Fill Your SEO Needs for WordPress with All-in-One SEO Pack
I’ve talked to several bloggers who spend a lot of time working on optimizing their websites for search engines, and often without good results. This can be attributed to several things, but often times it is the result of a lack of SEO knowledge, or to many SEO plugins that all do the same things.
If you have more than one SEO plugin installed to do various functions for your blog, you have to many. WordPress users actually have free access to a very well done plugin called All-in-One SEO Pack, which currently does everything out of the box. I don’t pretend to be an SEO expert, but you truly don’t have to be with this amazing plugin.
What does All-in-One SEO Pack do exactly? I don’t know how better to describe it than to just say that it does everything! And the best part is that it allows you to control everything from the Options panel of your WordPress dashboard.
Here is a screen shot of what my options panel looks like:

By default, Wordpress uses your blog’s tag line for the description and keyword tags. With this plugin, simply enter your homepage information once (name, description, keywords, etc.) and it will automatically add the information provided to your homepage’s meta information, which means search engines will begin displaying your blog’s homepage this way.
For your individual posts, you will want your meta information to be customized to each individual post you do. This plugin allows you to set everything up to do it automatically, or you can do it manually on certain posts if you wish. Here is a look at the menu placed on your Write panel to enter your individual post information:

- Titles Tags - By default, WordPress will actually add your post title as the title tag for the individual post, but this is not always ideal. One thing a lot of successful bloggers do is target their title to their readership, but use a different title tag which targets search engine traffic. When the search engines spider your blog, they pull the title tag, not the post title. With this plugin, your Write panel will now display a field to enter a custom title tag that the search engines will use, but your readers will never see unless they view your pages source.
- Meta Keywords - By default, WordPress will actually use your category assigned to your post as the keyword, but we all know this is often not a great indicator of what the post is about. All-in-One SEO Pack also provides a keyword field that you can enter in your own keywords, but it also allows you to automate this process if you wish. Because you can integrate it with the Ultimate Tagging Warror plugin, and UTW allows you to automatically assign your categories as tags, you can actually have this plugin insert your UTW tags (which includes your categories) as your meta keywords automatically. This will also go through and update your older posts with keywords.
- Meta Description - The meta description is the description that the search engines will use when displaying their search results, so this can be just as crucial as your title when it comes to getting web surfers to click over to your website. In the Write panel, this plugin gives you the option of inserting a custom description of your post, but that could be quite tedious very quickly if you write a lot. This plugin also offers another solution that I haven’t found on any other SEO plugins, and that is the ability to automatically insert the first 160 characters of your post as the description.
Other features include the ability to automatically exclude your sites categories and archives from being indexed (to avoid duplicate content being indexed) without the use of Robots.txt. This is extremely useful for bloggers that don’t know much about making a Robots.txt file to guide the search engine spiders through your blog. You can also set your title formats to look exactly the way you want them to (posts, tags, pages, search results, archives, and even categories).
How do I set up the All-in-One SEO Pack plugin? It couldn’t be easier. Just upload the plugin and activate it and you’ll be all set to start using it. This also means it is incredibly easy to update the plugin as well, which will be extremely handy because the author releases updates regularly (sometimes several a week). Some may not like that, but I look at that as an author who is committed to making his plugin the best one available.
I have to say that I couldn’t be any happier with this plugin as it is. It is constantly getting new features and more integration added each week it seems, and it already combines the best of other SEO plugins while and some unique features as well.
If you aren’t already using it, I recommend you deactivate your SEO plugins and give this one a shot for awhile. If you are using it, I recommend you upgrade to the newest version, as the one you have is probably outdated.










Comment by Michael on September 17th, 2007:
This is going to have to go on my list of plugins to try out, it sounds great.
I’ve always been a little confused about SEO and this seems to keep it really simple.
Comment by Kyle Eslick on September 17th, 2007:
Michael - I would definitely use it. I’m not an SEO expert or anything, but I understand the concept of what SEO experts are trying to accomplish, so I figure I have a pretty decent understanding of it.
SEO is not something to kill yourself over because the difference isn’t huge, but it will make a difference. The great thing about this plugin is everything is in the Options panel, so anyone can make their website SEO friendly very easily.
Once you’ve given it a try, stop by and let me know your thoughts.
Comment by John Bennett on September 17th, 2007:
I’ve used it for awhile now and it seems to work great for me. I would definitely recommend giving it a shot and it is pretty easy to setup and use as well. Nice in depth post.
Comment by uberdose on September 17th, 2007:
Thanks for this wonderful review!
One remark: The latest auto-generate-descriptions feature uses a fixed number of *chars* (160) instead of a customizable number of words, since most search engines use that amount too.
Btw., on this page I noticed double versions of meta keywords which look the same, might be from UTW. I recommend disabling one set of meta keywords, both SEO pack and UTW support this.
Comment by Kyle Eslick on September 17th, 2007:
Uberdose - Thanks for stopping by and reading my post!
Good catch on my duplicating keywords. I didn’t realize that was a function of UTW.
Oh, and I have updated my post to be more accurate. I’ve been using your plugin for a few months now and didn’t realize that it had changed when I wrote my review. That makes more sense I guess than having us set our own number of characters for the description.
Comment by GnomeyNewt on September 18th, 2007:
I’m using this plugin and haven’t had a problem with it yet and I think its working. I’m not a SEO expert either, but I do always try to have unique title tag, description, and keywords on all my website pages. (Try is the word :c)
Comment by Kyle Eslick on September 18th, 2007:
Gnomey - No need to try if you use this plugin, as it does it all for you.
Thanks for the comment!
Comment by Ralph on October 7th, 2008:
HELP ME PLEASE !
All is working fine except the Title tags, they just won’t show and Meta Tag analyzers tell me that there is no title on the pages.