Part 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 of the simple How to improve Website Profile Pages on AboutUs
Editor’s note: Topics are now called Tags and are located at the bottom of the page. Please see the wiki page about tags
Yesterday in Part I of our series on five ways to improve an AboutUs page, we gave a tutorial on how to add a Summary. The next step is just as easy.
Part II: Add Some Topics
In adding your Summary, you may have noticed a list of linked tags underneath or green text saying “(add a topic).” This is the new AboutUs tagging system we call Topics. Topics are keywords that are relevant to a site, and are a replacement for the standard MediaWiki system of Categories. If you’re familiar with the tagging systems of Delicious or Flickr, Topics should be a snap for you.
Why Topics and not Categories?
AboutUs began as an installation of MediaWiki, and retains many elements of that software. Why did we decide to implement Topics instead of sticking with Categories? Well, categories are a taxonomy that require a lot of hands-on maintenance, even in small wikis. What’s more, categories are practically hidden at the bottom of pages for both visitors and editors.
These two factors combine to make a system that is both difficult to use and not particularly useful, especially in a wiki pushing 13 million pages. Topics, being front-and-center for visitors and requiring no WikiText to edit, is a folksonomy that gels better with AboutUs.
Topics are important to you in your quest to improve an AboutUs page because they are the primary system of classifying our articles and correct Topics are an important SEO facet to a page.
How to add a Topic
If no topics are present, click the green text below your Summary. On many pages, Topics have been pre-populated from the Categories that were already on the page, or your site’s meta tags. To remove any Topics not applicable, simply click the X symbol on the left end of any individual tag.
The maxim to remember when adding or removing Topics is that quantity is not quality. Any more than 10 Topics in an AboutUs article may seriously degrade the page’s readability and SEO value; an ideal number is five to eight.
Also important to consider is how targeted your tags are. You may very well be a regional business or located in the U.S., but tagging your AboutUs page with “regional” or “U.S.” doesn’t communicate what your site is about. In general, it’s preferable to be more discerning in choosing Topics than you might choose other types of tags.
Look for the third post in the series tomorrow, where I’ll be giving an overview of writing a painless, effective description section.
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I’m assuming this is now out of date because there is NO green text appearing underneath the summary, nor any topics.
I know blog posts are blog posts, but if you’re going to post something to be helpful to people, I think it’s misleading if you leave posts up that are no longer accurate.
Marisa, you are right – we need to keep our documentation up better – it is a continuing feat that we do well sometimes and you have found an instance where we didn’t so such a great job!
Topics are now called tags, and they are at the bottom of the page.
Hi,
I am working on the website Elsema.com.
Some days ago, I edit the page http://www.aboutus.org/ElseMa.com, But after that it will not cached by Google.
Please help me, How it will be cached by Google?
I will appreciate for your precious reply.
Hi, most of the time, google / search engines cache pages pretty quickly, 1-7 days. In rare instances like this, months and months. We don’t know the details about google / search engines caching procedures. The best we can say, is to edit the page regularly. Best, Mark
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