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Wordpress Themes Download , July 22nd, 2009
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What we have done so far is created a bunch of static pages but what we want to do now is
have links to them permanently displayed on the sidebar. That way, no matter what page or
blog post the visitor arrives at, he can see all of your pages which makes the site look
content-rich, which is good.
Displaying Your Pages in the Sidebar
At this point I have created 5 static pages (they are pretty crap but this is just for
demonstration purposes!) Now these are automatically displaying in my sidebar but there
are a couple of issues. Look at the screenshot:

First of all notice that the one with the tips on finding a fishing guide is a little too long and
wraps around. Now this isn’t really too much of a problem because there is a dotted line
separating each entry but personally I find this messy looking.
The problem here is that this page list is generated automatically for you and the title you
see here is the exact title you used for the page. You can’t change this without changing
your page title which you don’t want to do.
A second problem is that there is an About page mixed in there. Whilst it is probably a good
idea to have an About page somewhere, notice that this list is alphabetical order so because
I have a page starting with a number, my about page turns up in the middle of my fishing
articles which is not ideal.
Basically this boils down to the problem that we are relying on a generated widget to display
this information. I haven’t talked about widgets yet but there is not much to it. The sidebar
you see on your site is made up of a number of widgets that are built into the WordPress
theme and using the Widget editor you can simply drag and drop widgets as you see fit
which is very nice.
An Introduction to Widgets
What is a widget? A widget is some kind of functionality that can be used with WordPress
that has been packaged up into a self contained unit. A WordPress theme that supports
widgets allows you to use the drag & drop facility to add them to your site.
Not all themes support Widgets but ProSense does which is another reason why I use it.
Now what I do here is to use another widget – the Blogroll that I spoke about earlier for
managing my internal link structure.
First let me show you where these widgets are. From your dashboard click on Presentation
and then on Widgets. This particular theme has two sidebars defined:

Sidebar 1 is your big skyscraper AdSense block so you’ll want to leave that alone. What we
want to do is fiddle with Sidebar 2 which is the one on the right that has lots of different
widgets in it.
Now look underneath this area and you’ll see available widgets. Let me take a moment to
explain what all of these are:
Akismet – Displays statistics about how much spam has been captured on your site.
Pointless if you ask me!
Archives – Allows your visitors to access your blog post archives.
Calendar – Shows a calendar in which each day that you wrote a blog post is highlighted.
This is probably not necessary for a niche site (or any site really!)
Categories 1 – When you write blog posts they are filed under a category. This plugin will
display a list of categories in use as links to the posts in that category.
Links – Displays your blogroll. This is what we’re going to use to create our list of internal (or
external) pages.
Meta – Displays the login / logout section currently shown at the bottom of the sidebar.
Personally I find this very useful as a way of logging into my sites so I always have this as
the last widget in my sidebar. Note that it’s only useful for you, not your visitors so you need
to make a judgement call as to whether or not to include it.
Pages – A list of all pages. This is what we’ve seen so far.
Recent Comments – As you would expect, a summary of the recent comments received.
Probably not suitable for a niche site.
Recent Posts – Shows links to the last few blog posts that you’ve made. May be useful if
you want to show some activity on the site.
Check For Updates! Revision 1.8 31
RSS 1 – Shows the RSS button to allow visitors to subscribe to the feed. For the ProSense
theme the button is already built into the header so it’s not needed in the sidebar.
Search – Allows visitors to search your site. Always a useful tool to provide. This is currently
the first widget on the sidebar – personally I’d move it lower down as you want your own
links shown higher up on the page.
Tag Cloud – This is a new feature of WordPress. In addition to filing blog posts under a
certain category, you can now tag a post with any number of tags that again make it more
search engine friendly. A tag cloud shows all of the tags used. This is nice for proper blogs
but probably not for niche sites – too distracting.
Text 1 – This is a special widget that allows you to put in any text you like including HTML.
This is very useful and allows you to create your own links etc.
Configuring Your Sidebar
To configure the sidebar, simply drag the widgets from the bottom section in the sidebar box
above and then click the Save Changes button. Here is what mine looks like now:

The problem I have now is that there are no links so that item doesn’t actually appear on the
site and it just shows the search and the meta section.
Using the Blogroll To Manage Your Links
To have complete control over the links you display in the sidebar you would use a Text
widget and put HTML in there to display the exact links you want. However, not everybody
has enough knowledge of HTML to do this so using the Blogroll is a nice non-techie way of
doing it.
Just a quick note – the Pages widget does allow some customisation such as the ability to
exclude certain pages which would solve the About page problem, but by using the Blogroll
we can add links that we could not otherwise do and this will become useful if your
monetisation strategy incorporates affiliate links as I’ll explain later on.
Click on Blogroll from your Dashboard. We saw this already when we deleted the default
links:

We need to get some links into the Blogroll. Click on the “Add links” link to get started.
However, before you start adding them, take a look at the Categories area to the right of the
screen:

Notice that we have a category called “Blogroll” already defined and that it is checked which
means that any new links will automatically be filed under that category. Instead, choose a
better name, I’m going to use “Fishing Articles” and add that as a category.
Now when you add your links you can choose your own title, URL and description. The title
will become the anchor text of the link which means that it will help that page rank in the
search engines for the title you provide. I’ll make the assumption that each page you build is
targeted towards some keyword phrase so here you need to try and make the link title
incorporate the keyword phrase too.
The URL is the permalink to the pages you created. Click on the links in your site and copy
them from the address bar. The description doesn’t show up so I tend to leave that blank.
Now if you just got rid of your pages from your sidebar like I just did then you can always
quickly pop back to your Widget editor and temporarily put the pages widget back in so you
can access the pages to get hold of the links 
Okay I have added links to my five pages and removed the pages widget (to remove a
widget simply drag it from the sidebar back down to the bottom area) and my sidebar now
has this section at the top:

Incorporating Affiliate Links
Look again at the last screenshot – do you notice that there are six articles and not five?
What’s the odd one out? Well this site is actually live so you can take a look for yourself:
http://caroline-middlebrook.com/nichesite/
Have a look at the article called “Fly Fishing for Beginners”. This is not an article at all! It’s an
affiliate link!
I’m not going to go into details of affiliate marketing as that is really a topic for another book
but I wanted to show you why I use the blogroll for my sidebar rather than the pages widget.
You can add any link you like in this way and I have put the affiliate link right in the middle of
all the other articles.
Sneaky? Perhaps. But that’s the whole point of a money making niche site! I do this on my
current niche site and it’s a good way of getting clicks through to the affiliate. Having said
that, if the affiliate program does not match the content of your niche site then those clicks
are unlikely to convert for you so be sensible with this strategy!
Adding NoFollow to Selected Links
Google has recently done a crackdown on paid links and has begun to penalize websites
that it suspects have been selling them by reducing their PageRank which can hurt search
engine rankings.
Since then it has become generally accepted practice to explicitly mark links that are not
designed to be followed by Google – this includes advertisements, affiliate links and other
such revenue-generating links.
So far most of the links we have created have pointed at a page containing an article
targeted towards a keyword phrase and so we want the link to be followed to help it rank in
the search engines for the title we used for the link.
However, if we mix in affiliate links as I did in the previous section, it can be wise to prevent
Google from following that link as it is not a static page but a dynamic link to an affiliate
product. There is a mechanism for that called ‘no follow’.
Rather than explain the technicalities of the no-follow tag, I’ll instead just show you a plugin
that allows you to mark a link as no-follow and show you how to use the plugin.
Install the BlogTactics NoFollow Links plugin from the following page if you have not already
done so:
http://blogtactics.com/plugins/
Now go back to the Blogroll links and click the ‘Edit’ link on the right of the screen for the link
you wish to add the no-follow tag to.
Expand the ‘Link Relationship (XFN) section and check the box marked ‘nofollow’ as shown
below:

Save the changes to the link and you’re done.
Ordering the Blogroll Links
By default, the built in WordPress Blogroll widget has a few options for ordering the links
within it such as by name but it is not easy to have complete control.
If you have a little technical knowledge and are comfortable modifying one of the theme files
then continue reading the rest of this section. If not then skip to the next section.
Ok Install the following plugin if you have not already done so:
http://geekyweekly.com/mylinkorder
Click on the Blogroll link from your dashboard and in the menu bar underneath you’ll see a
new option called ‘My Link Order’:

Click on that link and then click on the button ‘Order Links in this Category’:

This button will bring up a page showing the links that you have in that category and will
allow you to simply drag and drop them as desired. Remember that affiliate link I
mentioned? I have dragged that to the top as links near the top tend to get clicked on more.
Once you’re done ordering the links you’ll need to click the button at the bottom:

In order for this plugin to work you need to edit the sidebar.php file in the ProSense theme.
The exact change to make is as follows (taken from the plugin instructions):
Modify sidebar template to use correct function (additional parameters seperated by
ampersands):
<?php wp_list_bookmarks(’orderby=order&category_orderby=order’);?>
If you have a problem with it not ordering, make sure you have a plain “&” and not “& amp;”
between the parameters which could happen if you copy straight out of the browser. Also
make sure quotes are plain straight ones, some people have had problems when copying
and pasting code out of the browser and PHP chokes on the bad quote character.