of new fields now available within each blog post for Title and Description. These are the link and summary text that will appear in search results, thus very important to complete for each post.

All in One SEO Pack Post Title

For help in getting setup, read my post All In One SEO Pack Configuration for WordPress PhotoBlogs.

This plug-in is not needed for blogs running the Thesis theme, which has all of the SEO fields built right into it already.

Google XML Sitemaps

A proper sitemap can help posts rank within hours, especially after submitting it to Google Webmaster Tools which we talk about later in the book. Sitemaps make Google’s job easier to find and index content on the web and potentially return it in search results. The default settings for Google XML Sitemaps are adequate.

Google Analytics for WordPress

Google Analytics requires a plug-in to get web stats out of the blog. After installing the plug-in, simply add your Analytics ID that you received during the registration process of your Google Analytics account.

Scribe

Scribe is more than a plug-in, it’s an SEO wizard. After writing a blog post, click Analyze to see how the post measures up against SEO best practices.

It’s a paid subscription service for which I am an affiliate, but I recommend you at least try it for a month. With Scribe you’ll:

  • Optimize content faster
  • Eliminate guesswork about keywords
  • Employ SEO best practices
  • Preserve maximum readability
  • Increase targeted traffic

AddToAny

Social bookmarks can help increase links to your blog. The AddtoAny plugin helps readers share, save, bookmark, and email your posts and pages using any service, such as Facebook, Twitter, Google Buzz, Digg, and Delicious.

Add to Any WordPress Plugin

WordPress Related Posts

Automatically create links within each blog post to other related posts you’ve written. The internal linking of connecting similar content together is helpful for search engines and users.

Disqus

“Discuss” offers advanced, threaded commenting that adds searchable content for your posts.

WordPress Efficient Related Posts Plugin

The Efficient Posts plug-in by Aaron Campbell inserts related content at the end of blog posts and/or pages. Its an easy way to integrate links to your content to tell Google that your other posts are important, as well as keep users on your site after they’ve finished reading. I set the plug-in to show 3 related posts for my blog, which you can see at the end of this page.

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Recommended Photography Blog WordPress Themes

June 18th, 2010 @ admin

Photoblog themes on WordPress are relatively all equal when it comes to their ability to rank in search engines (SEO). Thesis is the only true theme that has all the bells and whistles, but the average photographer can use any standard WordPress theme along with the All in One SEO Pack plug-in to achieve acceptable search engine optimization.

The features offered by a self-hosted WordPress blog deliver search results heads and shoulders above all other blog platforms, like Blogger or Typepad. In this post I outline WordPress themes that I am affiliated with because I think they provide the best functionality and design for photography-based businesses or photoblogs.

Recommended WordPress Themes for Photography Blogs

PortfolioSitez
Great themes, customization options, customer service, and support. The best part is they will handle the technical setup and hosting for you for minimal cost.

ProPhotoBlogs
Get $10 off your purchase with code ZPRE3014. Great themes and impeccable online tutorials like Installing WordPress and Importing a Blog Into WordPress. Setup and installation options available.

Photocrati
Get 15 styles in one super theme, plus access to a member area. This theme requires you to install WordPress and acquire hosting elsewhere.

Thesis
Thesis boasts the strongest SEO of any theme. It has about 50 custom search related fields you can tweak for optimal performance. Most notably it allows:

  • Custom titles for search so your page/post title can be different than the headline that users see on your posts
  • Custom descriptions (that show in search results) for each page/post
  • Easy access to alternate text for images, including the option for different text for a thumbnail version of the same image

Themes I Use

I use the custom SEO features of Thesis everyday on my Photographers SEO Blog. Matt Cutts, outspoken search guru at Google, also uses Thesis.

This site uses a theme from Templatic, because I wanted a theme that was designed well around my Blog SEO Zen eBook. I didn’t need something that was built with photography in mind.

WordPress Theme Support

Sarah Arrow at Blogmistress offers a standard package at £99 for a selfhosted WordPress blog and domain name. You will have three themes to choose from and we’ll upload your company logo.

Patrick Allmond at Focus created a special hosting plan for readers of this site. His WordPress hosting costs $20 a month with a one time fee of $240 to migrate over your existing HTML based website to WordPress.

Increase Your Blog’s Ranking Ability

Blog SEO Zen for photographers and vendors offers everything you need to optimize your photoblog or photography-based business blog to rank higher in search. Get recommendations for all the best SEO features, framework, and plugins for your blog. Learn how Google works in non-technical terms and how to take advantage of text placement, image optimization, and building links. Come away with an easy to implement strategy for ranking your photoblog homepage for competitive phrases, and blog posts for niche phrases that can drive huge amounts of qualified searchers to your site. This solid 35-page ebook provides everything you need as a photographer or vendor to understand and exploit search.

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Where to Put Keywords in Blog Posts: Video

June 17th, 2010 @ admin

Video Capture Showing Keywords in Blog PostsBlog posts have the ability to provide more traffic through search engines than a homepage because of the long-tail affect. Long-tail in SEO refers to having a lot of little traffic sources that add up to a significant amount. My sites typically see 10-20% of their traffic from big phrases and the remaining from hundreds of smaller keywords. That’s proof that blog posts are worth knowing how to rank.

Optimizing blog posts for long-tail keywords is a simpler task than competing for a major phrase. While everyone else battles it out, you can scoop up all the little terms that provide very highly qualified leads. For example someone searching for Ritz Hotel wedding photographer in San Diego is much closer to a purchase decision than someone searching San Diego photographer. Plus there aren’t many pages on the web for a phrase that specific, making it much easier to rank.

I put together a 9 minute Quicktime video (.mov) to help identify the top places in WordPress blogs to use keywords in a blog post. There are 5 main places Google will check your post for a possible rank and it’s not meta keywords, keyword tags or categories! A small investment in this video not only improves your chances of ranking every blog post you create (dozens or hundreds of pages) but saves you significant time by not focusing on what search engines ignore.

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PhotoBlog Permalink Redirect URLs Using htaccess

June 12th, 2010 @ admin

Photoblogs can increase the chances of ranking blog posts in search engines simply by integrating keywords into the URL structure of the blog. URLs are the second most important thing on blog posts (#1 being the title) that search engines look at to figure out if your post is worthy of a rank.

WordPress Permalink URLs

WordPress makes it easy to get additional keywords into your blog post URLs by editing the permalink structure. Permalink just means the permanent link or URL location for a blog page/post. Here are some of the ways a blog will generate the permalink structure for a blog post:

Default myblog.com/?p=123
Day and name myblog.com/2010/05/23/post-name.html
Month and name myblog.com/2010/05/post-name.html

No post keywords are used in the default slug (the end of the URL), and numbers meaningless to search are used in the paths of the other two. Ideally the URL would include quality keywords in the path and the slug.

To change this in WordPress go to Settings > Permalinks and select the radio button for custom structure. Enter one of these:

/%category%/%postname%/
/%postname%/

The first one puts the post’s first category name into the URL path and the second one doesn’t. For example if your post was in a blog category called weddings, the URL would look like this:
myblog.com/weddings/my-great-wedding-post.html

Categories are a cool way to integrate keywords into the URL without having to think about it.

The only problem with changing the permalink structure is that all the URLs in the blog change. Links within your blog should continue to work, but anything linking to your old locations (like from other sites) will be broken. Thus, all the link building efforts you established to your photoblog appear to not work when Google finds them and you don’t get credit for the link.

About htaccess Files for WordPress

To avoid broken links you need to upload a file, called an .htaccess file, to your FTP server telling it the old URL and the new URL for each post on your blog.

In the htaccess file you will specify the old and new URLs like so:

Redirect 301 /oldpost.html http://www.myblog.com/newpost.html
Redirect 301 /oldpost2.html http://www.myblog.com/newppost2.html

At the bottom of the file you may need to add some general WordPress code that looks like this. You only need to add this if the only thing on your domain name is the blog, and the blog is NOT an extension of your main website (like mysite.com/blog).

AddType x-mapp-php5 .php

# BEGIN WordPress
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule . /index.php [L]
</IfModule>

# END WordPress
Create an htaccess file for your Photoblog
  1. Download my text file to use as an example
  2. Open or paste this into a plan-text editor like Notepad and update the old and new URL locations at the top
  3. Remove the WordPress block of code if your blog is in a folder of your website, like /blog
  4. Save the file as .htaccess – that’s it, the final name of the file is just plain old .htaccess with nothing before the period and no .txt or anythinghtaccess screen
  5. Upload it to the root level of your FTP server (after you have changed the permalink strucutre in your WordPress settings)
Tips and Recommendations

Hint: the easiest way to get the old URLs for all of your posts is via the sitemap file in Google Webmaster Tools.

You might want to experiment with the file before trying to add 500 redirects. If all you did was replace myblog.com in my example with your real blog URL, then you should be able to /oldpost.html and it will redirect you to /newpost.html. Nothing would be there, but at least you would know your htaccess file is working correctly.

Thanks to WebWeaver’s article for helping me to figure this stuff out for my own blog. I hope the information above gives some direction, but I won’t be answering any questions or providing support for blog redirect files.

8/27/10 Update

If you install the W3 Super Cache plugin from Joost, you can access the htaccess file directly within the plugin. Then just add some lines at the top for the pages you want to redirect:
Redirect 301 /old-url-path/ http://website.com/new-url-path/

It may also be worth checking out the Redirection Plugin. I have not attempted (yet) but hear it can automate the process.

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All In One SEO Pack Configuration for WordPress PhotoBlogs

June 12th, 2010 @ admin

Photoblogs must have the All in One SEO Pack for improved ranking ability. It’s absolutely essential plugin for WordPress blogs to help you control titles and descriptions for all your pages. Titles are the most important on page factor for ranking in a search engine. And descriptions are what shows underneath the clickable link in a search engine, and that’s going to help users click through on your link if it shows in search results.

For more about optimizing your blog if you’re a photographer, make sure to pickup a copy of my Blog SEO Zen ebook.

The first thing you want to do when you’re in WordPress is find and install the plugin. So click add new plugin.

Search for All in One SEO Pack.

Click Install.

And it should successfully install the plugin for you.

Then you want to activate the plugin. After you’ve activated the plugin, there will be a link in your left navigation under settings for All in One SEO. Click that to get to the configuration page.

Make sure you enable the plugin, then enter a a title and description for your homepage. Keywords in the title help your rank position, and the meta description helps get users to click your search result (better conversion).

You don’t want to the blog title to appear inthe title of your posts or the title of your pages or the title of your categories. The reason is that the keywords in your titles are the most important part in getting you ranked, and you want that to be very focused on the page that’s being displayed. You don’t want to add additional words that are general to your blog at the end of those titles.

Titles and Descriptions for a Photoblog

If you just display your category title on category pages, the title of your page might be just weddings and nothing else, if you’re on your weddings category. So you might put something like the above the end of your category pages in order to get in some extra keywords. Note: this applies to all category pages so you need it to be fairly general.

Now that your homepage is updated, the only other place you’ll use the All in One SEO pack is in your individual posts. When you add a new post, you’ll see at the bottom some new fields for All in One SEO pack. For every new post you create you want to enter a title and description. The title is what will display in search results and the keywords in this title help to get you ranked. And the description is what shows in search results and what that says will compel people to click the link, so those are very important features. Enter the All in One SEO Pack title and description for every post you create.

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