Archive for the ‘WordPress’ Category


WordPress 2.7 for MU

WordPress 2.7 has now been released for WordPress MU.

WordPress 2.7 Dashboard

WordPress 2.7 Dashboard

As we have clients running on both WordPress and WordPress MU sites, we have been holding off upgrading. But we are now doing final testing and should upgrade all client sites next week (first week of February).

The 2.7 Dashboard is a great piece of work. The menus have changed a bit, but the new menus are very easy to understand so you shouldn’t have trouble using them.

There are many new features in the Dashboard that are intuitive to use.

If you would like to get a quick overview of the changes that are coming, you can play the video below. And you can read a more detailed list of the changes in text form as well.

If there is anything that doesn’t make sense to you, pop on to our forums and you can ask any questions there.


Launching a WordPress Blog

Andrew Lindstrom wrote a list of 7 Must Dos Before Launching Your Blog.

A very good list Andrew, we do all of these ourselves.

Two minor add ons to the list.

Search Meter. If you want to track what people search for once they arrive at your site, you can use a plugin called Search Meter.

Robots. You might want to set up Robots.txt to stop robots indexing some parts of your site – we use KB Robots.txt for this purpose, as it works well for both WordPress and WordPress MU. Its a minor detail, but I like to disallow wp-login.php ( Google seems to have a fascination for indexing your WordPress login page, sometimes before more prominent and useful pages).


New OM4 website dashboard features

Today we have upgraded all OM4 web sites to include the latest WordPress 2.6+ features.

WordPress 2.6 Image Control

WordPress 2.6 Images

There are quite a few improvements:

  • Image captions.
  • An improved image control to allow for easier inserting, floating, and resizing of images (see screenshot).
  • Press This!: Post from wherever you are on the web.
  • Gears: Turbo-speed your blogging.
  • Word count for both posts and pages.
  • Bulk activation and deactivation of plugins.
  • Drag and drop reordering of image Galleries.
  • Customizable default avatars.
  • Media uploading while in full-screen mode.
  • Toggling between the flash media uploader and the classic one.
  • Various bug fixes.

More information on these features can be found here.

For those of you that use a desktop blogging client such as Windows Live Writer, you will have to go to your Dashboard -> Settings -> Writing and enable the remote publishing options.


Migrating Your WordPress.com Site to your own Domain and Host

Setting up a blog on WordPress.com – a hosted platform for WordPress blogs – is quick and easy. But once you get serious about wanting to build your own business, you will be interested in your own domain name.

WordPress.com allows you to upgrade to your own domain for a small fee, which is a great feature. (OM4Business.com also allows you to have a free hosted WordPress site with a mapped domain, but we don’t charge for it).

Some people want to migrate from WordPress.com to their own domain on another host. And this is where it gets a bit tricky. It is very easy to move, but very easy to lose all your search engine indexing. So your traffic might take a big hit, and take a long time to recover.

Think about it – if you have a page indexed at mysite.wordpress.com, when that page goes off the air (because it is now at mysite.com), Google just rubs it out of the index.

Worpdress.com doesn’t offer you any way to redirect your subdomain site to a new domain hosted elsewhere.

However there is a way to migrate without losing your search rankings.

  1. Buy your new domain mysite.com through your own domain registrar.
  2. Have a look at what Google and Yahoo have already indexed for your site. Use the site:mysite.wordpress.com query in Google and Yahoo search to do this. You’ll need to keep an eye on this to notice re-indexing.
  3. Pay $10 and upgrade to your new domain with WordPress.com. WordPress will automatically create redirects for all your pages at mysite.wordpress.com to mysite.com (for the technically minded, these are 302 redirects, not 301s). WordPress.com will also update the xml sitemap for your site, showing the new domain name.
  4. Now you have to be patient and wait for your site to be spidered and for the search engines to follow the redirects. Use that same query on site:mysite.com to see when your pages are re-indexed at the new location.
  5. When the index for your key pages is complete, you can move your WordPress.com site to your new home – perhaps you will download WordPress from WordPress.org to do this, or be moving your site to our platform. Either way you will need to use the Export function to get your site content in XML and import it to the new site. You will need to have a copy of all your media files (images, videos, PDFs) and migrate these yourself, as these don’t come with the export.
  6. Don’t change the page slugs. Google now has mysite.com (and mysite.com/about) indexed, and this is exactly what the URLs are for your site at your new domain.

Your new site – mysite.com – is now operational on its new host, and your ‘search engine equity’ has been preserved.


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