Since the news of duplicate content penalties has been spreading, it’s
finally reached the blogging world and many are scrambling to find a
solution for the way a WordPress blog displays its content. If you’re
currently running a WordPress blog, then there’s no reason for you to fear;
three quick and simple changes can help you to avoid the duplicate content
penalty.
Optimize Your Archive and Category Pages
The archive and category pages are where a majority of the duplicate
content problems arise. This happens because some themes publish the entire
post’s content which gives off the illusion that a post was published in
more than one place, although it truly wasn’t. To quickly get around this
problem, you’ll need to turn those full posts into partial summaries.
Time for action: Open your theme’s archive.php file (and
category.php, if it exists) using a plain text or HTML editor. A free one
can be downloaded from http://www.pspad.com/. When you have the files open,
change “the_content()” to “the_excerpt()”, save the changes, and upload the
updated file to your blog.
Your Homepage Needs Attention, Too
The homepage of a blog usually suffers from the same problem as the
archive and category pages, especially as you continue through the various
pages of older entries. Although you could just as easily convert the full
content into excerpts as you did for the archive pages, it’s not the ideal
solution. Your homepage relies on the index file as do other sections of the
blog. Altering this file may make sweeping, and undesirable, changes across
the blog.
Luckily there is a solution, without getting into advanced template
editing techniques. You can truncate your posts by using the "more" tag;
however, if you already have a number of posts, then it may be better to use
a plugin which will automatically truncate the post for you after a
paragraph or two.
Time for action: Download the free Evermore WordPress
plugin from http://www.optiniche.com/go/evermore and install it on your blog.
After activating it, verify that it’s working as intended and that your
homepage posts are shortened to one or two paragraphs with a link to
continue reading.
Internal Link Structure Matters
Now that you’ve gone through the steps of removing potentially duplicate
content, it’s time to tell the search engines where to find the right pages
to index. This is where a strong internal link structure comes into play.
The goal is to make sure that the permalink can be found from your homepage,
the archive and category pages using relevant anchor text.
On your homepage, archives, and category pages, make sure that your post
title is linked to the permalink page. Many themes will already do this, but
double check. Also, avoid using terms like “permalink” or “post link” when
linking to the individual posts.
Another way to boost your internal link structure is with a human
readable sitemap page. The sitemap page should contain a link to each of
your individual blog entries using the entry title as the anchor text. When
the sitemap page is created, make sure it is linked to from each page of the
blog.
Time for action: Download the free sitemap WordPress
plugin from http://www.optiniche.com/go/sitemap and install it on your blog.
Create your sitemap page according to the plugin instructions, adjust the
options until everything is to your liking, and double check to make sure
it’s working as intended.
Curbing duplicate content penalties doesn’t need to be a difficult or
involved process. In less than 30 minutes, your blog can be enhanced by
using excerpts on the archive and category pages, truncating posts on the
front page, and sprucing up your internal linking structure. Making those
small changes will have you off to a great start.
Teli Adlam is a blog consultant specializing in website and blog marketing.
Visit
http://www.optiniche.com/blog/ to learn more about WordPress, blogging, and
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