Seven Reasons Why Headway is the Best Theme for Blog SEO, Period

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Headway has the most complete set of search engine optimization features compared to any other premium theme around, without any additional plugins needed.

In fact, even if you did nothing but switch to Headway, your search optimization would be improved from the default settings alone. I wouldn’t recommend you stop there, though. A little knowledge goes a long way. Having the best tools for improved WordPress SEO baked right into your theme is great, but it’s even better if you know what to do with them to really maximize your optimization so you rank higher.

Watch the video above for a run-down of the main SEO configuration page in Headway, in which you set your blog’s home page and global SEO options. But here’s a point-by-point list of Headway’s formidable SEO features and why they matter:

  • Automatic URL Canonicalization – This eliminates the problem that Google sees http://www.domain.com and http://domain.com as two different web pages with the same exact content. Combined with the other SEO features of Headway, you can ensure Google and Bing know which URL really “belongs” to a page in your blog. That way, you concentrate your search strength to the right pages, instead of diluting it across multiple duplicate content pages.
  • Separate Titles from Blog Post/Page Headlines – There’s an HTML tag in every web page called title, and what’s in it carries a lot of importance in search—it’s used as the big headline text you click on in search results. Google and Bing look at the words in the title to help decide how to rank a page. Normally in WordPress, the title is automatically generated from your blog post headline, but sometimes we want it to be a little different. WordPress alone won’t let you change that, but Headway does.
  • Meta descriptions – The meta description tag is another HTML tag that search engines use to judge a page. It’s also used in search results as the description (go figure) below the title link of each search result (Note: not always, but often). This makes it kind of a big deal for SEO, but guess what? WordPress does not even have this built in!

    Unless you use a plugin or a theme like Headway, no descriptions for you. Previously, you had to hack your WordPress theme code. Headway makes this painless, you just write your description in a box. Often the description is what really convinces people they should click on your link in the search results, instead of some other guy’s.

  • Total Nofollow Control – Adding “nofollow” to a link in HTML tells search engines to ignore the link and act like it doesn’t exist. This causes search engines to “see” a different picture of a web page than if all the links were “visible” to it.

    This matters for two reasons: One, because the words and destinations of links affect search rankings. And, two, because if you have any sort of paid or compensated links in your post, and they are not “nofollowed,” you are violating Google’s terms of service. Headway gives you complete control over nofollow in your blog. From links in a post to comment author links, to links to entire pages, Headway lets you decide what to let search engines see.

  • Not Just Nofollow, but Noindex, Too – In addition to affecting the way search engines see and don’t see links, you can tell them to ignore entire pages. When you search the web, you’re not searching the actual web, you’re searching the search engines’ indexes of the web. Noindex tells them to not add a page to their index.

    There may be pages that are necessary to have on your site, but which don’t contain content that benefits your search rankings. For example, you may be writing a whole big new section of your site, and you don’t want search engines to find it, yet.

    Not only can you noindex individual pages on the fly, you can noindex entire classes of pages in order to avoid having five different URLs for a blog post as far as search engines see things. You can noindex all tag, category, and other archives, for example. The idea is that only URL search engines have for your post is the permalink one.

  • Seamless Integration with All-In-One SEO Pack – Many bloggers concerned with SEO are already using a popular plugin called the All-In-One SEO Pack (AIOSEO for short). If you switch to Headway, all of your AISEO data is used by Headway, which means you don’t have to go back and redo the SEO on your previous posts.

    In fact, you can happily deactivate AIOSEO and have one less plugin to slow your blog down. Other blog themes with their own built-in SEO features allow AISEO to override their own features, but you have to keep the plugin and keep it updated. With Headway, you can throw it overboard and have one less thing to worry about.

  • Breadcrumbs – Headway creates breadcrumb links at the top of the page that show a visitor’s location in the blog. Headway breadcrumbs use your blog’s categories, turning your categories into keyword link powerhouses on every single page of your blog. This works especially well if you’ve set your permalinks to being category-based, but more keyword-rich link text always helps, even if you’re using the normal date-based permalinks.

What about code frameworks and all that? To my thinking, any premium theme from now on is going to be built on a code framework that is better than your average theme’s code, or people aren’t even going to buy it. In other words, code frameworks are no longer a point of difference. Code frameworks are just par for the course, anymore. And without the features I’ve listed in this post, code frameworks really aren’t any help with SEO. Beyond valid XHTML/CSS and well-written PHP and JavaScript for speed and accurate parsing/rendering, code frameworks by themselves do nothing for SEO.

Note that none of these features will improve your writing, but they will help good writing be found more easily. You don’t want your good writing to be hampered by a bad WordPress theme, do you? That’s like putting a fifty pound weight in a backpack and then trying to run a marathon. Your theme should help you, not hinder you. Take the weight off. Make headway.

What you see in the video above is actually Headway 1.5 which will be released in a matter of weeks. Most of these features exist in the current version of Headway, and upgrades are free for life for all current Headway owners. The sooner you switch, the sooner you can start improving your blog’s search optimization.

Check out Headway and learn more.

  • Hi Michael,
    no doubt, Headway is the easist and most flexible theme of all.
    But may be there is one thing better in thesis: it is a very seofriendly code, not only valid and clean, but also slim and wisely structured. I can't reason that by myself for Headway as a noncoder, may be you can? Due to drag and drop it appears more difficult.

    One further question: Is it possible to make individual title tags/descriptions/KWs for every single page in Headway?
  • remarkablogger
    Headway gives you more control over on-page SEO aspects than any other theme
    with SEO features. What matters is the content/keywords, where they are
    placed, and to a small degree page load times. By content/keywords I mean
    headline, headings, and post content (including meta description).

    Headway offers detailed control over whether links in a post are followed or
    not, and whether individual page/posts themselves are indexed---something no
    other theme does.

    Meta keywords is no longer relevant to SEO, but the feature is included for
    backwards compatibility so people can edit older posts which may have them.
  • Martin
    "What matters is the content/keywords, where they are
    placed". That's what I mean by "wisely structured", hm, you think this is all in my hand according to drag and drop of leafs?

    As I will have mainly pages the SEO control panel for title tag and decription is no help for me, because I need individual title tags and descriptions for EVERY SINGLE page, not one setting for all pages. Therefore my question, how I can accomplish that with WP/Headway.
  • remarkablogger
    Yes it's fine because the "where" are titles, headings, and early content on
    the page like paragraphs, etc. These things are the same regardless of theme
    (except in very rare cases, but this isn't one of them). Hope that clears
    things up. :-)
  • Martin
    Sorry, may be it's my fault, but I still don't understand how I can create individual title tags (not titles) and descriptions for pages (not posts), in the head of the code. With the help of the seo-tool of Headway I can give the title tag (and also descriptions) of all pages a certain structure, but it's the same structure then for all pages. It's one setting for all pages. I'd like to make individual title tags and descriptions for every single page, following not only one rule of this one setting. With my present old static HTML-Sites this is no problem, but with WP?
  • remarkablogger
    For each page or post there is a box in which you enter your title text if
    you would like the title text to be different than the headline. There is a
    higher level structure of site name / page title you can control in Headway
    as well. Say, for instance, you don't want to include the site name at all
    in the title tag and just have the headline or title become title tag
    contents. Or you want to swap the order of site name with title, or change
    the separator from a pipe to a dash. All this is possible. This structure is
    changed at a higher level so that it can be applied to all pages in the
    site. This should be consistent for all pages because users hate
    inconsistency.
  • Martin
    In this case I don't fear inconsistency. So I can give all pages different title tag structures by just using the title text box or will I have to use additionally the setting of higher level structure "take only the title as title tag"?
  • remarkablogger
    The structure of site name / title text is set at a higher level, site-wide.
  • All the thing you write are completly true. I prefer Headaway by myself! It's the best Theme.
  • Being a piece of the WordPress community since 2006, I could frankly state that Headway is single of the most advanced idea framework I always tested. Beginners and non-tech citizens will definitely take delight in how good it is to customize it. Developers don’t have to worry, they’ll be able to “hack” the theme : Many hooks are obtainable in arrange to supercharge the theme and produce it ready to go your needs.
  • Wow - is this really that good? You've sold it to me - will take a look.
  • remarkablogger
    Hope you like it Frank!
  • Joe Mama
    I say this with respect to you, but seriously, aside from the 'drag and drop' / 'dummy proof' interface, how is Headway any better from an SEO standpoint than Thesis? Every item you've mentioned here is already covered in Thesis. After I read your post title, I was expecting to read about some amazing new mysterious SEO tactic that wasn't before handled in a blog platform, and after reading the post I realize what a misleading title you chose for it. Just cut the hype and shoot straight.
  • remarkablogger
    Joe, thanks for your question. Headway lets you set all the links in a blog
    post automatically to "nofollow," but Thesis does not. Headway gives you
    finer control over the distinction between "noindex" and "nofollow" at the
    page, post, and navigation bar level, while Thesis has limited control for
    this. Headway also had canonical URLs when Thesis did not, but this has
    become a moot point since WordPress 2.9 has canonical URLs built-in. Headway
    also takes over the database tables for the All-in-One SEO Pack plugin,
    allowing for seamless transition to Headway. There are no "mysterious
    tactics" in SEO. There's just stuff you haven't learned yet. :-) Headway
    seamlessly integrates with the database tables created by the All-in-One SEO
    Pack plugin, allowing you to jettison the plugin, Thesis does not. Headway
    has breadcrumb navigation built-in, Thesis does not.

    The headline for my post is not misleading at all. Everything I just wrote
    in this comment is also clearly written in the post above and shown in the
    video. No other premium WordPress theme has these SEO features. It's not
    hype, it's simple fact. So please explain to me where is my "hype" and where
    I am not "shooting straight" so I can correct them.
  • Joe Mama
    Well I guess I stand corrected then. My apologies... I should probably put aside the scotch before I comment on a post, or at least get my facts straight... I wonder if new versions of Thesis will have this functionality...
  • remarkablogger
    No worries, Joe. I'm happy you're here and you're commenting. :-)
  • hi Michael

    Sorry if here it's the wrong place to ask, but...

    I have a Thesis theme. If I switch to Headway, would I lose the titles and description that I did in Thesis?

    (If yes, that'd be a pain...)

    Thanks,
  • Daniduc, this is a fine place for your question. Headway will use the Thesis SEO info if it exists, so you will not lose any value from the prior SEO work you have done. We have tried to make it as easy and painless as possible to switch.
  • DJMorrisFitness
    How does Headway compare to Thesis 1.6? Similarities and differences?
  • remarkablogger
    They're actually quite different from each other, more than it's a case of
    which has "more" or "less." Headway enjoys SEO features which Thesis does
    not have, such as the ability to nofollow the links in a post as just one
    example. Headway and Thesis have very different ways of exercising the
    visual and design options. Thesis has a couple options pages where you can
    change settings. Headway has an extremely flexible visual editing
    environment in which you can see what you're working on: just click on it
    and change it right there. Neither theme is "easier" than the other: With
    Thesis, you need to work with PHP and custom CSS to get your blog to look
    "non-Thesis-y." With Headway, the visual editor has a slight learning curve
    at first. Both themes come with money-back guarantees, so you could try both
    and see which one you like better.
  • ok, you sold me on this one.
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