
Out of the blue, I was contacted today by a local business owner seeking Wordpress theme customization from a theme they purchased on Themeforest (by the way, read about how I was able to provide everything the client wanted in my other blog post) At first, I thought someone referred them to me, but after asking I was told they found me by searching for the phrase Wordpress Theme Customization Vancouver on Google where I rank #6.
As you might guess, I’m extremely pleased by the first page ranking considering I have had my new site, Full Motion Group, out for less than a year, and that I only recently installed a new theme from Themeforest. I’m going to share with you what I believe are the key factors in getting the ranking, and why I believe it’s partly attributed to the single page design I decided to implement.
Before I list my reasons, let’s get clear on WHAT a single page web site is:
- A theme or design where all of your primary keyword rich site content is loaded into the client browser when they hit your domain name root
- No frames, iframes, or fancy post-backs to load content in-line.
- Flash is NOT your primary content vehicle (can be used for headers and non-keyword rich content).
- Any sub-page content or blog posts can be linked to, but those pages are not your primary keyword-rich content
As mentioned, I recently implemented a single page theme on my business portfolio web site, Full Motion Group. The theme was from Themeforest called Personal Landing Page. I made many modifications to the theme (which i discuss at length about in the comments to the theme) to suit my needs like adding testimonials and making it possible to link to individual posts in the portfolio section.
If you visit the site, and then view the source code, you will see that the site’s primary content is loaded when you visit the home page. The only content that doesn’t appear on-load are the in-depth profile case studies (like this profile). In future, I might enhance the design further to load this content as well but for now I’m happy with the way it is.
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After purchasing the theme, and playing around with source code, I knew that the theme had potential for good search engine ranking, but I never guessed it would produce results until today.
How I got to be #6 on Google for “Wordpress Theme Customization Vancouver” and why a single page web site is better for your search engine ranking
- Reason #1: All site content is loaded when a search engine crawler visits the site. No additional links need to be followed that contain keyword rich content.
- Reason #2: If keywords are repeated unnecessarily (like in site footers), they pollute crawler statistics. For example, let’s say you have a page footer on every page that contains a short description of your business and some relevant keywords. Keywords used in that description appear for each page of your site and that forces crawlers to make some guesses about what that page could be about
- Reason #3: You only need to maintain meta-tag information for one page. I used the All-in-one seo plugin whenever I launch a Wordpress site, and one of the first things I do is enter the home page title and description. With a single page theme, I only need to do this once and I can carefully monitor my analytics results and tweak those keywords to match the results I’m looking for.
- Reason #4: Content deeper within your site might not get crawled. With traditional multi-page web sites, you need to hope that a crawler will index your entire site. Who knows how search engine crawlers behave, and it might not always be the case (as anyone that has tried to search the Microsoft site can attest to). Single page web sites on the other hand, are crawled and indexed completely, that you can be sure of.
- Reason #5: Single page web sites load more quickly. Well, this isn’t always the case, but certainly a single page theme creates less total traffic than say 10 individual pages of the same content (barring content that is cached in browser).
- Reason #6: Single page web sites that are updated are re-indexed completely. I’m sure that every time I updated my web site, a search engine eventually revisits and recrawls the site eventually. Having all my content on a single page load also means that all my content is re-indexed which is even better because I can carefully tweak my entire site’s keywords without too much fuss.
I have yet to prove for sure that a single page theme is better for you from an SEO point of view, and certainly this doesn’t always apply for all sites (as you get larger, you will need to split content into multiple pages), but if you can get away with it, I suggest you give it a try.
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30 Sep 09 at 11:15 pm
We have a one-page site. Your article was very helpful.
Thanks,
Fred
Fred
13 Oct 09 at 12:21 am