3 P’s of WordPress Site Structure for SEO – P#3: Performance

performance

In the third and final post of my "3 Ps of WordPress Site Structure for SEO" series I'm going to cover "P for Performance". If you havent read the previous posts, make sure you catch up with "P#1: Preparation" and "P#2: Publishing" first of all.

Test And Refine

The first part of P#3: Performance starts off with testing and refining, knowing exactly which keyword phrases work for your business.

As I'm sure you know, you should have monetary goals set up within Google Analytics. If this is the case youll be able to see which keyword phrases, and which links bring you the highest quality of traffic then you can re-focus your effort on areas that are most relevant for your business.

I also use a tools called Market Samurai to determine which keyword phrases I should be targeting, and how my targeted keyword phrases are currently ranking.

Increase Speed

You also need to make sure that your site is loading quickly for the majority of your visitors. Make sure you check out your site loading speed using the Vertain site speed tool.

Also, you need to make sure that your WordPress installation including your site structure such as your plugins is loading efficiently. You can do this using the W3 Total Cache and Optimize DB Plugins.

And of course, you need to be able to trust your host. I've had good shared hosting experience with HostGator, HostMonster and Vidahost. If youre building a big, popular site then you should take a look at VPS.net.

Direct Search Engines

As well as making sure your website visitors have a good experience, you also of course need to make sure that search engines understand what your site offers, and can easily navigate through your various pages.

You can do this by using a good theme which ensures that your site coding is efficient and easy to crawl. Personally I like Thesis, but there are lots of other good alternatives about nowadays.

Another good way of improving efficiency is to make better use of old, irrelevant content that still ranks well in Google. Why not 301-redirect this to fresh, new, relevant content?

Conversion Optimization

Finally, you need to make sure that your site conversion rates are optimized. I like using the theme OptimizePress which is a great way to create an opt-in base WordPress site.

However, if youre not doing this then you should at least be using Google Website Optimizer to run A/B and then multivariate split-tests. Improving your website conversion rates could be a lot easier than getting more visitors!

Written by David Bain

David Bain has immersed himself in internet marketing for over 10 years now, and conducted internet marketing strategy seminars for the past 4 years. He is author of the 13 Pillars of Internet Marketing as well as author and founder of the recently updated 26-Week Internet Marketing Plan Blueprint.

The 26-Week Internet Marketing Plan

Share This Post:

Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Stumble It Share to Delicious Sphinn This Share to Email More...
Interact With This Post:

Leave a Reply

CommentLuv badge

Stay up to date - Follow us:

Click to Subscribe

Simplify your information workflow: get blog updates delivered by email -- no more than once a day.
or
click to subscribe in your newsreader

Get the SEP Newsletter

Essential search marketing news and actionable SEO tips and strategies delivered in your inbox:



Call Us Today