So you’re a blogger or content writer for a website/blog built in WordPress but you want help writing articles with search engine optimization (SEO). You do some research and you find WordPress SEO by Yoast is
considered one of the best (and free). You install the Yoast plug-in
and then go to write a blog post (or page) and you are completely
clueless on how to use it. Well, you’re in luck because this is a
step-by-step tutorial for writing posts/pages with the Yoast plug-in!
The Edit Post sidebar – On the righthand side of the Edit Post screen in WordPress there is a Publish widget, in this widget the overall page status is displayed. Your goal is to get a green here.
Live/Preview of Post – When you click “Preview” in the Publish Widget or once your post is live on your website, you will see the SEO ranking in your WordPress toolbar at the top of the screen.
Post Listing – As you look at the list of posts you will see that each one has an SEO color as well as details on the title, meta description and current keyword.
Page Analysis – This tab of the Yoast plug-in provides details about how the plug-in has analyzed your post. This screen shot is midway through writing this post.
In general for the plug-in I try to avoid using phrases and instead use one word keywords. In this example I put WordPress and SEO as separate keywords, this will make it easier for the plug-in to track them. Also, it can only do one keyword at a time, so I usually start with what I consider the most important keyword. For most of this tutorial I’m using “SEO”.
The permalink will be automatically generated by WordPress after you finish writing your post title and select the post categories (for a page you should select if the page has a parent page). The permalink that was generated from the title and category I selected:
Red (you want to fix these)
Orange (you probably want to fix these)
Yellow (consider addressing these)
Green (congrats, you did a good job!)
Red (we should improve):
Yellow (we should consider these):
Green (doing well!):
Frequently what will happen is that your keyword density will be a little low (or possibly even too high). You can usually look back over the post and find a couple of places where you could add in the keyword (or remove it if too high). I’ve already tweaked this article, so I will just show you the screen shots for my 4 keywords.
While reviewing my post I also noticed that I used the keyword plug-in quite a bit. So I’ve gone ahead and added that to my list of keywords for the tutorial! This is actually a pretty common occurrence to find a new keyword or two as you write. In this case, I’ve updated the WordPress slug to include my new keyword. My new slug is:
Yoast Color System
The WordPress SEO by Yoast plug-in uses a color coding system to rate how well your blog post (I’ll call everything a post in this tutorial, but the same applies to pages) is doing on the current keyword. The system is based on a stop-light, so it’s quite easy to understand.- Grey – You have not selected a keyword yet.
- Red – The keyword is ranking poorly.
- Orange – Better than red, but still needs improvement.
- Yellow – You may want to improve this, but only if it doesn’t hurt your overall post.
- Green – Everything looks good!
The Edit Post sidebar – On the righthand side of the Edit Post screen in WordPress there is a Publish widget, in this widget the overall page status is displayed. Your goal is to get a green here.
Live/Preview of Post – When you click “Preview” in the Publish Widget or once your post is live on your website, you will see the SEO ranking in your WordPress toolbar at the top of the screen.
Post Listing – As you look at the list of posts you will see that each one has an SEO color as well as details on the title, meta description and current keyword.
Page Analysis – This tab of the Yoast plug-in provides details about how the plug-in has analyzed your post. This screen shot is midway through writing this post.
Step 1: What are you writing about?
Before you even create a new post, you need to answer the question “What are you writing about?” In the case of this example, I’m writing a tutorial on how to use the WordPress SEO plug-in by Yoast. Looking at the topic I can pick out a few keywords:- WordPress
- SEO
- Yoast
- Tutorial
Google vs Yoast SEO Plug-in
A plug-in which can match the robustness of the google search engine just isn’t going to happen. So, you want to be aware of phrases — because when targeting phrases you have to match the phrase exactly for the plug-in to pick them up. Google can handle more diversity than the Yoast plug-in can (such as “car service” vs “car servicing” would be correctly handled by google, but not the plug-in).In general for the plug-in I try to avoid using phrases and instead use one word keywords. In this example I put WordPress and SEO as separate keywords, this will make it easier for the plug-in to track them. Also, it can only do one keyword at a time, so I usually start with what I consider the most important keyword. For most of this tutorial I’m using “SEO”.
Step 2: Title, Permalink & Setup Plug-in
Time to create a new WordPress blog post and start writing! Start with your title, which should be between 40 and 70 characters and use your keywords in a coherent manner. In this case the name of the plug-in that I am writing a tutorial is “WordPress SEO by Yoast”, so I include the name directly and then follow it up with Plug-in and Tutorial. The post title is “WordPress SEO by Yoast Plug-in Tutorial”.The permalink will be automatically generated by WordPress after you finish writing your post title and select the post categories (for a page you should select if the page has a parent page). The permalink that was generated from the title and category I selected:
http://www.anphira.com/tutorial/wordpress-seo-by-yoast-plug-in-tutorialA portion of the permalink is called a “slug”. This is the very last part, just “wordpress-seo-by-yoast-plug-in-tutorial”. The Yoast plug-in will tell you that this “slug” is too long. It recommends that the slug not exceed 40 characters. So I have removed words that I am not targeting and shortened the slug:
yoast-wordpress-seo-tutorialNow that you have your title & permalink it’s time to configure the plug-in on your post to give you some results. Scroll down below the blog entry window to the WordPress SEO by Yoast plug-in window. Enter the keyword that you want to start with (in this case SEO). Then enter a meta description. Your meta description is recommended to be between 120 and 156 characters. You don’t need to make it perfect now, you can always edit it again later. To start the tutorial, I’m entering an “ok” meta description which I will update later. Once you’ve entered everything, click Save Draft in the Publish widget.
Step 3: Understanding the WordPress SEO by Yoast Plug-in
You’ve just saved your draft and now your SEO is reporting as orange (I’ve specifically set you up with this tutorial to not start with red). Well, that’s because you have no content yet. So let’s go over to the Page Analysis tab of the plug-in and see what it is looking for.Red (you want to fix these)
- There are 1 words contained in the body copy. This is far too low and should be increased.
- The keyword doesn’t appear in the first paragraph of the copy, make sure the topic is clear immediately.
Orange (you probably want to fix these)
- The images on this page are missing alt tags.
Yellow (consider addressing these)
- No outbound links appear in this page, consider adding some as appropriate.
- The meta description is under 120 characters, however up to 156 characters are available. The available space is shorter than the usual 155 characters because Google will also include the publication date in the snippet.
- The page title contains keyword / phrase, but it does not appear at the beginning; try and move it to the beginning.
- No subheading tags (like an H2) appear in the copy.
Green (congrats, you did a good job!)
- The meta description contains the primary keyword / phrase.
- The page title is more than 40 characters and less than the recommended 70 character limit.
- The keyword / phrase appears in the URL for this page.
Step 4: Writing content
Now that everything it all setup, we’ll get to the content writing part of the tutorial! There are a few general guidelines for writing on the web we’ll start with.- Keep your paragraphs short. Long paragraphs can be challenging to keep your place as you read. So do your best to keep your paragraphs to 4-5 lines of text.
- Keep the reading level easy. Frequently people are multi-tasking when they are at their computers, so do your best to keep content easy to read. As you start typing more text into your entry the plug-in will give your writing a Flesch Reading Ease score. You will get green in the plug-in by getting a score of 70 or higher. A score of 60-70 will earn you a yellow. Yellow means a reading ability equal to high school and green middle school. Unless you know your readers are technical people, try to get at least a score of 60.
- Use standard words. Again, unless you know your audience is very technical, try to avoid overly technical or obscure words. If you use them, you may want to provide definitions or links where people can get more information.
- Spell out abbreviations the first time. At the beginning of the article I spelled out “search engine optimization (SEO)”. This lets people unfamiliar with the subject understand the abbreviation. You can even link to a site which provides a definition of the term. New people can follow the link, those familiar with the subject just ignore it.
- Be careful of slang. While much of the internet is in english, not everyone reading your site will have english as their first language. Different countries also have unique slang terms. For example “the boot” can refer to the trunk of a car in England.
- Spelling is important. For this tutorial and all blog posts we use a WebKit based browser (Google Chrome or Apple Safari). The reason is, WebKit browsers check spelling as you type in both single line text fields (like your post title) and multi-line text fields (like the post content). So you take the help available from WebKit browsers, because I’ve seen major blogs have typos in their titles and it’s rather embarrassing.
Step 5: Reviewing Your SEO As You Go
Great job! You’ve got some content to your post. Perhaps even an image or two. So let’s review how your SEO is doing. The Yoast plug-in has given our tutorial an overall score of green at this point. Once you have the majority of items done, Yoast will score you as green. Here’s a look at this post’s introduction and first section (everything before Step 1):Red (we should improve):
- You have not used your keyword / keyphrase in any subheading (such as an H2) in your copy.
Yellow (we should consider these):
- The page title contains keyword / phrase, but it does not appear at the beginning; try and move it to the beginning.
Green (doing well!):
- The copy scores 74.4 in the Flesch Reading Ease test, which is considered fairly easy to read.
- The keyword / phrase appears in the URL for this page.
- This page has 1 outbound link(s).
- The images on this page contain alt tags with the target keyword / phrase.
- The keyword density is 2.17%, which is great, the keyword was found 7 times.
- In the specified meta description, consider: How does it compare to the competition? Could it be made more appealing?
- The meta description contains the primary keyword / phrase.
- There are 322 words contained in the body copy, this is greater than the 300 word recommended minimum.
- The page title is more than 40 characters and less than the recommended 70 character limit.
- The keyword appears in the first paragraph of the copy.
Step 6: Checking Other Keywords
You’ve written your post, periodically checking your SEO as you go by saving your draft, now it’s time to see if you remembered to include the other keywords that you are targeting. Go to your plug-in and change the Focus Keyword to one of your other keywords. Then press Save Draft in the Publish widget. The plug-in will now update to your new keyword.Frequently what will happen is that your keyword density will be a little low (or possibly even too high). You can usually look back over the post and find a couple of places where you could add in the keyword (or remove it if too high). I’ve already tweaked this article, so I will just show you the screen shots for my 4 keywords.
While reviewing my post I also noticed that I used the keyword plug-in quite a bit. So I’ve gone ahead and added that to my list of keywords for the tutorial! This is actually a pretty common occurrence to find a new keyword or two as you write. In this case, I’ve updated the WordPress slug to include my new keyword. My new slug is:
yoast-wordpress-seo-plug-in-tutorial
WordPress
SEO
Yoast
Tutorial
Plug-in
Source : anphira.com
Label:
Plugin WP