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SEO plugin

January 16, 2012 12:05pm

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  • #1 / Jan 16, 2012 12:05pm

    Matt Powell

    42 posts

    What’s the SEO plugin of choice amongst the EE core? I’ve tried NSM Better Meta, but not sure it was worth the $50. Can I do just as much with a free plugin?

  • #2 / Jan 17, 2012 3:34am

    danieljohnbarnes

    151 posts

    I’ve never felt the need for a plugin. EE’s core functionality enables you to do an awful lot on your own without any PHP at all and I’ve had good results. It’s more a problem getting editorial staff to comply!

  • #3 / Jan 17, 2012 6:33am

    Matt Powell

    42 posts

    Interesting - how do you deal with meta data for each entry? Without being able to share custom fields across different channels I can’t think of a way of doing this with the native functionality. Am I missing something obvious?

  • #4 / Jan 17, 2012 9:26am

    danieljohnbarnes

    151 posts

    Why do you need to share the custom fields across each channel? You can use Gypsy (free) to make it easier to use the same custom fields across multiple channels.

    I just have meta fields per weblog entry, and some conditionals to do something automated if those meta tags are not there.

    In general, articles have a summary slug of text that can be used for the unique description as well as the page lead-in-intro.

    Better Meta will no doubt make things a bit easier and be worth the cash if you have a lot of weblogs/scope but for me, it’s out of the box every time.

  • #5 / Jan 17, 2012 9:34am

    Matt Powell

    42 posts

    if i don’t share custom fields I can’t see how I can have a field for meta title, keywords, description on each channel. gypsy would do the trick yes, but isn’t compatible with lots of other plugins I’ve used (unless this has been remedied recently) and is not supported in EE2 as far as I’m aware. :{

    do you create SEO meta fields for each custom field group?

    i’d much prefer to come across a robust, out of the box solution so keen to explore this further. $50 for better meta is a cost I’d rather avoid.

  • #6 / Jan 17, 2012 10:52am

    danieljohnbarnes

    151 posts

    do you create SEO meta fields for each custom field group?

    Yes, but on my sites I only have 3 or 4 weblogs which relate to a page that needs meta.

    My bad on Gypsy - I’m resolutely hanging on to EE1.

    I think Better Meta includes sitemaps etc too no?

  • #7 / Jan 17, 2012 10:54am

    danieljohnbarnes

    151 posts

    More reading - I think you can workaround the lack of EE2 support with Gypsy using native EE according to thisthread - http://help.pixelandtonic.com/brandonkelly/topics/delay_in_updating_gypsy_to_2_0

  • #8 / Jan 17, 2012 10:56am

    Matt Powell

    42 posts

    It may do - I didn’t use that feature. I’ve made my own sitemaps in the past so just did that again on the site that was using Better Meta.

    Regarding the workaround - if you have a lot of custom fields that just isn’t practical. Admin page load times can be severely compromised.

  • #9 / Jan 23, 2012 2:35pm

    Andrew Fairlie's avatar

    Andrew Fairlie

    126 posts

    We’re in the process of building a ridiculously simple SEO plugin - for users benefits over developers so it wont have much functionality but would provide a really nice GUI for users and simple integration for developers.

    In your template you could just insert, for example:-
    {field_name:title}

    It’s not my main project but is something we’ve been wanting to build for clients. A number of other plugins handle sitemaps and other areas of a site well enough, this one would just be really nice meta. We’ll be looking to charge around £15 per site but we’ll announce this nearer the time.

    For a quick screenshot of it, check the attachment.

  • #10 / Jan 24, 2012 4:10pm

    We use SEO Lite on our projects, it does a good job of managing title, description, and keyword tags, which I blogged about here.

    Once you’ve rolled a sitemap.xml template, you’ve got most of the heavy lifting for that out of the way, especially if you just need the URL and last modified time.

  • #11 / Jan 25, 2012 8:51am

    Matt Powell

    42 posts

    I do like SEO lite yes. I suppose I’m always conscious of avoiding using plugins / addons where possible… must be a hangover from my wordpress days

  • #12 / Jan 28, 2012 11:08am

    scottb

    348 posts

    One simple way to add meta descriptions is to use the {summary} tag in an article template’s header.

    Wrap it within the exp:channel:entries tag and limit it to one entry.

    Taking it a step further, you can add a field for the entry that is called Meta Description and call that one instead of Summary if you want something different than the summary.

    That way the description is dynamically generated for each entry and you also can use custom fields.

    For the section fronts, skip the channel:entries tag and just manually write the description.

    Likewise, you do the same thing with titles.

  • #13 / Jan 31, 2012 1:18pm

    alangoodie

    1 posts

    I would go for SEO For firefox by Aaron Wall, the Author of SEOBook, which in my opinion is the best SEO book you can find on the web. The plugin is worth checking out!

  • #14 / Feb 15, 2012 11:42am

    bluee

    4 posts

    Nice sharing dude. this is exactly one and only which I am looking for.
    I also doing seo and I love to this job.

  • #15 / Mar 23, 2012 7:52am

    ianryde's avatar

    ianryde

    112 posts

    I’ve always used NSM Beta Meta. It’s so flexible and really powerful. Keeps your header code nice and need too without really long conditionals. Great if you are using templates to do multiple things.

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