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DIY WordPress: 3 Reasons You Should Learn To Code

(Reading time: 5 – 8 minutes)

Guest author Blake Waddill lays it all out: if you don’t know how to code, you darn well ought to!


3 Reasons You Should Learn To Code

-by Blake Waddill

At some point every successful blogger has to decide if they are going to write/edit their own code and be self-sufficient or rely on others to get things done. Your theme is the first thing visitors notice when they get to your site (even before content), so it is important that your page looks as nice as possible. Believe it or not, your theme also has a profound effect on your SEO. Most people don’t have a lot of experience with photoshop, editing HTML, CSS, and PHP, and thus, choices must be made. Most bloggers choose one of 4 major options:

  1. Have a generic (usually ugly) free theme. Pros: Free, You don’t have to learn anything Cons: Ugly, Unprofessional, There are tons of blogs with the same exact theme.
  2. Pay for a premium professional theme. Pros: Pretty, Professional, You don’t have to learn anything Cons: Cost money, You have to pay each time you want to change it.
  3. Learn to code and create/edit a free theme. Pros: Free, Pretty, Professional, You can edit it or fix problems anytime Cons: Time consuming, Possibly ugly/unprofessional.
  4. Pay for a premium theme and learn to edit it an unlimited number of times. Pros: Pretty, Professional, Save money on any changes required Cons: Cost money.

There are 3 major reasons I decided to learn to code.

1. Learn Code To Make Your Site Look More Professional

One of the biggest reasons I wanted to learn to code was to make my site look more professional. If you come to a site that is ugly and hard to navigate, you won’t even take 20 seconds to read the content. This is the free theme I found:

Propsblog Before ATF

Propsblog Before ATF (Click to see full length)

The main reason I picked this theme was it had a simple 3 column format that I believed would be easy to edit. If you click on the image, you’ll see a full length image of the page. Notice the 125 x 125 ads do not fit well. The sidebar headers looked funky, the navbar was out of place, and the title looked unprofessional.

I did a quick search on Google for photoshop logo tutorials and whipped up a nice little logo to make the site feel a little more professional. After I finally settled on a logo, it was time to dig into the code. The author of the theme had a few comments in his code saying where to edit the code to insert the logo, but I had no clue what I was looking at.

Website-in-a-Weekend to the rescue, I sent Dave a quick message asking him if he could figure out what I was doing wrong. Like I good teacher, Dave said “I’m too busy, figure it out on your own.” Just kidding, I’m lying. He actually gave me links to several excellent resources including an article about when to use relative positioning which I later used to move the search bar from the top of the screen into my navbar.

After playing with just about every conceivable variable in the CSS, my site finally reached the point it is at now. I still have a lot to do, but because I took the time to learn to code like Dave recommended, I’ll be able to make the change I want on my own time.

Propsblog After ATF

Propsblog After ATF (Click to see full length)

2. Learn To Code for SEO

There is no doubt my site looks better now than it did when I started. Looking at the two, you would might not even believe they were the same theme at one point. The search engines feel the same way.

It turns out search engines don’t just look at the on site content, but at the code behind the content also. Search engines use META tags and headers (<h1>, <h2>, etc..) to get an idea of what the important things are on your site. When a search engine sees words with a header tag, it puts more weight on those words than just normal text. The theme I picked (and most other free themes I’ve seen) give the sidebar titles H2 tags and give post titles H3 tags. What is more important to you, the title of the post or “sponsored links”

Rocket Science!

WIAW already has detailed why the Title tag is important. If you want to know how search engines see your webpage check out website grader (WIAW got a 99 out of 100… Shocker, I know).

3. Learn To Code to Save Money

Buying a premium theme can definitely save you time, but what happens when you decide to change something small? Are you going to pay someone to do it for you? What happens when you want to overhaul your whole theme? Another $20-$160+ down the drain! If you get a nice premium theme like Thesis (buy Dave a beer and use his affiliate link if you want to buy Thesis Theme), you can customize things without much help, but if you get a theme from Woo Themes or Theme Forest, you’ll either have to learn to code or pay someone to make changes.

Summary

If you’re serious about blogging, choice 1 isn’t an option. You’re either going to have to shell out money or learn for yourself. Take the time to learn some code, and you’ll be free to change your site anytime you like and save a ton of money in the process. You won’t regret it.

Blake WaddillGuest author Blake Waddill is “leveraging” his education in Chemistry at Props Blog dot Com; resources and reviews site with addicted gamer twists. When he isn’t blogging, he’s hanging out with his wife and 3 year old step son or cheering for the Mavs and the Patriots.

News of the New – Another WIAW Week in Review

(Reading time: 6 – 10 minutes)

If you have something to do, go do that. Then come back later. Because I’m about to open up the firehose here… there is a lot of information packed in this week’s review.

Open wide.

Open wide.

Let’s get on with it.

We have a winner!

Smart bears recall I offered an editorial sweep through anyone’s choice of blog posts, given the best guess at word count. Well, Blake Waddill stepped with an estimate of 1950 words. Which is close enough for two reasons: 1. WordPress tells me the article is 2003 words, and 2. nobody else tried. (You miss all the shots you don’t take.) I’m going to throw an advance copy of my ebook too, just because Blake is a Tiesto fan.

Evolving towards sustainability…

I’ve been threatening to implement a membership system on Website In A Weekend for months. I even went so far as to join Yaro Starak’s Membership Mastermind program, and I purchased a Pro copy of Memberwing.

But I’ve been holding off.

Until now.

I spent most of today (that’s Sunday, November 8, 2009) slogging through a bunch of tedious WordPress file management and customization tasks, and wrote up a 9 point WordPress custom file management checklist for all you WordPress Do-It-Yourselfers. If you continually stumble over how to deal with file differences on different hosts, and you are intent on keeping your operational website fully backed up, this might be just the ticket. For newsletter subscribers only, and you can subscribe right over there to the right (or below, click on the “Weekender” link).

More! More! More!

You might want to get that cuppa now… some rich stuff coming up.

  • John E Kennedy’s Reason Why Advertising pages launches tomorrow, Saturday, November 14, 2009. Watch for it. It’s the whole book, in HTML, sectioned into WordPress pages along chapters, a free resource for reading and discussion.
  • Series I of the Website In A Weekend Whitepapers are “in press.” Watch for that launch on Wednesday, November 18, 2009. Weekenders and Insiders will be getting the details first.
  • The Woodblock 101. Can’t say much more than this, just watch for more information from Deacon as he wraps up his latest project. Our interests coincide as he’s using WordPress for his internet marketing website platform.
  • Have you written an article for Website In A Weekend? If so, find yourself on the Guest Authors page. If not, there’s still room for you, and we’d love to have you.

News from the New

Ever wonder how some people just seem to have that special touch? Effortless success seems to come naturally to them. You never see ‘em sweat. And they hit the ground running. Lemme tell ya… that’s not me! But I keep an eye on such folk. I learn from watching them. You can too. Here’s a few I’m currently watching.

Site Envy 101: Yeah, I admit it, I’m a fan of Site Sketch 101. I don’t have any idea who Nicholas Z. Cardot is, or where his years of experience are documented, but it doesn’t really matter. Anyone that can do it right the first time has serious talent, and Mr. Cardot is making base hit after base hit, lining up for some serious Grand Slams. I have no doubt he will be extremely successful. In fact, Nicholas is already successful measured by traffic growth. Head over to Site Sketch 101 and check it out.

Here’s another blog roaring out of the starting blocks. Vintage 1951, a brand new blog from Mr. Tom Mellor, proprietor and principal consultant of Identigrate UK. Vintage 1951 is off to an excellent start, landing on Google’s first page on a search for terms containing WordPress and mindmaps. Nice! Mr. Mellor is an IT professional, and advocate of the Microsoft OneNote product; check out his informative and well-written blog.

Jean-Baptiste Jung just jumped into the fray with Cats Who Blog. Ok, this isn’t Jean’s first go-’round in blogging, he also has Cats Who Code and WP-Recipes under his belt. Jean is a brilliant designer: Cats! Strawberries! Rainbows! (Talk about site envy.) As you can see, Jean’s experience has paid off for launching Cats Who Blog. Subscribe, of course.

What do you call a multinational, bilingual, corporate drop out blogger living in the Canary Islands who’s been at it a little over a year and is just killin’ it? Why, you call him Mike, and you find him over at Mike’s Life. Mike has it exactly right: Life can get better. And he’s proving. Check out Mike’s Life, he has a lot to offer.

New articles

Updated posts

Ricky Buchanan helped point out some deficiency in How To Fix FTP Connection Error on Localhost WordPress.
(I’m asked Ricky for a guest post on how she is using WordPress to manage her sites.)

Added a great link to an article in 7 Ways To Evaluate Blog Post Quality — Tuning your BS detector. These articles are complementary, read them both.

From the Archives!

Nothing from the WIAW Archives this week. No need. If you’re disappointed, leave a comment and Dr. WordPress will assign you some homework.

Upcoming

See above.

The Week In Review Series

Last WIAW Week in Review
A Trip Around The World – Another Week in Review. What do SEO, XKCD and shared hosting have in common? Nothing. Except being noteworthy for this week’s WIAW Week in Review. Try it. You’ll like it.

Next WIAW Week in Review

Where goes Website In A Weekend? Another Week in Review. Website In A Weekend continues to evolve: new material and products are in the pipeline, find out how you might be able to help.