Improving SEO on WordPress, a mix of technical config, content strategy, & optimization plugins

Improving SEO on WordPress requires a mix of technical configuration, content strategy, and optimization plugins. WordPress is naturally SEO-friendly, but you must configure it correctly to maximize search engine visibility.

Overview of WordPress SEO

WordPress SEO focuses on three main pillars:

  • Technical SEO: Ensuring search engines can crawl and index your site quickly.
  • On-Page SEO: Creating high-quality content optimized for specific user search terms.
  • Performance: Delivering a fast, secure, and mobile-friendly user experience.

Structured Breakdown by Focus Area

1. Core Technical Configuration

  • Search Engine Visibility
    • Ensure the “Discourage search engines from indexing this site” box is unchecked in your Reading settings.
  • Permalinks
    • Change the URL structure to “Post Name” for clean, keyword-rich web addresses.
  • WWW vs. Non-WWW
    • Choose one format in General Settings and ensure the other redirects to it consistently.

2. Specialized Plugins & Indexing

  • SEO Plugin Deployment
    • Install Yoast SEO, Rank Math, or All in One SEO to manage meta data.
  • XML Sitemaps
    • Generate a dynamic XML sitemap via your SEO plugin and submit it to Google Search Console.
  • Robots.txt Optimization
    • Edit this file to block search bots from crawling sensitive core admin folders.

3. On-Page Content Optimization

  • Keyword Placement
    • Add your target keyword to the title, first paragraph, headings, and URL slug.
  • Meta Titles & Descriptions
    • Write catchy, character-limited titles and summaries for every post to boost click-through rates.
  • Heading Structure
    • Use exactly one H1 tag per page for the title, followed by logical H2 and H3 tags.
  • Image Optimization
    • Compress image files before uploading and write descriptive Alt Text containing relevant keywords.

4. Performance & Security

  • Site Speed
    • Use a caching plugin like LiteSpeed Cache or WP Rocket to decrease page load times.
  • Hosting Quality
    • Migrate to a managed WordPress host to ensure high server uptime and fast response rates.
  • SSL Certificate
    • Activate HTTPS encryption through your host to establish data security and gain search trust.

5. Link Management

  • Internal Linking
    • Link new articles to older, relevant posts to distribute page authority across your site.
  • Broken Link Prevention
    • Install a redirection plugin to fix 404 errors and guide users away from dead pages.
  • Permalinks Consistency
    • Never change an existing post URL without setting up a permanent 301 redirect.
Unknown's avatar

Author: Mark Whitfield

Welcome to my site! After graduating in Computing in 1990, I accepted a position as a programmer at a Runcorn based software house specialising in electronic banking software, namely sp/ARCHITECT-BANK on Tandem Computers (now HPE NonStop). This was before the internet became more prevalent and so the notion of enabling desktop access to company accounts for inter-account transfers and book keeping was still quite a cutting edge idea (and smartphones only ever hinted at in Space 1999). The company was called The Software Partnership (which was taken over by Deluxe Data in 1994). I spent 5 years in Runcorn developing code for SP/ARCHITECT for various banks like TSB, Bank of Scotland, Rabobank and Girofon (Denmark) to name but a few. I then moved onto a software house in Salford Quays for further bank facing projects. After a further 23 years in the IT industry and now a Senior IT Project Manager (both Agile and Waterfall delivery), I thought I would echo out my Career Profile in this corner of the internet for quick and easy access.

Leave a comment