Seattle and Tacoma WordPress Design and WordPress Development

Changing Your Page Title in the Nav Bar

You create a page. You title it “About Joe Smith,” which is what you want it to say on the page. But in your nav bar, you just want “About”. Here is a simple way around this problem.

First you will need to install the plugin All In One SEO Pack. This is a great plugin and one you should be using anyway. I’m not going to use this post to tell your all it’s features, but do check it out.

Once installed and enabled, you will find this box at the bottom of every post and page you create. But you will only see this line for your pages.

Menu label:

seotitle

Simply type in what you want to appear in your nav bar, save and presto!

Excluding categories in the sub-navigation bar

Just a quick tip this AM.

If you have a theme that has a sub-navigation bar for categories, often they have a theme setting on which categories you can include or not in the bar. But if they don’t, here is a few steps to ensure certain one’s won’t appear…

First, you need to find out the number ID for each category you want to exclude. An easy way of doing this it to go to your category list page under “posts”, then run your cursor over the page to identify the number. Look at the bottom of your browser page and you will see a url with the number at the end.

Now go into your appearance menu, and choose the editor. On the left hand find your file “header (header.php) and open it.

Look for this code:

<?php wp_list_categories(‘orderby=name&title_li=&depth=2′); ?>

Replace it with this

<?php wp_list_categories(‘orderby=name&title_li=&depth=2&exclude=1,2,3‘); ?>

or you can use this to select only the categories you want to appear

<?php wp_list_categories(‘orderby=name&title_li=&depth=2&include=1,2,3‘); ?>

Just remember, if you aren’t comfortable with coding, make sure you have everything exact, no extra spaces and no “,” after the last category number. To be safe, copy the whole files text into a text window as a backup. Good luck!

Get Rid of the Google Landing Page Blues: 5 Tips for Increasing Online Sales with a ‘Portal Site’

geeselandingWhether you are a massage therapist,  dog trainer, executive sales coach, event planner, or someone else, if you are selling information products online, or are thinking about doing it, you might already know how hard it is to get your visitor’s undivided attention.

Your website visitor, who must be convinced to buy a product they might have never heard of, is a little different from the customer who goes to Amazon.com to buy a copy of Seth Godin’s latest bestseller-something she already knows she wants. What you must do, then, is persuade her to buy your product.

On a large, multi-page website, your reader has many choices: click here, go there, do this. If you have several products (e-books, DVD sets, audio recordings, etc.), your visitor can easily become overwhelmed.

To attract visitors and convince them to buy, consider creating landing pages. Also called micro-sites, landing pages  are really just sales letters posted on the Web that allow you to target the very people who are most interested in what you are selling, the people most likely to buy.

Great idea. Except for the fact that Google recognizes landing pages as sales letters and does not rate sites with sales copy very highly. So you don’t get nearly as much organic search traffic. Many online marketers get around this by creating a portal site, one central place with valuable free content for the search engines and links to their individual landing pages.

5 Tips for Increasing Online Sales with a ‘Portal Site’

  1. Create a simple URL/address for your portal site. It helps, especially as you begin to sell more products, to have a simple, central site. When someone asks what products you offer, it’s easy because you just have to remember one site address and direct them to that.
  2. Create links from your portal site to each of the landing pages for your individual products. You will want to send people to separate landing pages for each product, each with its unique domain name. Choose names that are easy to remember.
  3. Create sections of your site where visitors can download free content. This is key because it will increase your organic search rankings and drive traffic to your site. Because Google loves content, especially fresh content, include articles, special reports, and other information that is timely and helpful and will bring you lots of visitors. Valuable content will  also establish you as an expert and build the reader trust that leads to sales.
  4. Include a sign-up for your free, opt-in e-newsletter and links to your blog and other social media profiles. It’s a great way to build your list organically, find quality prospects, and get your content out to more people.
  5. From your portal site, send visitors to separate landing pages with their own unique domain names. Make each page simple, with no menu bar, no confusing options. You want your reader to focus on the reasons she needs to buy your product right now. So just include your sales letter and link to a form where your visitors can buy your product.

A well-thought out portal site linking to landing pages with amazing copy that sells your unique products will go a long way in pumping up your online sales.

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SEO Tools – A Must for WordPress

The All in One SEO Pack is probably the most used and well known admin plugin for WordPress. The All in One SEO pack allows you to give your post or Page a keyword rich title, different to the post/Page title, a meta description and keywords. This is a must have tool especially for Pages and when you are running your site as a content management system. Click here to download the All in One SEO Pack.

Seattle and Tacoma WordPress Design and WordPress Development