
After using both the platforms namely Blogger and Wordpress I think I am now eligible to discuss about this issue and offer you a conclusion. I have used blogger for more than 2 and half year now, and I guess I love blogger until I met Wordpress(The paid one and not the free one).I have used blogger on this weblog MiniAdvices.com while I have used Wordpress on ILikeThatLook.com WordPress is an immensely popular web Content Management System that is used by millions of websites around the world! People never seem to stop asking the question: which is better, Blogger or WordPress? And indeed both have their pros and cons, making it almost impossible to declare a winner. But in today's ever-changing SEO environment, WordPress seems to offer a certain edge to users.
I went over the latest statistics
recently, and was staggered to find out that WordPress now powers 22.3%
of all websites on the web! That's a CMS market share of about 60%! In
comparison, Joomla powers 3.1% websites (8.3% CMS market share), Drupal
powers 1.5% of the total websites (5.2% CMS share), and Google's Blogger
comes in at 4th, powering 1.1% of all websites with a CMS market share
of only 3%! WordPress is 20 times as popular as Blogger! It's due to this that even I have planned to shift my work on MiniAdvices.com From Blogger to WordPress(paid hosting)
Staggering, right? What makes WordPress so popular? Certainly, its power
and flexibility can only be matched by Blogger's simplicity and
ease-of-use. But what makes it so special is how much of an impact it
can have on a site, not just from a development perspective, but also
from a technical and SEO point of view. Here is why stock WordPress will
win the SEO game over other stock CMS every time.
SEO out-of-the-box!
Baby sites born on WordPress speak SEO right from the start! WordPress
is very well coded, and makes new sites look very clean. Post URLs come
with a SEO-optimized structure, which you can modify as well. WordPress
has excellent taxonomy management, which allows you to categorize your
posts according to categories as well as tags.
Archive pages are handled by WordPress by default, some of which include
the tag/category and author archives etc. The canonicalization is
pretty sleek, and the default SEO settings disable indexing of these
archive pages by default in order to avoid duplication. All in all, it's
a pretty neat SEO solution right out of the box. It is ironic that
WordPress, being so much more complex than the other CMS, offers such
ease-of-use for beginners in SEO.
SEO Plugins
WordPress often does a pretty good job on a site's SEO. But if you're
looking for automation, or advanced features that you're comfortable
messing around with, you can get some killer plugins that you don't
otherwise get with CMS like Joomla or Drupal. Plugins such as 'WordPress
SEO by Yoast', and 'All-in-One SEO' can add so much more to your site's
SEO that you yourself ever could.
From index settings to setting up structured data,
these plugins can give you access to every inch of SEO you can possibly
do on a website. Often times, you don't need all these advanced
features, but it is nice to know you have the right tools in your
toolkit.
Custom themes
Templates, or themes as they're called in WordPress, add so much more to
a site than just visual customization. The WordPress dashboard is
pretty dynamic, and any add-on themes or plugins can change the look as
well as the functionality of the dashboard.
There are hundreds and thousands of free and premium themes available
out there, many of them built on the best SEO foundations. You can find
templates to fit any sort of website, from eCommerce to music sharing to
personal portfolios. And you can rest assured that if a theme is
popular, it must be well coded and conform to the latest SEO
recommendations.
There are extensive frameworks out there as well such as the Genesis and
the Thesis frameworks, which extend the functionality of a website in
terms of SEO, among other aspects. Genesis SEO settings do not
necessitate the use of any third-party plugin, as their themes are
highly SEO optimized and require little SEO knowledge to be handled.
They act as an auto-pilot, taking care of the SEO stuff while you're
running the show.
Website loading time
WordPress is a very well-coded and highly optimized software that has
taken years to reach perfection. Working in the dashboard, it might look
like it'll take a lot of time to load a website, but it really doesn't.
WordPress does a very good job at maintaining a reasonable load speed,
since this is one criteria that has become crucial these days. What's
more, you can use third-party plugins such as WP Super Cache to further reduce page load time, effectively giving you a better SEO score.
And not to mention, you can find tons of professional all over the web
when it comes to customization or troubleshooting. There are millions of
WordPress websites, and millions of developers who're ready to provide
free or premium services and resources.
To conclude WordPress can be said as a sexy platform to use while Blogger just lacks the sexiness,
So, do you think WordPress does a fine job at SEO, or can you do it
better using any other CMS? We're looking forward to hearing from you on
this one ;)
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