Tag Archive: SEO

How clean is your theme?

Fairy Blog Mother: blogging help

Click my logo to ask me a question!

I took the plunge and changed my theme again – but how many of you have noticed?

The theme experts will know exactly where to look – and I hope they will approve – but the whole idea was to make improvements to the insides of my theme, and ultimately my blog’s performance, by having a major ‘deep clean’.

Setting up a WordPress.org blog isn’t majorly expensive if you do it yourself (though hiring a web-designer to do it for you may be), but apart from the costs of hosting there doesn’t seem to be many more demands on your budget. Plugins and other applications are free (many suggest you make donations) and so are a very large quantity of themes. If you know a bit of HTML and PHP you could go into the CSS and make necessary changes – but only if you have the knowledge and necessary know-how.

But sometimes this false economy can create problems that you may not be aware of. You may be very proud of your free theme and how you have changed it. I know, I was! For many months I stood back and admired my blog’s theme, it’s purple boxes and mouse-changing coloured links. That is, until some very kind blogging benefactor pointed out the defects…

There is no such thing as a free lunch. My free theme had lots of unseen code behind it clogging up my search engine optimisation. Even my stats plugin wouldn’t work properly, and I had to rely on Google Analytics to monitor my blog’s performance (not that there is anything wrong with that, but it is only one side of understanding traffic and connectivity). Apparently he could see the ‘blockage’ with his software and advised me to purchase a paid-for theme. Only then would I have a ‘clean’ theme with no restrictions, freeing up my visibility on the web with a view to increasing my audience and blog awareness.

For a while I resisted. I was envisaging going back to freelancing and I had to save up for the fees of a diploma in digital marketing course I am starting next month (I believe in continued self-development). But all that time my poor blog was grinding to a halt under so much blogging code-crud and overbearing pressure I’m surprised it was working at all.

But last week I bit the bullet and bought a Headway theme. It was a bit of a financial shock, but I’m glad I did it. The day I transferred it onto my blog and started to develop my design, I received 208 hits! Amazing! I knew that was the case because my blog stats started to work again – a definitely worthwhile reason to have installed it. The result, after a lot of trial and error (I do like a challenge), hasn’t made much difference visually (I had no intentions of doing so), but the performance value has rocketed!

So now I will wallow in my improved blogging situation and keep you monitored of the differences it will make – and it will be in ideal time to work on my SEO to see what makes a difference and what does not.

Which service would you use to start a blog?

Fairy Blog Mother: blogging help

Click my logo to ask me a question!

This was a question that was asked on LinkedIn. I took a look and blanched at the number of answers that were already there (which would normally mean my response would be lost in the wilderness), but then having read them I realised the question hadn’t been properly answered.

This is because there isn’t a straight answer to this kind of question. Of course I would recommend WordPress, but there are, of course, two kinds of WordPress, each with their own characteristics and special features.

The questioner needs to work out which one is right for him. Here are three questions he needs to consider:

  • Are you technically-minded?
  • Do you have access to a web-developer?
  • Do you want to use your blog to sell products or make money?

If the answer is yes to the above, then he obviously needs to use WordPress.org. This is an excellent platform to create a monetized blog or a blogsite to act as a CMS website, and the facilities it provides are second to none.

But if you are starting a blog on your own, without external help or a desire to monetize it, purely as somewhere to write or to promote your business more effectively on the web, then I would recommend WordPress.com.

Now I expect all the other blogging experts that answered this question will be be thinking that I’m crazy. Well, not really. You see, it’s usually wise not to run before you can walk. You can use WordPress.com to master the art of blogging properly and effectively before seeking out a web-developer to move onto WordPress.org. And don’t forget it’s very easy to transfer your posts and pages from one to the other, so all is not lost.

Meanwhile, while you are learning the ropes with WordPress.com, you’ll still receive excellent SEO, search engine coverage, access to social media, and an excellent and easy to use environment to learn all about blogs and how they work. Here you can build up your readership and following in safety, because WordPress is doing a lot of the work for you behind the scenes.

Once you’ve moved onto WordPress.org you’re out on your own, which means you’ll have to start working that much harder. But that won’t be a problem, because you will have gained a good grounding beforehand, allowing you to develop and grow, rather than floundering like a non-swimmer diving straight into the deep end.

Which comments should you approve?

Fairy Blog Mother: blogging help

Fairy Blog Mother

When your blog is new, there is nothing more exciting than getting a comment! It not only proves that people are reading your posts, but that they like them enough to want to respond.

Of course the more you write, the kind of relevant post subjects you offer, and the more people who read your blog, the more likely you will get comments. The audience ratio will vary depending on where your blog is geographically – obviously American blogs get more comments because there is a culture to perform online interaction and activity.

But should you approve all your comments? Obviously special applications like Akismet (which I call my trusty spam-eater) will seek out and separate spam comments, either by dumping them in the spam folder, or offering them for moderation (administrator’s approval). Some it will ferret away without you having to consider them.

Spam (or as it should be better known as inappropriate viral marketing) is recognised as either a comment that has nothing to do with your post’s subject, or is an annoying comment like ‘Nice post’. Be aware of the ones that seem to be complimentary, they may contain links to their own websites or blogs that you may not approve of. A lot of spam, either human or robot generated, is about link building and getting more traffic to their sites. Read each carefully before approving them, to make sure they are suitable.

If you want to know whether to accept the comment, check out the destination of the commenter’s website or blog. Every comment will contain a link to the commentator’s email address and their website or blog, and you should check them (Akismet will weed out the offensive ones) before deciding to publish their comment. Once the comment is live, the link to their website is live also, helping them with SEO and inbound links to boost their ratings.

So once you’ve approved and published the comments, why not respond to them yourself? This is a good way to keep the conversation going (especially if they reply back) and this continuous repartee will encourage the internet spiders to return because they consider it to be new material.  I once had a very nice conversation with a young blogger about a particular subject, an activity I very much enjoyed.

Should you approve comments that disagree with your post? Yes, everyone is entitled to have their say, and as long as the comment is not derogatory to you or your blog, then go ahead and publish it. If you want to set the matter straight, a polite answer is a good idea, as long as you don’t continue the slagging match!

And responding to other people’s blogs will also raise your expert status within your subject (particularly if you respond to like-minded blogs to yours), as well as providing a link back to your blog if your comment is approved.

Jargon-free SEO for beginning bloggers


(A guest blog by Tom Pick, author of that blog’s design I improved recently)

When you first launch your blog, most of the visits you get are likely to be from your direct efforts — telling people you know about your blog, linking to your posts on Twitter, getting like-minded online or offline acquaintances to recommend it, etc.

Over time, however, most blogs drive the majority of their traffic through search engines. Getting traffic from search requires that your blog rank well (show up highly — preferably in the first few results) in search engines, and getting a high ranking for a specific search phrase requires that you do a bit of search engine optimisation (SEO) on your blog.

SEO is not magic, ‘secret’ or even all that complicated. You may hear some SEO ‘experts’ throw around terms like canonicalisation, long tail, 301 redirects, cloaking, or latent semantic indexing. While these terms have some real meaning, particularly for large, complex websites competing to rank on commonly used and therefore highly competitive search terms, they are all SEO jargon. Too often they are used not to convey meaning, but rather to make the person using them feel smart, and to make you feel stupid. Don’t fall for it; making your blog search engine-friendly isn’t terribly difficult and you can do it without having to learn a whole new language.

Here are six tips to help you get your blog to rank well in search and draw visitors who are interested in what you have to say:

1. Think about your keywords. ‘Keywords’ is actually a somewhat misleading SEO jargon term; ‘key phrases’ would be more accurate. These are phrases, usually 3-4 words, that communicate to your readers (and to the search engines) what your blog, and what each post, is about.

First off, your blog needs one high-level phrase that describes the subject you’ll be writing about on a regular basis. Then each post you write needs to focus around one or two key phrases or ideas in the post. For example, this post may rank well for the phrases ‘jargon-free SEO’ and ‘SEO for beginning bloggers’. That’s the core topic of this post, and used in the title to communicate that both to people and search engines.

2. Use keywords in your blog name and post titles. The high-level phrase that describes your general topic, as noted above, should be used in your blog name. For example, if you are writing about natural and organic foods, or the best pubs in London, don’t call your blog ‘Fred’s Blog’ or ‘Mary’s Thoughts’. Make it something like ‘Natural and Organic Food with Mary’ or ‘London’s Best Pubs by Fred’. Over time, your blog should rank well for your title phrase (as long it isn’t too common or generic).

My blog is called the Webbiquity B2B Marketing Blog. Webbiquity is a made-up word (meaning “to be findable in many places online”), so no one is likely to search for that unless they’ve actually heard of my blog. But B2B (short for business-to-business) marketing blog is a common search phrase. At last check, my blog appeared on the lower half of the first page for this term; not bad for a fairly new blog with a lot of competition (and actually my old blog, WebMarketCentral, still ranks for this term as well even though my last post there was in January 2010).

Similarly, each post should you write should contain one or two key ideas, phrases that are used in the title, content, and meta tags (oops, more SEO jargon—I’ll explain meta tags shortly).

3. Write interesting content. This is really the single most important thing you can do for SEO. Interesting content naturally includes key phrases that are important to your topic. It also attracts links from other bloggers and will result in people recommending your content through social bookmarking sites like Digg and StumbleUpon as well as through social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter.

4. Use keywords in meta tags. Meta tags are simply bits of content that describe your blog and each post on it, more for the benefit of search engines than human visitors. Think of meta tags like the dust jacket of a book. When you look at the front and back covers of a book, you can immediately glean key information such as the title, author, perhaps a short description of the contents, and recommendations from reviewers. These enable you to get a pretty good idea of what the book is about without even opening it. Meta tags serve the same function for search engines; they communicate, briefly, what each page or post on your blog is about.

Most blog platforms provide a way for you to easily edit your meta tags. In WordPress for example, it’s best to install a plugin called the All in One SEO Pack. With this plugin installed, simply scroll to the bottom of any page or post in the WordPress editor and you can add three bits of meta tag content: title, description and keywords.

The title tag is the most important element for search engines. It can be the same as, or slightly different from, the actual title of your post. But it should be no more than 80 total characters and include the most important key phrase for your post right at the beginning.

The description is a short summary (generally 150-200 characters) designed to hook search engine users into reading your posts. For example, a meta description for this post might be:

Learn how to get your blog to rank well in the search engines using this simple, jargon-free guide to SEO for beginning bloggers.

Note that it’s short, action-oriented (‘learn how’) and describes the benefit readers will get from this post (rank well in search).

The meta keywords tag is the least important for search; Google no longer uses this, though some of the lesser-known search engines do. Still, this can he helpful in clarifying your thoughts, and it doesn’t hurt to include 2-4 keyword phrases, separated by commas, in this tag.

5. Get links to your blog. The two core elements of SEO are content and links. Content tells the search engines what your blog is about; links tell them how much popularity or authority your blog has.

There are many ways to get links, but the best is by writing interesting content that others want to link to. For example, if Fred (from the example above) wrote a post about ‘The Ten Best Pubs in London’ and included brief reviews of each, it’s highly likely that others interested in the London social scene (such as bloggers and even journalists) would link to it.

Social bookmarking and networking sites are another source for links, though it’s not clear exactly how much weight these carry with the search engines (and their engineers won’t tell). These links appear to only have a real impact on search if many people are linking to particular post or blog.

A great way to jumpstart links to a new blog is by submitting it to blog directories, sites dedicated to categorizing and linking to blogs of all types.

6. Have patience. Unless you are writing about a very obscure topic with low search competition, a new blog is unlikely to rank highly in the major search engines. It generally takes a fair amount of content (at least a couple of dozen posts), links and time before search engines, particularly Google, really start paying attention to a blog.

However, by focusing on writing compelling content, and following the steps above, your blog will inevitably rise in the search engine ranks and attract more readers interested in your writing.

About the author: Tom Pick is an online marketing executive with KC Associates, a marketing and PR firm in Minneapolis, Minnesota, focused on B2B technology clients. He’s also the award-winning writer of the Webbiquity blog, which focuses on B2B lead generation and Web presence optimization – the fusion of SEO, search marketing, social media, content marketing and interactive PR.

Blog review 3: dark, left and cloudy

Fairy Blog Mother

One of the comments on another blog I write for requested a review of the blog pictured below, so here it is.

refers to .com blog

My first impression: it’s a bit dark. This is my personal opinion, as I have never liked dark backgrounds; I think they make reading text difficult (books have white backgrounds, so why not websites and blogs?). Also the white headlines are difficult to read against the grey background, which makes them not prominent or noticeable enough.

http://ogirlsays.wordpress.com

There is a trend towards having lots of black in web material, as many people prefer it. WordPress have increased the amount of templates available for their free blogs recently, many of which are excellent, while others accommodate different tastes.

This particular template has a left sidebar. Psychologists have discussed recently how a website’s or blog’s visitor perceives the content on their first visit, and a left sidebar has proven to be beneficial to presenting important material immediately, as we naturally read left to right (in the Western world).

Therefore it is necessary to place the most important elements of your sidebar at the top, such as the sign up form or link to subscribe to the blog (and not have it languishing forgotten at the bottom where it never gets noticed). This is a sure-fire way of increasing your readership, as subscribers will be notified whenever you next publish a new post. This facility can be improved via Feedburner from Google, to provide a RSS URL (to feed your blog into social networking sites).

I’ve just noticed the blog’s title, which is ‘Thinking of…’. This is pretty meaningless, especially as the page’s title is extremely important for SEO reasons. I suggest this should be changed to a phrase that succinctly describes the blog’s content, preferably using keywords, and this can be done in the Settings section found in the Dashboard’s left sidebar.

The elements at the top of this sidebar are a ‘Snoopy’ icon which does nothing, and a very large calendar. I suggest these are removed, as they are not necessary, to be replaced by the subscription button. The next item should be a widget which shows the most recent posts, encouraging the reader to venture further into your blog. The tag cloud is good, but the category cloud doesn’t work in this template, it should be changed to a simple category list. The Twitter feed app is also good, but is placed too far down. There is no widget that shows recent comments (unless you are not encouraging them) or a blogroll of recommended blogs and websites (all help towards out-going links and therefore SEO).

The content includes many links, which is very good, for the same reasons just stated above. Big bright pictures help maintain the interest factor and help emphasise what you are saying. You could increase your chances of a higher search engine take-up by including relevant and up-to-date keywords, as these will correspond with what people are talking about, and the popularity will pay off.

And don’t forget to post consistently – which is more important than frequently – and keep the content quality high. An interesting, well maintained blog will soon get the readership it deserves.

How can a blog become a business?

Fairy Blog Mother

Someone on LinkedIn asked a question if blogs are businesses. Many of the answers wittered on about affiliate and sponsored advertising, as if making money made your blog a business. I sometimes wonder how much money these blogs actually do make… I personally ignore all advertising I see on blogs and just concentrate on the posts.

There is also the old adage that a blog can help your business (and I’ve written plenty about that before), but have you considered how a blog could be adapted to become an integral element of your business, rather than a useful accessory?

You could adapt your blog to become a blogsite (a website using a blogging platform such as WordPress that is self-hosted) to become a more substantial business tool. The alternative to having irritating adverts would be to write the pages to incorporate e-commerce (shopping carts) for visitors to buy e-courses, products, services, etc, because the blog is self-hosted, you can include any kind of HTML or web-programming for money-making functions.

Your entire blog can be adapted to become a very effective website, suitably programmed to attract SEO, internet and audience traffic, and RSS feeds to social media and elsewhere. The blog news-stream will attract a readership which can be directed to the other pages on your blogsite, which in themselves should be transformed into effective landing pages for email and Google Adword campaigns. I note there are effective sales pages programmes available for WordPress now.

Why not take advantage of a blog’s ability to become a membership site. The privacy and password protected posts and pages will enable you to gain paid-for subscriptions for members to view certain elements of your business. You could also build up a membership or forum, like a sort of ‘Inner Circle’, or even provide individual page access for particular subscribers or customers. This feature is extremely easy to set up, even for a WordPress.com blog (see my e-courses on the sidebar).

This proves I don’t see blogs merely as somewhere to post up your thoughts, or even somewhere to put up advertising, but certainly occupying a viable position for making a business successful.

The importance of links within blogs

Fairy Blog Mother

Blogs thrive on links. In fact, blogs are full of links, contained mostly in the content of the sidebars, both internal (navigation around the blog) and external (destination exits or entry from referral sites). You can tell which are links on this blog because they are coloured purple, and change to pink when you mouse over them. I’ve also made the images interactive, linking to specific posts and pages within my blog.

Both kinds of blog

Think of links as doors or portals for gaining access to elsewhere. You can see this is how search engine spiders travel through, to and from blogs and websites, and humans can too. Because links are interactive, they both allow access and attract activity to and within the blog. The power of links are such that connections with the right kind of high-ranking website or blog can boost your rankings in the search engines, tags (keywords) interact with what is up-to-date within the search engines, categories aid archiving as well as search engine optimisation, and each post’s permalink is used with subscriptions to search engine readers, and RSS feeds to social networking sites, blogs and other resources.

A blog’s links come in many guises: the blog’s domain name, the post’s headline which becomes a permalink, contextual links (keyphrases linked to relevant destinations) within posts, the tags (keywords) and categories (topics) after the post, comments (links to the commenters), the blogroll or list of links to recommended websites, and RSS feeding your new material to a subscribed audience.

• Your blog’s URL, domain name or web address is a link. People are divided whether keywords should be part of your URL or whether it should just reflect your branding, be rememberable and easy to spell. This is the main form of access to your blog.

• Each post’s headline automatically becomes a permalink, leading to the post’s individual page and URL. This is where keywords become important for search engine optimisation, as well as using marketing psychology to make the reader click on it and read the post.

• When using links within your post, creating them as ‘contextual’ is much more effective. Contextual links are when a phrase within the post is highlighted to become a link, and the relevance of the destination is paramount to increase success.

• After you’ve completed writing your post, carefully select relevant tags (keywords) and categories (topics) to boost your search engine optimisation. If you have a .org blog with the All-in-one-SEO plugin, don’t forget to fill in the extra SEO fields to aid promotion of your post.

• You should encourage comments to your blog, as they are also considered new material by the search engines as well as the links they generate. And you could increase traffic to your blog by commenting sympathetically and appropriately on other blogs within your niche.

• The blogroll is a list of links to important, relevant and recommended websites and other resources. If you can arrange a reciprocal link, then that will not only boost your search engine rankings, but increase your audience too.

• And of course, RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, works totally on links. RSS creates a subscription service to deliver new posts to email in-boxes and search engine readers as soon as they’re published. It also feeds your posts as a permalink to social networking sites, each with the post’s title and link back to your blog.

10 things a blogging mentoring service should provide

Fairy Blog Mother

I keep an eye on many LinkedIn Groups, especially those about blogging, and one post caught my eye. It was from someone who wanted to know about forming a blogging mentoring service, and being the altruistic kind of person I am, I gave him my 10 opinions of what a blogging mentoring service should provide:

1. You need to be aware of business’s blogging needs; this includes explaining how blogging can benefit a business, small or large, to increase its online visibility and its audience on the net;

2. You need to research into why people have blogs (or don’t have blogs); blogs are created for a myriad of uses, business and personal, and therefore have very different styles – alternatively there may be many potential bloggers who need encouragement to start one;

3. You need to understand what blogs are used for, and whether they are used properly; similarly to above, blogs fall under many categories, but you need to understand their purposes to advise on the best practices;

4. You need to explain blogs need to be regularly updated, and to find out whether help is required with writing posts; blogs aren’t really blogs without consistent new material, so ideas for post subjects and writing styles are usually welcome;

5. You need to find out whether bloggers fully understand SEO and explain how keywords can help their blogs; this subject, once properly aired, stimulate a vast change in a blog’s performance towards its success;

6. You need to check whether they have they fully optimised sidebars; so many blogs have neglected sidebars and don’t use their widgets adequately, mainly because they don’t understand or appreciate their functions;

7. You need to advise on which plugins they need; for WordPress.org blogs these applications help enhance the blog’s performance to further it towards popularity and success;

8. You need to talk about integrating their blog’s design with their website or corporate image; using the myriad of themes available, some of which can be adapted or redesigned to match an existing style or personality through specialised blog designers (the Fairy Blog Mother is one);

9. You need to show how to get RSS and see if is it being used to its full extent; once acquired, the online world is opened up to automation of post publishing, feeding to social media and other related websites, and visibly interactive headline links;

10. You need to explain how to integrate blogs with social media; related to above, your blog should be the hub of your social networking strategy, fully optimised to interact with your audience, and present and potential customers.

I’m sure there are many more things I need to include (and if you know them, tell me in the comment box below). But in the meantime these 10 will have to do.

Fairy Blog Mother aims to offer much of this advice in this blog, and eventually through her book which she plans to publish in the future. She benefits from people asking her questions, especially specific things you would like to know about blogging and particularly from blogging beginners who may have a selection of questions they are too embarrassed to ask elsewhere.

I plan to change my style in future posts to a more advisory nature, in concise, focused subjects, and if the subject is large, to break it down into smaller posts for easier understanding. The Fairy Blog Mother was formed to explain blogging in easy to understand, visual e-courses, using non-jargon and everyday language, step-by-step with no assumptions that the reader understands technical blogging requirements. She doesn’t mean to be condescending, just informative and educational.

So, what questions about blogging do you have?

What and how important are permalinks?

Fairy Blog Mother

There is a industrial and successful marketeer called Ed Rivis who has acquired some creditable acclaim through his online marketing prowess, mainly in the use of online campaigns and the art of the landing page, but what astounds me is that he doesn’t optimise his permalinks on his blog!

But more of that later… so what is a permalink?

WordPress allocates each post with its own URL, created from the headline you give it:

Both kinds of blog

As you can see, this post has been given a permalink of http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/what-and-how-important-are-permalinks/ which WordPress has automatically created for me underneath the headline field. I also have the option to edit my permalink should I decide to change my headline while writing my post, or if I want to create a shorter, more memorable one. (There is also the more advanced option of a ‘shortlink’ if you want to use this permalink in social networking, such as Twitter.)

Most blog permalinks include the date within them, and look like this: http://successnetwork.wordpress.com/2010/06/01/5-things-to-consider-when-writing-adverts/ – so let me break it down for you.

• Note there isn’t www after the http:// because this is a blog, not a website;

• Next you’ll see the username of the original author of the blog: ‘successnetwork’;

• Followed by .wordpress.com because this is a WordPress.com or a ‘free’ blog (WordPress take control of your blog’s URL because they have provided all the software and programming for you, if you have a WordPress.org blog you can choose your own blog URL);

• Next is the date of the post: /2010/06/01/ (presented backwards) which is automatically calculated for you;

• And then you have the headline or title of the post: 5-things-to-consider-when-writing-adverts/ separated by hyphens so it’s easier for the spiders to read and for humans to quickly recognise.

If you have a WordPress.org blog, you have the chance to change how your permalinks look in Settings > Permalinks:

And you will see a number of options for how your permalink could look:

• Default = URL/?p=123 (post number)
• Day and name = URL/year/month/day/post name
• Month and name = URL/month/day/post name
• Numeric = URL/archive/post number
• Custom = whatever you want.

I have chosen ‘URL/post name’ as it makes it much easier to remember my permalinks and to write them in posts and browsers. If your categories are important to your search engine optimisation then these can be put into your permalink: ‘URL/category/post name’ for example. In fact, SEO is an important factor when considering your permalinks, but if stuffing it full of keywords and other goodies as well as what’s in the headline of your post is important to you, then go ahead, but take into consideration the length of your permalink and its practicalities, and that shortening it into tinyurls isn’t always the answer.

Oh, and another tiny point, it’s the permalinks that are live in RSS feeds, and when you are posting your latest blog contribution into a LinkedIn Group news section, the programming automatically recognises your permalink and everything associated with it for you!

So what of Ed Rivis? His latest post was http://www.edrivis.com/?p=517 – which means absolutely nothing to me except that he has probably written 516 more posts before this one. I have no idea what the subject is about (it is, actually, 77 ideas for great email and blog content) but I wouldn’t bother reading it because I only managed to glean about 8 that were worth considering! You’d think that an online marketing chap that is so famous and rich would have optimised his blog better – but no matter, it probably isn’t important to him.

What do widgets do on your blog?

Fairy Blog Mother

I’ve just uploaded my free e-course ‘What and how to use widgets’ which explains what widgets are, what they are for and how to put them on your blog.

So what are widgets? Well, look at your sidebar and see all the various elements that are situated there. These are widgets, individual applications or programme processes that allow you to put up a picture, add in a subscription form, show which pages and posts I have written, list my comments, show feeds to my social media and many other things.

Both kinds of blog

Usually you mention the word ‘widget’ and the uninitiated will wince and look worried, but really it is very easy to cope with widgets once you understand them, and that is exactly what my free widget e-course does.

I have seen many blogs, not even new ones, who have not fully taken on what their widgets can do for them. To me, to see an unpopulated sidebar missing vital elements that enhance a blog as regards search engine optimisation (SEO), allowing readers to find past posts and participate in comments, even to realise there are other pages to be read, is a wasted opportunity.

The widgets that are really needed are:

  • a method for your reader to subscribe to your blog (either a sign up form for emails or chicklit logo to subscribe to a Google reader)
  • show which posts you have written recently
  • show the comments people have left
  • show your categories (topics)
  • show your tags (keywords)
  • show your links to other websites or blogs you recommend reading
  • how to access your blog

And then there are widgets to make your blog more usable for both your readers and the search engine spiders:

  • access to other pages
  • links to your social media profiles
  • RSS feeds to your Twitter stream, other blogs, delicious or other social networks
  • see who has visited recently
  • pictures, either on their own or as links to elsewhere
  • archive details
  • search mechanisms

If you have a WordPress.com blog, widgets are already available to you (dependent upon which theme you have chosen). If you’ve used WordPress.org to create your blog then some widgets will need to be added via plug-ins, of which there are many thousands to choose from, including the option to retweet posts you want to recommend and share the post with other social networking sites.

Find out how to add widgets to your blog, or just brush up on the ones you haven’t used yet – the widget world is really worth exploring!