A common question that I receive from clients who are just starting to post on their first small business website is, what are the differences between adding tags to a post, and adding a post to a category?
When I started my small business blog I had far too many categories, often with matching tags. I would place content pieces into more than one category. What a disaster!. I was having a hard time finding my own articles! I’m sure Google was having the same problem.
Doing things correctly from the beginning will save you time in not having to go back through maybe hundreds of content pieces to file away correctly after you have previously built your website.
Categories
The first rule of thumb is to place each post into only one category. Think of categories as dresser drawers. You wouldn’t try to put one sock into two different drawers. content pieces are the same as socks, and categories are the drawer we place them in.
You can however place a post into a sub-category that you can create from within the post dashboard. This is the only time I check two categories on a post. As long as it’s a sub of a main category, all is well.
This will make it easier for people to find your posts, and Google won’t be seeing cross-eyed when it crawls your blog. Google could consider multiple categories on an article as double content, a big no in Google’s webmasters’ guidelines.
I base all my sites on categories rather than tags. On my affiliate marketing sites, I set up my main categories with the brand name, such as Crossman, and then set the subcategories to the specific model that is on the post. This has been functioning quite well as far as showing up for specific key-word phrases.
In general, I try to have only a few main categories, each covering a broad general topic. I try to keep under ten categories.
Post Tags. You can then use multiple tags to further organize the article. I generally use three to five tags, and think of them more as key-words. Think of your tags as areas within the dresser drawer. A quick example:
Let’s say we have a cooking blog. We could have a category titled sauces. If we create an article on spaghetti sauce, we would place it in the sauces category and then use tags like Italian sauces, meet ball sauce, red sauce, and tomato sauce and so on.
If we had a music blog, we could have categories like Rock, Jazz, Country, and Classical. Inside these we could have tags like Miles Davis, Beethoven, and the Smashing Pumpkins.
In review, try to think of broad general terms that would describe the product or service. Then use subcategories with more targeted and more specific terms or phrases. You’ll be able to then add more categories and subcategories as your blog develops. These categories should include some of your key words for your blog. This will help tweak your blog for SEO.
Next, think of three to five tags that would describe the product or service you are attempting to market. This will give you a good foundation to build your blog on. I like to, think of my blogs as pieces of cyber real estate. Every good home needs a sound foundation.
Building a category based website and using tags as keywords is a brilliant way to keep things ordered, not only for SEO and Google rankings, but for your site visitors as well.
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