Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Installing Your WordPress Blogs


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At this point, your domains have been registered and setup on your server.

Now, we’re going to install a WordPress blog on the root of each of the 100 ‘money’ domains you purchased. Again, don’t worry about your blog farm domains for now as we’ll get into setting up your blog farms later.

There are several programs/services out there that will install WordPress blogs for you automatically, at the click of a button across multiple domains. I use a program called  WordPressSuperInstaller (WPSI). It’s by far the best automatic wordpress installer out there in terms of features, speed and easy of use.

There are simple step-by-step videos on how to use WPSI. It’s very easy and will probably take you 15 minutes to learn how to use.

At this point, you need to go ahead and install your 100 blogs (one blog on the root of each domain).

It’s extremely important that your blog links to your internal pages.

Now, we have not created our internal pages ye, but that does not mean that we can’t setup a link to our internal pages from our blog. This may not make sense now, but it will in a minute.

Let me explain…

When you build your pages using RSSGM Generator or NC Generator (these are the page-building scripts included with this download), the scripts are going to create several sitemaps for you. These include mainsitemap.php and fullsitemap.php. Now, we haven’t built our pages yet. I haven’t even talked about using these generators, but just keep reading and you’ll know in a minute why I mention them here.

For a description of what these sitemaps are, read the instructions that come with the scripts.

Now, it’s very important that you link from your WordPress blog to one of your sitemaps. Why? Because when the spiders arrive at your WordPress blog, they will follow the link to your sitemap, which contains links to your other pages. In other words, you’re creating a funnel that the spiders can follow.

Now, even though you haven’t actually built your sitemaps yet, you know what they will be called. They will look like this:

 http://www.domain.com/mainsitemap.php
 http://www.domain.com/fullsitemap.php

So, you can link to your site maps before you have even created them because you the know the url before hand ☺.

In this case, we’re going to be linking from the sidebar of our blog to the mainsitemap.php. Don’t worry about fullsitemap.php for now.

So – how do we do this across all 100 of our blogs automatically, so that each blog is linking to the corresponding mainsitemap.php file for that domain?

Well, fortunately, WPSI has a feature built in that will allow you to do this.

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