A Silver Surfer’s Tips for Making Money Online

WordPress Slug | A Nifty Way For Boosting SEO Rankings For Your Blog

WordPress Slug | A Nifty Way For Boosting SEO Rankings For Your Blog

Making Money onlineAs I’ve been doing the rounds of some internet marketing forums recently to generate traffic to my blog I’ve seen some questions about a WordPress Slug.

So, I thought it would be a good idea to explain what it is here for those who don’t know.

Let me assure you that it’s certainly not some fat slimy creature that slithers its way through your blog chomping on anything it fancies on the way like a destructive computer virus!

In fact, a slug is a string of a few well chosen words that helps with the SEO of your blog.

What Is A WordPress Slug & How Does It Work?

According to WordPress Glossary:

A slug is a few words that describe a post or a page. Slugs are usually a URL friendly version of the post title (which has been automatically generated by WordPress), but a slug can be anything you like. Slugs are meant to be used with permalinks as they help describe what the content at the URL is.

When you post a new page or article on a WordPress blog, the site automatically creates a miniature “slug”.

It appears under the blog post title in the editor.

Here’s an example of what a slug looks like inside the dashboard of this blog.

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It contains the post title with the words separated by hyphens (and not spaces). Basically, the slug helps us in identifying different posts published on the site, for a specific topic.

The basic format is this:

http://www.sitename.com/post-category-slug/topic-name-slug

For example, if I create a post titled “Six Common Gardening Errors Made By Novices” and post it under the category  “Simple Tips On Gardening” on my blog titled “Online Gardener”, the format for its slug would be:

http://www.onlinegardener.com/simple-tips-on-gardening/six-common-gardening-errors-made-by-novices

Since the release of WordPress version 3.3 it has included  smarter auto-slugs which automatically gets rid of any other characters  like exclamation marks, apostrophies, brackets etc when the slug is created.

How Can We Use the WordPress Slug For SEO Purposes?

According to Joost de Valk, an  an authority on WordPress & search engine optimization, “The URL should end with the post name and could possibly be prefixed with the category. No other options really make sense.”

This means you’d set your permalink structure either like this:

/%postname%/

or, with the category like this

/%category%/%postname%/

You will find the permalink structure settings under settings in the left hand menu on your WordPress Dashboard.

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Then you can choose the structure.

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For a perfect WordPress SEO URL, your slug should be no longer than 3 to 5 words and these words should include your keyword.

Now you might be wondering how you can make it that short if the title of your post is longer than that.

Before you publish your post you should edit the slug and remove what are known as stop words that are unimportant to Google such as to, for, your, a, an, is, of, on, or, that, the, this, when, with etc.

To do this you simply click on the “edit” button right below the post title field.

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SEO is all about looking for the hottest search phrases (most used by the readers) and incorporating them in your web content, in order to obtain a higher SEO ranking for your site.

So, while creating a post slug, we can incorporate keywords of higher search value in the box and they will get published in the permalink. This will help to entice the searcher to click on the link and in getting a high SEO score.

Have you noticed how Google highlights the queried keywords in a website slug as it displays the search result snippet? Next time you do a search for something take a look at the slugs that display.

WordPress Smart Slug Plugin

Now instead of doing this manually every time an alternative is to use a nifty WordPress plugin called Smart Slug that will automatically remove stop words that are just making your titles longer and keeping them from being optimized.

In researching this article I have come across quite a few posts that recommend the WordPress SEO Slugs plugin but when you go to the download page you will see that there is a notice telling you that this plugin hasn’t been updated in over 2 years so you could get compatibility issues or find it does not work with the recent versions of WordPress.

Now you know that editing a WordPress slug is something that you need to do to make your post and page URLs search engine friendly.  If you have not been doing so now’s the time to start.

What about editing old WordPress Slugs?

The great thing about WordPress is that if you decide you want to go back and edit some of the slugs on your old posts  it will automatically create a redirect for you.

Have you been optimizing your post slugs?  Any tips?

Share them with my readers in the comments.

And, don’t forget to share this post if you think others would find it useful.  Thanks 🙂

 

 

 

 

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Silviu
11 years ago

Hi Sandy,

This is a kind of small study about slugs. A mini-guide or a tutorial. I like the way the information is organized and all the details. I must say I was not interested in slugs because I had almost no idea what they were. Now, I bookmarked the article to use it whenever I need. Thank you.

Have a nice day

Mark McKnight
11 years ago

I never knew they were called slugs. I always keep my ‘slug’ the same as my title. My title never goes over 60 characters which is the recommended length for titles to appear in search engines.

This means I never have to shorten anything. I just keep the title and the slug the same.

For example: http://www.markmcknightblog.com/can-your-local-business-grow-without-social-media-marketing/

I find this to work really well now because I used to change the slug to the keyword, for example: social media marketing

Since Penguin, my keyword based slugs aren’t performing as well as my full title based slugs. So that’s why I now use a full title based slug of 60 characters or less.

~Mark

Mark McKnight
Reply to  Sandy
11 years ago

SEO has changed a lot since that post was written on 23rd May 2011. The information in that post is quite out of date. I would consider myself to be quite knowledgeable in SEO and will be soon writing a few posts about getting the most from off-page SEO in 2013 and beyond.

I only really know of two SEO experts who study the search engines scientifically and have done so for a good few years and they are Dan Thies and Leslie Rhode of SEO Braintrust.

If you need some tips on getting traffic through SEO, my best piece of advice in 2013 is to do lots of blog commenting.

Rajesh Jhamb
11 years ago

Hello Sandy
I was not aware of slug,i am using SEO by yoast plugin and there is word come i.e slug but i didn’t know about this term.
But you have cleared my all doubts about this term, Now I can explain this anyone who will ask me for this term.
Well organized and awesome post.
Thanks for sharing this wonderful post.

Michel Snook
11 years ago

Hello Sandy,

Great Post. There are several of my WP sites where I will edit the permalink slug manually removing the unimportant words of that link to shorten it. I like how you provided a short list of unimportant words contained in a slug.

What I learned from this is the smart slug plugin that can be installed that automatically removes those unimportant words from the permalink which would save time. The only question that I have is does the plugin also shorten the links of those posts that have already been published?

Dita
11 years ago

Hi Sandy,

I am not familiar with the term “slug”. I do not use any plugins but in most cases I optimize the link before I publish my post. I like the link you created and that is something (or similar) I would do.

It is good to keep your permalinks short because even in searches, if the link is too long it will end up having “…” at the end. (the …represents the missing words from your permalink.

For that reason I do not even include categories for my original article, so my links would be: mydomain.com/blogpost

Anyway, enjoyed learning something new

Take care,

Dita

skin care
11 years ago

I changed the url structure for all of my wordpress sites and noticed a significant improvement in rankings across the board. This is definitely a great way to boost rankings!

Rob
Rob
11 years ago

Thanks for adding to my marketing lexicon, Sandy. Good to know that it’s more than just a pretty url. I concur with Mark McKnight about trying to keep my slugs the same as my post titles. I think the consistency helps aesthetically. If it helps with SEO, so much the better.

Glenn Shepherd
11 years ago

Hi Sandy,

This is a really informative and useful post (as always!).

I’m quite surprised that so many people haven’t heard of slugs. But it just goes to emphasise that we can never assume what people may or may not know.

The long vs short slug issue is an interesting one. At the moment I’m letting YOAST guide me but it would be interesting to see some stats on the subject to get a better idea of what’s best. It appears that the jury’s out somewhat at the moment.

Keep up the awesome work, Sandy! 🙂

Regards,
Glenn

Sylviane Nuccio
11 years ago

Hi Sandy,

I have to say that I’m aware of such postname/category settings since I have been blogging on WordPress in 2008/2009 but I don’t think I knew that they called it slug.

It’s very important to set them as you explained in your post so the permalink/slug is created automatically. This is a great feature of WordPress.

Thank you for the tip 🙂

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