Tag Archives: WordPress
Weekly SEM Reading List | 06/01/2012
Our Search Engine Marketing reading list for the week ending Friday, June 1, 2012.
Weekly SEM Reading List | 05/04/2012
Our Search Engine Marketing reading list for the week ending Friday, May 4, 2012.
Weekly SEM Reading List | 04/27/2012
Our Search Engine Marketing reading list for the week ending Friday, April 27, 2012.
Weekly SEM Reading List | 04/20/2012
Our Search Engine Marketing reading list for the week ending Friday, April 20, 2012.
Weekly SEM Reading List | 04/13/2012
Our Search Engine Marketing reading list for the week ending Friday, April 13, 2012. Friday, April 13, 2012 ‘Very strong quarter,’ two-for-one stock split for Google – NYTimes.com Apple Fires Back at the Feds, Amazon – AllThingsD JK Rowling Updates Website, Teases First Adult Book – Mashable Facebook One-Ups Google With A Kind Of ‘Facebook+’: [...]
Weekend Search Engine Reading – January 28-29, 2012
Tweets on social media optimization, search engine marketing, digital media and Kansas City.
WordPress Plugin: WordPress.com Stats
If you’re already using Google Analytics for WordPress (see our post on Google Analytics for WordPress) then you already have a ton of information about your blog’s traffic. So much information, in fact, that it may be hard to get a bird’s eye view. That’s where WordPress Stats comes in.
WordPress Plugin: Flexi Pages
The built-in Pages widget does a good job of listing, well, pages, but its options are limited. Which brings us to Flexi Pages, a highly configurable WordPress sidebar widget to list pages and sub-pages. Can be used as an alternative to the default ‘Pages’ widget. It even has a special option to include a Home link, which can come in handy if the title of your home page is something other than Home.
WordPress Plugin: Advanced Category Excluder
Advanced Category Excluder doesn’t just let you omit categories from the category list. It lets you omit categories from just about every form of item there is. You can even specify categories to be omitted from your RSS feeds. It’s glorious!