After reading Drew’s post Building a WordPress Blog From Scratch, I started to write a loooong comment, then decided to write a post, and finally decided to write a series.

I’m a huge proponent of WordPress.  I use Drupal for ecommerce sites & am familiar with Joomla.  They both have steep learning curves, and are both overkill for real estate websites.  I currently integrate WordPress with a custom IDX solution on all of my real estate sites, including ericbramlett.com.

WordPress can be a fully functioning CMS, and can be very SEO friendly.  Google’s Matt Cutts went so far as to say that WordPress takes care of 90% of SEO.  So, how to get the remaining 10%, and how to turn WordPress into a fully functioning CMS?  Plugins.  Here are the plugins I use & recommend:

As a side note, there are plugins that have more features than these, but I choose these plugins because of their combined features & support.  There’s nothing worse than upgrading WP only to find that one of your plugins is no longer supported, and so breaks your site (which has happened to me.)

  1. Akismet – Comes out of the box with WordPress for good reason:  It kills 95% of potential spam comments with very few false positives.  Easy to enable, but you do have to sign up for an API, which is free.
  2. All in One SEO Pack – Feature rich SEO plugin that takes care of your title tags, meta data, and canonical URLs.  Lots of nice automation.
  3. cforms II – Flexible & design rich contact form plugin with auto confirmation & landing page functionality.
  4. Google Analytics for WordPress – Allows you to easily add the Analytics javascript to every page, and is functional with cross subdomain tracking.  Nice extras like “exclude admin” which automatically excludes traffic from the admin (you) which can skew data.
  5. Google Chrome Frame for WordPress – If you’re like me and you’ve stopped supporting IE6, then you can enable this plugin and prompt your visitor to download Chrome Frame, so they can view the web in a modern browser without giving up the oh-so-awesome IE6 (or 7, or 8 – it’s all in the plugin options.)
  6. Lucia’s Linky Love – I run a dofollow real estate blog, but it’s very far from a “free for all.”  This is the most flexible dofollow plugin out there, in my opinion.
  7. My Page Order – You can manage the order of your pages in WordPress with the default installation, but it’s pretty janky.  My Page Order gives you a nice GUI to order your pages.
  8. Page Lists Plus – In order to act as a functioning CMS, your WordPress installation needs this plugin.  This allows you exclude pages from nav, change the link text, and perform a few other questionably beneficial actions to your page lists.
  9. Redirection – I manage the page redirection of my main site through my .htaccess file, but use redirection for my other sites.  Redirection is really cool in that you can manage and track page redirection (which is why I use it to manage redirection, rather than Page Lists Plus.)
  10. Reveal IDs for Admin – It’s often useful to know the page, post, etc IDs, and this plugin allows you to display them, and choose which level of user sees them.
  11. Robots Meta – Allows you to tag your pages with robots meta data to instruct bots to follow, index, nofollow, or noindex specific pages.
  12. Smart Youtube – Allows you to easily insert youtube videos into your posts, pages, or sidebar widgets.
  13. Subscribe to Comments – Allows your readers to subscribe to comments in a post.
  14. Tweetmeme Retweet Button – Allows your readers to easily retweet a blog post.
  15. WordPress Database Backup – Protect your data and schedule DB backups often.  Complete with email functionality.
  16. WP Super Cache – If your site ever breaks, disable this plugin first.  It’s typically the culprit.  I hem & haw over whether or not I like it, but I’m using it as of the past few months.  It caches your site so you can deliver it to your readers much more quickly.  If you’ve ever heard of “digg proof,” this is what does it for WordPress (plus a beefy hosting plan.)

Today, I have 41 plugins installed on my site, and I’m running these 16.  I’ve probably disabled & deleted 50 other plugins over the past two years.  The nice thing about WordPress is that if you want to do something with your site, there’s probably a plugin or widget for it.  If there’s not a plugin/widget for it, there are thousands of developers ready to write one for you.

Up next…Evaluating & Choosing a WordPress Theme.

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  1. drewmeyers on December 1, 2009 10:03 am

    Awesome resource Eric – thanks for putting this together!

  2. Jeff Bernheisel on December 1, 2009 11:17 am

    Hey Eric,
    Is that IDX you use a plugin as well? If so, who is the provider?
    Thanks,
    Jeff

  3. OBX on December 1, 2009 3:24 pm

    Jeff,

    There is a WP IDX plugin now available but it's not free and doesn't look completely stable yet. Also you have to set up separate script to import data. The plugin is a rewrite of Open Realty script. Once I get time to actually try plugin I may be able to offer more info, waiting for some paperwork to finish up.

  4. Jeff Bernheisel on December 1, 2009 3:33 pm

    Cool…
    Just trying to learn about all the IDX options. Our team at HomeQuest is working on one. Putting finishing touches on it this week and it should be good to go very soon. It's a whole new world to me since I left Inman…

    -Jeff

  5. ericbramlett on December 1, 2009 3:41 pm

    Hey Jeff –

    It's a proprietary RETS/IDX that I designed with my biz partner. We're rolling out a bunch of changes to it this week that I'm pumped about!

  6. Jeff Bernheisel on December 1, 2009 3:42 pm

    No wonder I didn't recognize it. It looks good man!

  7. Free DoFollow Blog Lists » Project Wordpress: Preferred Plugins | GeekEstate Blog on December 1, 2009 2:58 pm

    [...] Free DoFollow Blog Lists Info Here:  Project WordPress: Preferred Plugins | GeekEstate Blog Comments (0)— Magic Words Backlink Method [...]

  8. ericbramlett on December 1, 2009 5:20 pm

    Thanks!

  9. OBX on December 1, 2009 9:57 pm

    I'd love to hear if you have a fully integrated option that can be purchased. Especially if it deals with importing RETS, because I know IDX can be a pain and requires tons of customization.

  10. Matt on December 2, 2009 8:44 am

    How well do your WordPress IDX listings perform in ranking and drawing SE traffic? I see that they're housed in a subdomain, and the URL string for specific neighborhoods has some things in it that you might not want. Are pages like http://search.ericbramlett.com/residentials/lis...
    performing well?

  11. Jeff Bernheisel on December 2, 2009 9:16 am

    OBX, email me your contact info to jeff@pdxhomequest.com and I'll send you some info and example links.
    Thanks,
    Jeff

  12. Top 10 real estate posts of the day for 12/2/2009 : Tempe real esatate and free home search on December 2, 2009 8:31 am

    [...] Project WordPress: Preferred Plugins – You a WordPress blogging Realtor? Then you will want to check this out for some great plugin [...]

  13. ericbramlett on December 2, 2009 12:17 pm

    They perform. I get significant traffic from them.

    While URL is a ranking signal, it's a very minor ranking signal. A future feature will be keyword rich URLs, but the /residentials/ organization won't go away b/c it's necessary.

    The subdomain vs. subdirectory argument is pretty tired (in my opinion.) I haven't seen anything to indicate subdomain organization is inferior to subdirectory organization. This was written a couple of years ago: http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/subdomains-and-su...

  14. jfsellsius on December 4, 2009 10:23 am

    Good stuff, Eric . I just shared my WP plugins on Inman: http://www.inman.com/buyers-sellers/columnists/...

    LinkWithin & Apture are my faves. WassUp my clients seem to like.

  15. ericbramlett on December 4, 2009 7:42 pm

    Hey Joseph –

    Thanks for stopping by! I just checked out your post and saw some new plugins I'll have to investigate.

    Thanks!

    ~Eric

  16. Eric Bramlett on Progect WordPress on December 7, 2009 10:12 am

    [...] Full Story [...]

  17. Weekly summary of real estate news, Memphis comments, and other interesting stuff – December 13th - Memphis Real Estate Buzz on December 13, 2009 5:08 am

    [...] Shared Project WordPress: Preferred Plugins | GeekEstate Blog. [...]

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  19. Project Wordpress: Theme Selection | GeekEstate Blog on January 9, 2010 12:42 pm

    [...] been a bit longer since my last Project WordPress post.  Holidays, work, & other excuses kept getting in the way of [...]

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