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How To Optimally Configure All-In-One SEO Pack For Your Travel Blog

One of 13 recommended WordPress plugins, the All In One SEO Pack is a powerful tool that can help your blog and individual posts become much more visible to search engines. Its power, and conversely weakness, is in All In One SEO Pack’s complexity. Many people who first install the plugin focus on adding descriptions to individual posts when you can more efficiently harness the SEO effectiveness on the general configuration page.

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Setting Up All In One SEO Pack From Scratch

Installation of All In One SEO goes much like most other WordPress plugins and is a realtively straightforward affair. Once you’ve uploaded the plugin (download here) and activate it, the first order of business is to head over to the “Options” page. All In One SEO Pack is kind enough to direct you there when you first activate the plugin, otherwise in your WordPress backend head to Settings > All In One SEO.

all in one seo config

The rest of these default settings are fine for most travel blogs. I wouldn’t recommend changing them unless you want your post title and blog title to appear differently at the top of a browser window.

all in one seo settings

Settings To Consider Deviating From The Default – Meta Keywords

Meta keywords are a elements of HTML that were originally designed to provide other computers (and search engines) with information about a given web page. The importance of meta keywords has significantly diminished in recent years and their effectiveness is often disputed. You can however use All In One SEO to convert your travel blog categories (e.g. time management) into meta tags.

  • This is a good setting to consider in the first 3 months of your travel blog when you don’t have many ‘post tags’ yet established.

After that, you should check the “Use Tags For Meta Keywords” instead; but not both. (This assumes you are adding post tags to your individual blog posts.) Checking both could earn you a small penalty from the search engines; they typically don’t like when you have too many similar ‘follow’ links on a given page. While meta keywords might have negligible SEO benefits, ignoring them won’t gain you anything.

The Misunderstood Dynamically Generate Keywords Setting

If you’ve set your WordPress blog to appear on a page other than the homepage (e.g. http://foxnomad.com/blog vs. http://foxnomad.com), then checking this setting tells All In One SEO pack to use the keywords you’ve set for posts on that [blog] page to act as the keywords for the entire page. The alternative is to set the keywords for a given page specifically, using the All In One SEO Pack configuration box at the bottom of the page-edit screen.

all in one seo keywords

This configuration box can be used to define specific keywords and descriptions for any and all of your travel blog’s posts and pages. If you don’t set them individually or won’t on a regular basis, you can have All In One SEO do it for you by checking the “Autogenerate Descriptions”. All In One SEO will then use the first 160 characters of a given post to automatically create the description field for it.

Using Noindex

all in one seo noindezAll In One SEO Pack will, by default, “noindex” your category, tag, and archive links. Those “noindex” links are the equivalent of “no-follow” links which tell search engines to ignore them. Again, to avoid duplicate links and content from being indexed (and subsequently penalized by the search engines), choose only one of these to un-check. Those of you who are diligent about tagging your posts with keywords can enable indexing of tags, while very new blogs or small static sites can enable indexing on categories to expand the number of overall pages being read by Google and other search engines.

It’s important however not to un-check more than one of these boxes in general so as not to have duplicate links being indexed more than once.

question markThat Configuration Box Below Each Post – Do I Need To Fill It In Every Time?

At the bottom of every one of your post and page drafts is a small All In One SEO configuration box. You can fill in keywords, specific descriptions, and modify your post titles just for the search engines. Most people don’t bother filling these in or lose enthusiasm for doing so after time. Filling each configuration box out can really help you focus your travel blog on a few specific keywords but the truth of the matter is most travel blogs aren’t keyword-oriented.

  • Most of the large (and SEO-oriented) travel blogs optimize their homepages and individual travel blog pages (using All In One SEO) and leave the posts up to the automatic functions of the plugin.

You can see what others are targeting by checking out the “Page Source” using your web browser. Look for what’s between the lines “<!– All in One SEO Pack” and “<!– /all in one seo pack –>” and you’ll see the description and specific keywords being targeted on a given page.

Expanding Your SEO-Reach

All In One SEO is a vital organization tool for your travel blog and does a lot of the SEO dirty work for you. In addition to the All In One SEO Pack you should change your permalink settings and use the alt attribute so your photos can be indexed as well. The search engines rely on boring text to sort through and map out your travel blog and All In One SEO gives them much more to read and feed on.

[photos by: jackbouma (magnifying glass), crystaljingsr (question mark)]

{ 14 comments… add one }
  • ayngelina November 19, 2010, 12:27

    Thanks so much for this post as I have the plug-in installed but have no idea what to do with this. This is so helpful and I’ll continue to fill out the form at the end of every post 🙂

    • Anil P. November 19, 2010, 13:57

      Thank you for the idea to do a post on the plugin – glad this post was able to help 🙂

  • Happy Hotelier November 20, 2010, 10:26

    Anil

    You don’t tell me you use the all in one SEO plugin here do you? That would be double up:-)

    Guido

  • Nancie November 21, 2010, 14:47

    Thanks for the info. I’ve been using this plug in since the beginning, and it looks like I do it right (always good to know).

    • Anil P. November 22, 2010, 02:10

      I find it always helps to see how other people are configuring their similar plug ins and what they’ve found effective and now. Good to hear you’re all set up!

  • Corinne @ Gourmantic November 22, 2010, 16:32

    Great info, as usual, Anil. In the early days I fell for the trap of unchecking the noindex for tags and categories and had to fix it, not realising it was the cause of duplicate content. Love the All In One SEO plugin.

    • Anil P. November 23, 2010, 11:44

      Understandable and something I think many people do since it’s easy to figure more indexing means more visibility. Unfortunately the search engines don’t think the same way but that makes it easier for them to map out the web accurately.

  • Randy December 15, 2010, 20:12

    Nice post! I’ve recently started reworking our site for SEO and found your tips a great help in better understanding how the All-In-One Pack works.

    • Anil P. December 16, 2010, 03:43

      Thanks Randy – do let me know if you have any specific questions while setting things up 🙂

  • Animesh December 23, 2010, 08:22

    Hi Anil,
    Thanks for this post. I have been setting up my website and this was really useful.
    One quick question: Would you recommend noindex even if archive pages contain summaries only?

    Thanks!

    • Anil P. December 23, 2010, 14:22

      Hi Animesh,

      My pleasure. Yes, still noindex the summaries since you don’t want to risk a duplicate content penalty from Google.

  • Kyle September 7, 2012, 16:50

    Did you see any noticable difference in traffic after you implemented all-in-one SEO? I started using it from the beginning and my blog is young so it’s hard to gauge it’s benefits

    • Anil P. September 8, 2012, 12:15

      Absolutely I did. My theme especially wasn’t particularly well designed for SEO so it helped a lot. I would also recommend taking a look at ‘Wordpress SEO’ plugin, a great alternative.

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