MovableType SEO
MovableType SEO by: Miles Evans Alright I
touched on Movabletype and SEO this last week in my best
movable type plugins article with the intent to come back
and provide some specific details.
I... MovableType SEO
by: Miles Evans
Alright I touched on Movabletype and SEO this last week in
my best movable type plugins article with the intent to come
back and provide some specific details. I will tell you that
Movabletype is optimized quite well out of the box, but there
are a few quick tricks to easily providing the spiders with
some dynamic content.
For my main home page and category index pages I
hardcode most of my meta data. Your meta tags will be at the
top of the template within the <head> tag. You can get
fancy on your index pages but I cannot really see why. Optimize
these two templates by hand for whatever keywords you are
targeting site wide.
The important part of your main index template is telling
Googlebot what the title of your blog and lead article are
properly. This is accomplished with heading tags. For the title
of your blog you can do this:
<h1>
<a
href="<$MTBlogName$>"><$MTBlogName$></a>
</h1>
And for your lead article do this:
<h2 id="a<$MTEntryID pad="1"$>">
<a href="<$MTEntryPermalink$> rel="bookmark"
title="<$MTEntryTitle$>"><$MTEntryTitle$></a>
</h2>
This is pretty much essential as we know that all search
engines give weight to heading tags. You should do this as well
in your archive templates.
So lets focus on the individual archive template as this is
the page you want ranking well in the SERPS. From my testing
the code I use on two separate blogs (this one and
PlanetBangkok) the results show up very neat and tidy in
Google, Yahoo, and MSN. By this I mean the title and
description fields are what I am expecting them to be. Here is
an example with Google from last weeks: Article Post Robot
Review (hopefully I am still front page).
Ok back to you meta tags but this time go into your
individual archive template. Take a look at the following from
my own page:
<title>ProfitPapers | <$MTEntryCategory$> :
<$MTEntryTitle remove_html="1"$></title>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;
charset=<$MTPublishCharset$>" />
<meta name="generator" content="Movable Type
<$MTVersion$>" />
<meta name="author"
content="<$MTEntryAuthor$>">
<meta name="keywords"
content="<$MTEntryKeywords$>">
<meta name="description" content="<$MTEntryBody
words="30"$>">
<meta name="robots" content="ALL">
<meta name="revisit-after" content="2 days" >
<meta name="reply-to" content="your@email.com" >
Most of this is self explanatory. Notice the
<$MTEntryKeywords$> is being used to generate keywords
from your entry page (you may need to turn this field on in the
MT entry area). The meta description data is going to be the
first 30 words from your entry body as I have done with
<$MTEntryBody words="30"$> - so you should see some nice
descriptions in the search results pages. Finally I structure
my title to contain both the category and entry title we all
know yahoo loves them <title> tags mmmkay.
Now one final caveat with meta data is the issue/non-issue
of comment links. Personally I love comments, and I do not mind
people adding a link to my articles as long as their comment
has some meaningful input. Others disagree and feel that
excessive comment links leak pagerank like a sieve. I'm not too
concerned with this notion as the pagerank loss is minimal and
Google has done its best discounting links from popular weblog
software. So this is open to debate but for the record I do not
bother.
If you want to stop Googlebot indexing your comment links
you can simply place a robots meta tag in your comments
template like so:
<meta name="robots" content="noindex, nofollow">
Finally page names are important to all search engines and
URL's like /archives/09/12/i_need_skillz_bec.html are about as
useful as tits on a bull. I use the dashify plugin to structure
my page names for SEO. It's a 3 minute change - for details
take a look at my best movable type plugins article.
And that is pretty much it. Of course how well you do in the
actual search results pages depends on many factors outside the
scope of this article, but doing your meta data properly is
pretty much square one. Having said that it is also well known
that Google ignores most of your meta tags. I was snooping
through Matt Cutts page source the other day and noticed he
uses no meta info at all. In fact you might notice that many
large websites pay no attention to meta tags Regardless these
tags are still important for Yahoo, MSN and the rest of the
stragglers and Google seems to always uses my descriptions
properly for its results.
Although dated i still think Nicholas Carvine's article on
Movabletype SEO is one of the best online.
I hope someone finds this helpful. If I missed something
cool and useful let the comments fly.
For a free copy of MovableType 3.2 please visit the
Movabletype Homepage.
MovableType SEO
MovableType
SEO by: Miles Evans Alright I touched on
Movabletype and SEO this last week in my best movable
type plugins article with the intent to come back and
provide some specific details.
I...
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