Wordpress Blog for Magento Store?
-
Magento is fantastic for e-commerce although the blog capabilities are limited and our web development fees are just ongoing. I have great experience with wordpress sites and I don't have a bad word to say about the CMS, there are plugins available for everything you possibly need to develop the blog. Would it be a good idea to integrate a wordpress blog for our e-commerce store? To keep both the transactional website and the blog on the same domain, but have a different style for the blog so we're not trying to 'sell' to people looking for home improvement advice and DIY guides, our main priority with the blog is to grow the website authority.
-
I'm sorry to reply to you so late and I have used both WordPress and HubSpot beginning in 2006.
Everett I respect your opinion this is how I feel about it.
HubSpot is a excellent blog however is had some recent restrictions on the amount of traffic you can receive without having to go up to a higher plan.
With that said their blog is spectacular. There CMS designed for people that would use WordPress however it cooperates a lot of search tools and marketing Information e.g. landing pages, social media, spectacular analytics, keyword research, you will know if you're doing something wrong on HubSpot it will tell you.
I would not say WordPress and HubSpot are apples and oranges but I can see how someone would feel that way.
HubSpot and WordPress far much more than your average blog. I would have to say that WordPress has more in common with HubSpot than it does with Ghost ( a pure blogging only system)
I think hub spot offers a lot of value and who rule their ROI-you will agree. They coined "inbound marketing" and make fantastic additions to websites as well as great websites themselves.
The best way to learn about it is to do a 30 day free trial NO credit card needed http://offers.hubspot.com/free-trial-blogging-tool
http://www.hubspot.com will show you what is possible in their CMS.
Sorry for the delayed response I hope this helps,
Tom
-
Hello Kevin,
Wordpress is a blogging platform and I'd define Hubspot as more of a marketing automation platform. It does provide the ability to blog, but sometimes people using Hubspot still choose to blog from Wordpress and run their content offer campaigns on Hubspot. Comparing the two would be comparing apples to oranges.
But to answer your question, yes Hubspot allows you to do lots of things that increase conversions, especially if your site is geared toward lead generation (i.e. filling out a contact form, as opposed to adding products to a cart).
-
Hi Thomas,
While just a bit off-topic, I was curious about your Hubspot experience. While I'm seeing great performance from my current application set up, I've been eyeing Hubspot for some time now, but I just can't justify the cost. Does Hubspot allow you to do anything to increase conversions that couldn't be done with Wordpress? Any thoughts, please do share.
Thanks!
-
Hi Joshua,
Glad I could be of some help. Sorry to hear your dev team dismissed the idea of Fishpig's integration. Using this integration method, you wouldnt have to pay for a custom theme development to match your Magento site--in fact your Wordpress content would appear inside Magento resulting in a big performance boost. Imagine visitors navigating from your store to your blog and back loading all those resources. That's a few second delay at least depending on your set up. If your dev isn't in-house, consider the motivation not to use Fishpig integration, like profits on a custom Wordpress theme and maintenance of two sites Instead of just one.
If you have any othe questions about Magento performance, feel free to ping me. FYI, just finished New Relic integration and seeing sub-second page loads on my Magento/WP BBQ site. If you like how this site performs on both mobile and desktop, I can point you in this direction.
Cheers!
-
Hi Kevin,
Great response, I will check out the Fishpig wordpress integration. I discussed the idea with our web development team and they dismissed the idea, although I do have a lot of experience with Wordpress and I feel that it has much more to offer than Magento from a blogging perspective. We already have a blog by the way but it's a Magento extension which doesn't really have much to offer. We will be keeping the blog and e-commerce site on the same domain to increase the domain authority although we was unsure whether to keep the same theme throughout.
We could either have a different theme for our blog and keep it 'information based' rather than keeping our product category navigation, although if someone adds an item to cart then decides to visit the blog, they cannot continue to checkout until they return back to the transactional website. It's a tricky one and an expensive mistake if we make the wrong decision.
-
Of course the speed of your site really makes the huge difference. But integrating
WordPress with Magento if powered by the same server or by different servers is extremely easy
AuthorityDev.com has experience if you need a Dev
Keep in mind HubSpot is an amazing Blog/CMS tool for this as well
http://www.magentocommerce.com/magento-connect/wordpress-integration-3795.html
https://wordpress.org/support/view/plugin-reviews/magento-wordpress-integration
All the best,
Thomas
-
Magento Wordpress installs are my specialty. From a marketing perspective, a blog will definitely be helpful for your visitors seeking relevant info. Most clients I set up tend to neglect their blog, so make sure to approach this with a plan. From the feedback I've collected from customers and clients, a consistent brand image tends to build more trust.
From a technical perspective, there are several ways to integrate Wordpress and Magetno. Fishpig http://fishpig.co.uk/magento/wordpress-integration/ will take a lot of work out of the project if you select to run Wordpress "inside" Magento. This extension basically uses your Magento template and puts Wordpress content into Magento, but you administer Wordpress through the traditional back end. If you have multiple languages/blogs, this gets a bit tricky. You can visit www.88k.com.tw for my site example running a Wordpress multi-site inside a multi-store Magento instance on a custom LEMP stack.
Anyway, to answer your question, a blog would be good if done right. Be careful not to cannibalize other site pages by adding the same keywords, and also make sure to link related blog posts to products. I personally agree with you--the purpose of your blog should be to inform visitors, not to sell. However, consistency is good, too. If you want to sell on your blog, there's nothing wrong with that, as long as you have a good plan.
-
I would say it is one of the best things you can do for your site.
By adding a blog you can become an authority on your company's product or industry.
It's easy to update and Google loves fresh content. Without a decent amount of content you cannot become a true authority on anything
a WordPress blog would easily allow you to update your content whenever you like.
I recommend them over ghost and other platforms because WordPress makes up over 20% of the web is capable of
so much it would be a perfect addition.
companies like authoritydev.com Gregreindel.com, Pagely have helped larger sites integrate WordPress blogs same thing goes for companies like flywheel and Pantheon.
I hope this is of help,
Tom
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
-
Blogging for SEO in Muse 2017
Can anyone give advice about SEO - specifically blogging in Wordpress and embedding it in your Muse site - that is specific to the 2017 updates. I found a lot of negative information, but that was mostly on forums from 2+ years ago. On their own forums, Muse says that you can get SEO plugins that help with this, but I am not sure I can trust those with clients yet. I have worked in Wordpress for years, but prefer the design freedom adobe provides. Specifically I am worried about whether the traffic to the site would be credited to the wordpress blog (on a different URL) or if it positively impacts my own URL used for the muse site. Would it be considered duplicate content? Also, are there any solutions that I don't know to ask about? Thanks in advance for listening.
Web Design | | Jesiwicks0 -
Facebook is now only allowing owners of FB pages (not admins) to create keys for a WP blog post syndication. Is there a way around this?
I hired a contractor to configure a WP plugin to syndicate FB, G+, Twitter and standard WP posts. He is using NextScripts: Social Networks Auto-Poster. He came back to me saying that FB is now only allowing direct owners (not admins) of FB pages to create keys. This means I have to give my client's personal FB access to a third party contractor. I'm not comfortable asking my client to do this. Does anybody know of a way around this? Is there a way to create a FB key with just admin access? Thanks
Web Design | | RosemaryB0 -
Blog on Subdomain or Subdirectory?
I was wondering what the SEO impact was of having a blog on a sub domain or sub directory. Which of the following is better? blog.companysite.com companysite.com/blog Personally, I like making the blog a more important part of the site so 2) is preferable; however, I don't know which one is best for SEO purposes. Do the search engines consider a subdomain as a different website? Can SEO authority be passed through each equally? What is your preference? Regards, Dino
Web Design | | Dino640 -
Should I nofollow my blog "read more" links?
I have a standard blog index page with entries formatted as such: Blog title Blog excerpt read more link The blog title is linked to the blog post (duh). The "read more" link is also linked to the same blog post, but I put a rel="nofollow" tag on that link because I don't want the SE's thinking "read more" is relevant anchor text. Now, is what I'm doing right? Won't having the read more link as nofollow result in some sort of conflict considering the blog title link is set to follow? Will a nofollow link have a cascading effect on any matching "follow" link? I've frequently read that "read more" should be nofollowed, but I've never once seen anyone address the conflict of having a follow and nofollow link on the same page pointing to the same link. Which one wins? Thanks.
Web Design | | bluekite770 -
How important are tags on blogs?
Hi, I've always used tags on blogs, but I've noticed that some prominent and reputable blogs (e.g., SEOmoz blog, Problogger, Copyblogger) are no longer using tags at the end of each post. I'm curious about what is the reason for this - any ideas? Thanks in advance, Carolina
Web Design | | csmm0 -
Duplicate content and blog/twitter feeds
Hi Mozzers, I have a question... I'm planning to add a blog summary/twitter feed throughout my website (onto every main content page) and then started worrying about duplicate content. What is best practice here? Let me know - thanks, Luke PS. I sat down and re: blog feed... thought that perhaps it would help if I fed different blog posts through to different pages (which I could then edit so I could add<a></a> text different from that in blog). Not sure about twitter.
Web Design | | McTaggart1 -
Making a third-party hosted blog look like a folder on the main domain
I have a client that has a "completely pristine" Microsoft.net web environment that is unwilling to put a wordpress installation on their server. Their management team wants a wordpress blog for the marketing department. Is there a means where we can host the wordpress blog with a regular hosting company but yet have it appear as part of the main site e.g., mainsite.com/blog vs. having to put it in a subdomain (blog.mainsite.com) and lose all the SEO benefits of the blog content?
Web Design | | jtroia0 -
?3dCart, Magento, Volusion, Zen Cart? Looking for recommendations based on my situation.
I have done a ton of research trying to figure this out but still need help and clarification. My strength is marketing and not the technical aspects of ecommerce cms etc. I am ignorant in this area and don't mind if you explain to me like a 5 year old. I am ready to take my marketing knowledge and creativity to ecommerce but this one aspect is stopping me. I really want to understand this and would be appreciative of the option to do a skype instant message session where I would pay you for your time to ask for clarification. I will explain my situation so you can better understand where I am coming from and can recommend something appropriately. My ecommerce stores run between my own and my clients range from motorcycle, supplement and fitness equipment stores. None of the stores are very large with the biggest one having about 150 products. Mainly I am looking for a mix between an economical solution combined with being easy to use and great for search engine visibility. I have a lot of questions here and appreciate in advance anyone reading all of this and helping. Am I correct in my understanding that I basically have 3 options when doing ecommerce. One is I can go to a company like 3d cart or volusion and they can provide the merchant account, ssl cert, the cart and free and paid templates ready to go? Two is getting free cart software such as Magento or OScommerce etc. The third option is paid cart software like zen cart or others. Is that my main options? Let's say I was to use 3d cart. What kind of cart platform will I be using then? One they created? Or do they use a (free/paid) solution like I talked about in question 1? Is the main advantage of using a company like 3dcart and volusion the fact that they integrate many things into one? With Magento would I need a developer to customize my theme to integrate all those things? Are there some major disadvantages to using companies like 3d cart? How does the process and advantages work when using a solution like Magento or OScommerce. So for example I decide to use the Magento free platform. Am I then able to hire a designer to create a site from scratch that will work with the Magento platform? Or I could also go to template monster and purchase a theme already made and have it customized by someone? Also what about paid cart software like zen cart etc? Why would I use that over the others? Would I also then hire a designer to create a site that works with zen cart or purchase a template made then customize? Are you able to create almost ANY structure and design for a site no matter what its cart platform is? For example, although I would make a few changes to this site I think it's very close to a great site from a design/conversion standpoint. http://www.spiderofficechairs.com/ . Lets say for example I was using any one of the options I have so far mentioned. Would I be able to just tell a designer/developer that I have magento,3dcart, zencart etc and tell him I would like that type of layout for example? How would I know how certain cart platforms are coded? Does that even make sense? For example I have created and ranked many sites and tested quite a bit also. I have always noticed that very clean basic static html sites have almost always ranked better and faster for me. Do these platforms come built a certain way such as html or (I don't even know what the names of other options are). Or does it not come as anything and when I have the site built I determine how I want it built? Also if you have any suggested reading for me I would be appreciative. Thank you for the help. Jake
Web Design | | PEnterprises0