Optimizing WordPress Permalink Structure
One aspect of onsite SEO for blogs is to configure a desirable permalink structure. Essentially, a permalink is a permanent reference url used for access once the post passes from the first page of your blog. It is what others will use to link to the post and, perhaps more importantly, the link the search engines will use to identify your post, page or article. Permalinks should be unique.
There has always been debate about whether, and the extent to which, keyword-rich urls contribute to a pages. It is commonly believed that keywords in the permalink do indeed contribute to a page’s SERPs.
The structure of WordPress permalinks is dictated by a series of settings and parameters found under the Settings -> Permalinks section, within the administrator console.
In order to fully optimise the permalink structure, aim to use your tagret keywords in the leftmost position of the url. In order to do this you’d need a custom structure containing the single parameter /%postname%. This creates a permalink based on the post title. It is then up to you to choose a unique, keyword-rich and compelling title for each of your posts.
Be aware that using just the /%postname% parameter compels you to create unique titles for every post on your blog in order to avoid collisions (where two articles might have the same permalink, clearly not a good situation).
Also, be aware that if your blog is established with numerous indexed pages then your should avoid altering your permalink structure without a full understanding of the consequences. It will affect your backlinks, trackbacks and ultimately your SERPs. Usually, optimising a blog’s permalink structure should be undertaken during the early stages of the blog’s development, and before a substantial content base is developed.
There are several plug-ins available that allow auto-manipulation of post slugs and consequently permalinks. These often remove “noise” words (such as “the”, “and” and alike) with the belief that increasing the overall keyword density of the permalink, and shifting the keywords leftward, will ultimately increase the link weight. Although these plug-ins might offer some small SEO benefit, be extra cautious when using these on active blogs for the same reasons stated above.
Later iterations of WordPress offer the facilty to edit the permalink before publishing in a box just beneath the post title when writing it. This way you can manually create a permalink for the post or manually crop noise words prior to publishing.
November 16th, 2009 at 8:37 am
i have been using WordPress for 2 years but i still dont know how to do SEO using WordPress, is there an SEO pluggin for WordPress?.
December 7th, 2009 at 10:45 am
@Matt,
There are two common plugins for WordPress. Platinum SEO: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/platinum-seo-pack/ and All-in-One-SEO: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/all-in-one-seo-pack/.
There are several others that offer some SEO benefits. Search here for more: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/
December 11th, 2009 at 5:53 pm
Lots of of guys talk about this subject but you wrote down some true words.
April 10th, 2010 at 12:49 pm
[...] if they have a lot of pages too. I did eventually find one post that specifically stated why: http://www.freeseoarticles.net/optim…ink-structure/ Apparently the closer leftwards, it has more wieght. I'd say overall the effect is probably [...]
May 12th, 2010 at 4:09 am
[...] For each post, ensure the post title includes its target keyword or keyphrase in the left most position and ensure that you have your permalink structure set up appropriately. [...]
May 25th, 2010 at 4:11 am
[...] your permalinks [...]