Posts Tagged ‘seo’
wp-content\plugins\fuzzy-seo-booster\seoqueries.php on line 507
Last Updated on Thursday, 11 March 2010 03:23 Written by Simon Nicol Friday, 27 November 2009 12:36

I’ve always had problems with this plugin and until recently I’ve never actually seen it working, but I’ve now discovered that the problem is with IIS6 & IIS7 -
If you are using the Fuzzy SEO plugin for WordPress with IIS6 or IIS7 you will get this error: wp-content\plugins\fuzzy-seo-booster\seoqueries.php on line 507
as soon as you try to activate the Fuzzy SEO plugin. It’s a great idea and a nice little plug-in as long as you’re using Apache. I have posted MOGMartin the developer of Fuzzy to inform hom of the problem with IIS so hopefuly there might be an update for this soon (20th March 2010). Will keep you posted.
Simon
Tags: seo, wordpress | Posted under Articles & Reviews, Tutorials, wordpress | 2 Comments
Pagerank Checker
Last Updated on Thursday, 11 March 2010 11:32 Written by Simon Nicol Tuesday, 24 November 2009 11:45
Google may say PageRank is no longer of any importance, but I have decided to write this post out of belligerence and for the sake of having the PageRank Checking tool on my site. Read more: Pagerank Checker
Tags: google, pagerank, seo | Posted under Articles & Reviews, Hints n' Tips | No Comments
WordPress’ 20 BEST Plugins for Ultimate Blogging.
Last Updated on Tuesday, 24 November 2009 01:43 Written by Simon Nicol Sunday, 22 November 2009 02:53
WordPress has a vast number of plugins, to try them all would take an eternity, but of all the ones I’ve used this list is the top 20 plugins that are utterly essential for every power blogger. Read more: WordPress’ 20 BEST Plugins for Ultimate Blogging.
Tags: seo, wordpress | Posted under Articles & Reviews, Donate, Hints n' Tips, wordpress | 1 Comment
Optimising WordPress SEO with the All in One SEO plugin
Last Updated on Friday, 13 November 2009 01:33 Written by Simon Nicol Wednesday, 11 November 2009 06:22
The easiest way to explain SEO is to simply say “Think like Google” but how? Well, when you take away all the glitz and glamour of beautiful graphics, layout, JQuery animation and cunning use of Flash – what exactly are you left with?
That’s the thing.
I think most people on the Internet, or certainly most web designers, are familiar with WordPress – though a lot of designers might mistakenly believe they are above it and WordPress is only really for complete beginners, and yes, I do understand their point of view. I was like that myself just over a year ago, the days before my epiphany, the days before I started using WordPress. To them I would just say this – “Don’t re-invent the wheel, and there’s no point swimming against the tide. There are thousands of WordPress developers and plugin authors all over the World working round the clock to make WordPress an even better platform than it already is (and it’s free) – just work with it. Integrate your work into it and you won’t look back.”
This post is about one particular enhancement to WordPress’ arsenal. It’s the plugin that most WordPress users know and love and it’s called the ‘All in One SEO plugin’.
In and of itself WordPress does a great job of optimising for search engines, but combine it with a plugin like the All in One SEO plugin, you really do have an advantage, which is why whenever you search for anything on the Net you’ll generally find a WordPress site or two in amongst the top 10.
Firstly; if you don’t already use Firefox, I suggest you download a copy. I’m not going into a browser war rant. IE is easily the fastest browser for displaying Flash content – hands down! However as a web designer/developer the plugins available for Firefox make it a CSS designers dream, there’s a free plugin called Firebug and if you don’t already have a copy I strongly suggest you download it and give it a go, and while you’re at it, it would be a good idea to also download the ‘Web Developer Toolbar’ – but that’s enough of that!
This post is about SEO and the All in One SEO plugin for WordPress, and here’s the crucks of the matter right here -
The H1 tag.
Or maybe I should put it like this:
The H1 tag
Yes, we all know it looks nasty, but that’s what CSS is for, and that’s not necessarily to make it look nicer. CSS can also be used to move it completely off screen, not hidden per se, but just well off screen.
All search engines see once you remove the glitz and glamour of graphics and styling is just text, which is why I mentioned Firebug and the Web Developer Toolbar earlier. With the Web Developer Toolbar you can easily disable all CSS styling and just see the raw text that a search engine will also see.
With that in mind, try disabling CSS on your website and see how it looks.
See what I mean? Maybe your site is stunning, but when you look at it the way a search engines like Google or Bing etc… see it, then it’s a lot easier to see where the search engine rankings are going. Having said all this; being at the top of the search engines will always be a game of cat and mouse, because 10 billion websites can’t all be in first place in the search engines and thus the ranking formula and criteria to rank above another website vieing for the top position has been and always will be a dynamic process – out of pure necessity.
Anyway, I will philosophise in another post. To sum it all up in one punchy paragraph do this to your website to improve is search engine ranking position:
With the All in One SEO plugin, go to it’s settings. Near the bottom of the page you will see a box that looks like this:

Under where you can see ‘Additional Home Headers’ you can see I’ve place my text inside an h1 tag, which is wrapped in a ul tag. It’s unlikely that this combination of HTML tags are used elsewhere in the site (I know on my site they’re not). It’s just called ‘specifisicity’ which allows me to create a custom tag in my stylesheet for this specific combination of HTML tags.
This style is added to the stylesheet for my site:
ul h1{height:0;margin:-31px 0 0 -9000px}
What this does is to allow me to use the power of the h1 tag – all search engines that I know of will see the h1 tag as important. By combining this style with CSS, it means when CSS stylesheets are active in a browser the important text I have (that looks dreadful) will not be hidden, just displayed a long way off screen.
So when the stylesheet is disabled or ignored (as it is with Google and other search engines) the text contained within the h1 tag will be visible. Not only that the text within the tags will be given more weight thus improving your performance/ranking within a search for those ‘key words’.
Simon
Tags: All in One SEO, plugin, seo, wordpress | Posted under Articles & Reviews | 2 Comments
Hot Topics
- Creating a Drupal 6 custom login form – Step by Step tutorial.
- WordPress Contact Form 7 & WP-Mail-SMTP problem solved
- imagecache wrong path – SOLVED!
- 7129/6105195 Edward Leedskalnin’s anti-gravity – How he built Coral Castle.
- How to take Ownership of a Drive, Folder or File in Windows 7
- WordPress widgets not saving or dragging?
- Firefox – update favicon.ico (SOLVED)
- IE emulator for FireFox
- Site off-line The site is currently not available due to technical problems. Please try again later. Thank you for your understanding. (SOLVED!)
- Access denied – Drupal 6.x
Archives
- November 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- June 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- August 2008
- June 2008