How do you incorporate a Wordpress blog onto an ecommerce website?
-
Hello there,
We have a company website: http://www.parklanechampagne.co.uk/ and a Wordpress blog: http://www.alastairharrison.me/ and I would like the blog on the subfolder http://www.parklanechampagne.co.uk/blog so that we get maximum SEO benefit from updating this regularly (I understand this would be better than putting it on a subdomain blog.parklanechampagne.co.uk?).
The Wordpress blog is hosted externally but I was after some advice on how we can move this blog to the parklanechampagne/blog subfolder?
Any help gratefully received - I've asked several SEO and web agencies this question and had a lot of contrasting replies!
Many thanks, Jon
-
If it's done correctly and Google sees it as if it lives in the subfolder, then yes - it's perfectly fine for SEO. This is a technically tricky solution, though, and would really depend on the capabilities of your hosting provider.
-
Hi Andrea, thank you for your comments - I'm definitely keen to avoid anything to painstaking and most importantly, costly! Jon
-
Thanks Ben, I feel this is good advice also safer, quicker and easier to run a blog in its native environment. Cheers, Jon
-
Hi Peter,
Many thanks for sending those two links over - I'm leaning on perhaps setting up a new .net blog so that it'll be easier to integrate with our site.Regarding your last point, it we run the current Wordpress blog on a separate server and make it look like it "lives" on a subfolder would it still have the same SEO benefit?
Cheers, Jon
-
The php-compiler.net blog article about running php on a .net platform is interesting, but wherever possible its always better to run applications in their native environment.
-
As someone who is currently dealing with the making a WP blog look like it lives on a subdomain, I will agree with Dr. Pete that it's very tricky.
-
Hi Jon,
Thank you for your feedback, its much appreciated and I'm glad I could assist. To answer your question, a blog can be written in any server-side language (PHP, .net, Clasic ASP, Ruby etc).
You will often find that .net hosting will be more expensive as opposed to php.
-
I can't vouch for these tactic, but there are ways to port WordPress to .Net. For example:
http://www.php-compiler.net/blog/2011/wordpress-on-net-4-0
http://sourceforge.net/projects/wordpressnet/
It might be better to go with a .Net-native app, but it's not completely impossible to run WordPress.
Can they set up a reverse proxy? You could theoretically run the current WordPress blog on a separate server, but then make it look like it "lives" on a subdomain or subfolder. It's a bit tricky, but it's possible.
-
Dear Peter, Andrea and Ben. Thank you all for taking the time to help answer my query. The points re security are valid and also Ben, thank you for your step by step response - much needed by an SEO novice!
However, I spoke to my web agency today and they have told me that they can only run .net blogs on their server and not .php which our current Wordpress blog is written in : ( Does anyone know of any blogs written in .net?
Thank you once again, Jon
-
It's probably true that the subdomain approach is easier, but I lean toward the subfolder these days - it's possible for subdomains to fragment in some cases and not pass all authority to the root domain. The subfolder can help preserve that inbound link value.
Ben and Andrea's comments about the difficulty of subfolders and potential risk of integrating WordPress on to your main servers are certainly valid and worth considering. I'm definitely not an expert on WP migration, and there's more than one way to achieve it. It's possible to actually keep the WP installation on a separate server and then make it act as if it "lives" under the "/blog" subfolder with a reverse proxy, but that's pretty complex:
http://www.apachetutor.org/admin/reverseproxies
No matter which route you go, keep in mind that you'd need to 301-redirect all of the old URLs to either the subdomain or subfolder version. Simply moving the WP installation won't migrate the inbound link-juice or traffic. Both visitors and spiders need to be redirected to the new URLs - that's absolutely critical.
-
Thank you Andrea. You've also made some good points as well. Obviously storing WordPress on a sub-domain would seem to be the safest option if the website is an e-commerce site, but having WordPress stored in a separate database really would be a necessity. The last thing you'd want to happen is for their WordPress blog to be hacked and data to be deleted from the blog and the e-commerce system simultaneously.
As far as WordPress vulnerabilities go you need to ensure you use trusted and highly used plugins. There is a plugin called WP Security Scan (http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-security-scan) that might outline ways you could secure the blog.
If WordPress security is a potential concern here are a few things I would recommend doing (or getting your hosting company to do for you):
1: Password protect the wp-admin directory with a .htaccess fileBy password protecting the WordPress admin area, if a malicious user tries to access your WordPress admin area login page to launch a brute-force attack, or any other file which resides in the wp-admin directory to send a harmful crafted HTTP request, he is greeted with a server side login prompt and no direct access to WordPress files is possible. Something like this should do, but feel free to suggest improvements:
_ AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/.htpasswd__ AuthType Basic__ AuthName “restricted”__ Order Deny,Allow__ Deny from all__ Require valid-user__ Satisfy any_2: Change the wordpress table prefix from wp_ to something else.This will make sure that a malicious user cannot insert wp_<table_name<strong>> into their scripts to compromise the database.</table_name<strong>3: Install and use the Login LockDown plugin to restrict failed login attempts (brute force attacks) http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/login-lockdown/4: Don't use 'admin' account and use strong passwords.http://www.safepasswd.com is good for generating strong passwords if required.
5. Restrict access to /wp-admin to known IP addresses (Public Home IP and a Public Work IP for instance)
Put a .htaccess file in /wp-admin with the following:
Order Deny,Allow
Deny from all
Allow from xx.xx.xx.xx
Allow from xx.xx.xx.xxYou can use whatismyip.com to file the ip addresses you want to use and just update it as necessary
-
I think Ben outlines some great, actionable steps - there's one word of caution I'll throw out and that it's not necessarily that easy, depending on how your back end is set up.
I recently looked at something similar, and because of issues hosting WP (with PHP) on our server, we had to worry about hacking and the integrity of our shopping cart checkout system being vulnerable. So that wasn't a viable option to set it up as a sub folder and we had to look at a subdomain and pointing Apache at WP. (I don't want to bore you with all the technical vetting we went through, just suffice to say that theory and reality don't always go hand-in-hand.)
-
Personally I would say that having the WordPress blog as a sub-domain would be the simplest and easiest option available to you, you could always have links from the WordPress blog on the sub-domain pointing to content on parklanechampagne.co.uk to pass on some link juice from the blog.
In terms of moving the content across you would need to do a database export of the wordpress blog (if this is possible) you could always do this using WordPress Database Backup plugin (http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-db-backup) and send the .sql file to an email address.
You would then need to open the .sql file and do a find/replace on "http://www.alastairharrison.me" (note, no / on the end) and replace it with "blog.parklanechampagne.co.uk". Then you can import that .sql file into the database for your main website. If possible I would create a separate database for the blog on parklanechampagne.co.uk just to keep things nice and tidy.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Non Published Wordpress Pages
Hi, Is there any negative SEO consequences from having too many pages private or not published. Can it like slow the site down or does it not matter? Someone in my dept. has so many pages started/not complete and besides being messy, I wonder if it has any negative impact on the site. Thanks
Technical SEO | | aua1 -
Google not indexing my website
Hi guys, We have this website http://www.m-health-expo.nl/ but it is not indexed by google. In webmaster tools google says that it can not fetch the site due to the robots.txt but i do not see any faults in it. http://www.m-health-expo.nl/robots.txt Do you see something strange, it really bothers me.
Technical SEO | | RuudHeijnen0 -
Duplicate Title - Shopping Website
My website is showing with errors due to duplicate titles, these errors add up to over 150 errors. The problem is a lot of my products are similar, just in different lengths, colors etc. For example
Technical SEO | | adelemaree
http://www.ugg.org.au/en/classic-candy-short-australia-ugg-boots/48-classic-candy-short-australia-ugg-boots-blue.html
http://www.ugg.org.au/en/classic-candy-button-short-australia-ugg-boots/31-classic-candy-button-short-chocolate.html
http://www.ugg.org.au/en/classic-candy-button-short-australia-ugg-boots/28-classic-candy-button-short-black.html How can I avoid this error without having to merge all my products and colors into one page? As that would make my catalogue look too small! Thanks in advance0 -
Blog Ranking NOT home page main website?!
Hi, Our Blog (http://blog.thailand-investigation.com) is ranking for some of our major keywords but not our home page (http://www.thailand-investigation.com)!? Our blog is WordPress and our main website is HTML. It seems like the search engines consider that they are 2 separate websites!? When I check the incoming links to our website, I get also the blog links!!!??? Is it normal? Do I have to build a relation of some kind or write some code saying that it is our Blog... I don't know! I'm not a SEO specialist or even a webmaster. I'm a small business owner and take care on my website. I created by myself but never learned! So, please help! Thanks
Technical SEO | | MichelMauquoi0 -
Website Redirects
Background information: We have a website (devicelock.com) which is currently our corporate website. The company use to operate under (ntutility.com) which is now being redirected to devicelock.com via a DNS Forward - 302 Redirect. The IT admin (a founder of the company) is reluctant to change it to a 301. The current flow is ntutility.com redirects to protect-me.com then redirects again to devicelock.com. When i search up Devicelock on google, it shows up as ntutlity.com. There is no devicelock.com homepage on google search. Question: Are there any negative implications about this? Is this hurting our SEO in any way? When i do link building, will this have any negative affects? Will my links for devicelock be attributed to devicelock.com?
Technical SEO | | Devicelock0 -
Optimizing Flash websites
Does anyone know the latest on how well Google is indexing flash sites? I'm talking to a prospect now whose site is 100% flash, but looking at it all the content within the site is indexed and returning in the results. This is promising enough, but does anyone know exactly how well Google is indexing flash content these days and are there still any problems with that? Thanks!
Technical SEO | | MattBarker0 -
How to SEO a Website Built off Godaddy?
I have a client whose website is built off Godaddy services. I know Godaddy is not the right choice for building a website, but what's done is done. The client has already bought the Godaddy services and there's no way I can tell him to go rebuild his website before we could optimize it for SEO. I'm already facing a lot of challenges while optimizing on-page elements. When I wanted to verify the ownership for Google Analytics and Webmaster Tool via his Godaddy account. the process failed many times. it looks like Godaddy is using some kind of caching not allowing us to modify the codes. For example, I'd applied the site verification codes for Webmasters Tool 48 hours ago, and the metatag for google site verification is not yet updated in the frontend. It's quite frustrating. What would you suggest?
Technical SEO | | suskanchan1 -
Which is the best wordpress sitemap plugin
Does anyone have a recommendation for the best xml sitemap plugin for wordpress sites or do you steer clear of plugins and use a sitemap generator then load it up to the root manually?
Technical SEO | | simoncmason0