Monday, January 30, 2017

Using Yoast SEO Plugin for WordPress

Getting SEO set up on your WordPress blog has gotten super easy with the Yoast SEO plugin. This plugin allows you to write and manage title, meta description, and open graph protocol tags all in one interface.


The Yoast SEO plugin is pre-installed on our class WordPress blogs. You can find it on the left hand nav menu - it is called "SEO". First, we'll be working with Titles & Metas.

Titles & Metas

If you don't know what title and meta description tags are, you'll first want to read my blog post about them. In the Yoast SEO submenu, you can select the "Titles & Metas" option.

The first thing you'll want to do is take a look at the title and description for your home page. The title is coded to dynamically add content from your current site name, page name, and site description - but you can change this based on Google's requirement that a title be unique, descriptive, and accurate. 

Write a description for your site that is also unique, descriptive, and accurate that further describes to a potential reader what your blog is about. Think about keywords you want your blog to be associated with. 

When you're done, click "Save Changes". Next, you'll enable Facebook Open Graph Protocol tags.

Facebook Open Graph Protocol Tags

Before you complete this step, you should read my blog post on Open Graph Protocol (You can ignore the part about Blogger code - that was what students in the past had to deal with).

Once you're open graph enlightened, go ahead and select the "Social" option from the Yoast SEO Plugin submenu.


You'll want to make sure that under the "Facebook" tab, that Open Graph meta data is set to "Enabled." This will automatically use the title and meta description tags you wrote from the previous step and add open graph tags that use the same data.


If you want to customize the title or description of your home page, you can do so in the section called "Frontpage settings".  You can also upload a preview image to use for your blog's home page. This image should conform to Facebook preview image standards.
  • For best display, use an image that is 1200 x 630 pixels.
  • Note that images in other sizes and aspect ratios may get cropped.
  • Next best image size is 600 x 315 pixels. Images smaller than this will appear in a smaller preview size.
  • Facebook will not display a preview image smaller than 200 x 200 pixels.

Ok - now you're ready to write title and meta description tags for your individual blog posts. There isn't a submenu option for that. You'll do that while you're editing the post itself.

Adding Titles & Meta tags to Wordpress Blog Posts

Go to one of your blog posts and scroll down past your post copy. You should see a Yoast SEO content area:

This gives you a "Snippet Preview" of what your blog post's google listing will look like. As you can see, WordPress has automatically created a title based on the post title - and has autofilled the meta description with the first paragraph of your post. Let's make that a bit more readable by clicking "Edit Snippet".
You should make the title and description unique, accurate, and descriptive - while piquing the curiosity of the reader to get them interested in clicking on the post in Google Search results. For example, this is a better description than the first paragraph of the article:


You can also designate a Focus Keyword for each post. A focus keyword is a word or phrase that you want your post to be associated with. In the example above, we might designate a focus keyword like "productivity apps".

The plugin gives you feedback on how well your page content and SEO tags relate to your focus keyword.

In general, you should fix things with red or orange dots until as many dots as possible are green.
Get into the practice and discipline of doing this for every blog post you write for maximum SEO benefit.

Ready to check your work? 

SEO Tools To Check Your Tags

First you should check your title and meta description tags by using the SEOCentro Meta Tag Analyzer.

Then check your open graph tags with the Facebook Sharing Debugger




Sunday, January 29, 2017

Social Media Project Roundup, Fall 2016

Every semester, my UNI Digital Advertising students work very hard on a massive project: To develop a professional brand based on their personal interests using social media. 

Let's take a moment to praise their work and note a few special honors.

The Big Picture

It's always astounding to me what my classes can accomplish in little under three months.  By measuring our activity and engagement on social media, we can quickly evaluate our performance with quantitative metrics.

From mid-January through April 18, 2016, my 48 #unidigadv students accomplished the following:
  • Posted a total of 5,656 tweets on Twitter
  • Gained a total of 5,262 followers on Twitter
  • Earned an average score of 40 on Klout
  • Added 3,570 connections on LinkedIn
  • Published 400 blog posts on Blogger or WordPress blogs
  • Earned 41,711 pageviews from 15,829 visitors to their blogs

    TWITTER

    Most Prolific
    Tweeting is one of those things that seems very easy at first glance - until you do it every day in support of a professional brand.  That's hard work!  Here are the top five #unidigadv Tweeps by Tweet volume (I only counted original tweets for this - retweets did not count!):
    1. Rob Bremner @BlockParty1520 - 527 Tweets
    2. Melissa Curtis @SnapsMacsBooks - 270 Tweets
    3. Katelyn Kozak @k_dcreative - 179 Tweets
    4. Jeffery Johnson @VirtualRundown - 160 Tweets
    5. Jimmy Terronez @techwebfun - 154 Tweets
    Most Followers Gained
    If you want to wield influence on Twitter, you need followers.  Here are the students who added the most followers during the semester.
    1. Scott Burak @AdFlies - added 352 followers
    2. Parker Harrington @pv_only - added 331 followers
    3. Jeffery Johnson @VirtualRundown - added 320 followers
    4. Carson Zhou @zhouzhecheng - added 287 followers
    5. Travis Miller @securegadgets - added 316 followers
       

    LINKEDIN

    Most Connections Gained
    When job hunting, who you know is often as important as who you are.  Here are the class members who gained the most connections on LinkedIn during this project:
    1. Jeffery Johnson +851 connections
    2. Trenton Schulte +359 connections
    3. Natalie Siems +239 connections
    4. Mary Kluesner +148 connections
    5. Olivia Ballhagen +142 connections
    Most Overall Connections
    Some students already had a huge network of professional contacts on Linkedin. Here are the most well-connected class members overall:
    1. Jeffery Johnson - 911 connections
    2. Jamal White - 728 connections
    3. Trenton Schulte - 647 connections
    4. Carson Zhou - 536 connections
    5. Alyssa Meeker - 533 connections
    Highest Quality Profiles
    A high quality Linkedin profile can help you stand out to potential employers. The following students had outstanding profiles:
    Most Recommended
    These two students had the greatest number of recommendations by others on LinkedIn:


    BLOGS

    The real content was being generated on student blogs, where students developed unique and original posts related to their professional brand.  They then attempted to organically attract an audience of readers - a difficult challenge!

    Most Visited Blogs 

    We had SIX students who earned over 1,500 pageviews to their blog during the course of the semester - they did a fantastic job attracting and engaging their visitors.  Browse through their blogs and see what they came up with:
    1. Natalie Siems - Textbook Chic - 6,261 pageviews
    2. MC Pham - Vietnamese Cuisine - 2,198 pageviews
    3. Adisa Skrebo - Adisa Glam - 2,081 pageviews
    4. Josh Berendes - Berendes Media - 1,884 pageviews
    5. Lindsay Moore - Moore to Grow - 1,829 pageviews
    6. Teresa Connelly - Run Like A Millennial - 1,539 pageviews

    Special Honors

    Fashion Blogger of the Year
    Natalie Siems - Textbook Chic

    Natalie proved once and for all that fashion blogs rule. Her ambitious fashion blog is the #3 most visited #unidigadv blog of all time!

    Best Advertising Blog
    Carson Zhou - Social China 101
    Carson did an excellent job explaining how Chinese social media marketing works - learning about Weibo and WeChat was definitely fascinating.

    Thespian's Award (TIE)Abbie Takes - Engaging Theatre
    Abbie did an excellent job looking at some of the top theatres in the country and how they are successfully using social media to promote the theatrical arts.

    Zach Champlain - The Modern Backstage
    Zach is really into theatre lighting technology - and he clearly knows a lot about it. His blog seemed very helpful and relevant.


    Most Literate (TIE)
    Melissa Curtis - Snaps, Macs, and Actual Books
    A fun, readable blog that was authentically passionate about marketing college libraries.

    Ali Henkle - Book 'Em Blog
    If you like reading books - you'll enjoy Ali's blog. It is always good to have a student who gets my Harry Potter jokes.

    Most Tech Savvy
    Lydia Anderson - Histortech
    Lydia revealed a whole new world of connections between archeology, history, and technology that were fascinating and very well-written.

    Funnest Read
    Jimmy Terronez - Tech Web Fun
    I don't know why I liked reading Jimmy's blog - but I really did. Maybe it was the Spongebob animated GIFs. Maybe it was his YouTube video of Jimmy's celebrity impressions. But the fun always made the content more interesting and readable.

    Thanks again for a great semester - if you get nostalgic you can always tune into #unidigadv on Twitter and help the newbies out!

    Did you have a favorite blog this semester that I didn't mention?  Tell me about it in the comments!