YouTube Reports 200 Billion Daily Views For Shorts Format via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

YouTube CEO Neal Mohan announced that the platform’s short-form video format now generates 200 billion daily views during a keynote address at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

The milestone comes as the Google-owned platform marks its 20th anniversary and faces increasing competition from TikTok and Instagram Reels in the short-form video space.

Key Platform Metrics Revealed

During his presentation, Mohan shared several performance metrics:

  • YouTube Shorts averages 200 billion daily views
  • One billion viewers watch podcasts monthly on the platform
  • Over one billion hours of YouTube content are viewed on television screens daily
  • TV screens are now the primary viewing method for more than half of the top 100 YouTube channels

The television viewing data represents an evolution from YouTube’s mobile-first origins, with creators increasingly producing content formatted for larger screens.

New AI Features Coming to Platform

YouTube will introduce Veo 3, Google DeepMind’s video generation model, to Shorts creators later this summer.

The tool enables users to create AI-generated backgrounds and video clips, building upon the existing Dream Screen feature.

The company also reported that its Auto Dubbing feature has processed over 20 million videos since launch six months ago. The tool currently translates content across nine languages, with 11 additional languages planned.

Industry Context

YouTube’s announcements come as the platform competes for creator attention and viewer time with TikTok, which popularized the short-form video format, and Meta’s Instagram Reels.

The emphasis on television viewing and longer-form content may represent an attempt to differentiate from mobile-first competitors.

While YouTube leads in platform breadth and viewing hours, TikTok still holds a cultural edge in mobile-native short video. YouTube’s push toward TV-based viewing and AI creation tools may help retain creator loyalty and expand monetization opportunities across formats.

The AI tools announcement follows similar features from competitors, including TikTok’s AI effects and Instagram’s creative tools.

Looking Ahead

The shift toward television viewing and serialized content marks a departure from YouTube’s roots as a platform for amateur video uploads.

As YouTube enters its third decade, the platform’s strategy appears focused on supporting professional content creation while expanding its technological capabilities through AI integration.


Featured Image: Screenshot from: blog.youtube/news-and-events/neal-mohan-cannes-2025/, June 2025. 

Yoast SEO Plugin Bug Injects Hidden AI HTML Classes via @sejournal, @martinibuster

Yoast SEO rushed out an update to fix a bug that introduced a known fingerprint of AI-generated content. The bug was highlighted on social media, and Yoast corrected the error within hours.

HTML Classes Injected By AI

It’s recently become known that highlighting then copying content generated ChatGPT and then pasting it directly into the WordPress will cause HTML classes to be added to the content code. An HTML “class” is something that’s added to an HTML element like a paragraph element

, which can then be used to attach a style to it, like specifying a font. This bug only happens when a ChatGPT user highlights generated text, copies it, then pastes it into the WordPress editor. It won’t happen if the user clicks the ChatGPT “copy” icon to copy the generated content.

The HTML classes injected into content are “data-start” and “data-end” which are only visible within the code, not on the published content.

This is what the AI-generated content looks like in the HTML code:

“He thought no one would notice—
the quiet hum of the AI
churning out words
like it knew something.
Google noticed.
Now he shelves canned beans at Safeway.”

This is what the content would look like in the visible version:

“He thought no one would notice—
the quiet hum of the AI
churning out words
like it knew something.
Google noticed.
Now he shelves canned beans at Safeway.”

The “data-start” and “data-end” classes are the telltale clues that the content was generated by AI. Savvy SEOs are using that knowledge as part of their SEO audits to indentify AI-generated content that was directly copied and pasted into their WordPress editor.

Yoast SEO Premium Injects AI Classes

Alan Bleiweiss, known for content audits, called attention to the fact that Yoast SEO was injecting the “data-start” and “data-end” HTML classes into content. Alan called them “wrappers” but they’re technically HTML classes.

He posted:

“UPDATE

Yoast Plug-in pushed live without proper QA. Injecting AI wrappers without site owner permission.

Fortunately, according to Carolyn Shelby they’re working on a fix.

But tool providers need to do better.”

Alan indicated that no clarification was given as to how those classes were injected but the bug was limited to Yoast SEO Premium because the free version does not contain the necessary AI text generation feature (Yoast AI Optimize).

Yoast Pushes Update To Fix Bug

Yoast swiftly pushed an update, version 25.3.1, to fix the issue so that AI-generated content created by Yoast SEO Premium does not contain the classes. Happily, the updated plugin also removes the telltale HTML classes.

According to the Yoast SEO blog post announcement:

“Recently, we announced the rollout of Yoast AI Optimize for the Classic Editor in WordPress. …During the initial rollout, we discovered a technical issue where unintended classes were being added to content for some users. While these added classes are harmless and do not impact the functionality or appearance of your content, they should not have been added, that’s on us.

We take this seriously, and to maintain the quality you expect, we’ve been actively working on a solution. We’re pleased to share that a fix has now been released, and the issue has been resolved. For users already affected, we are automatically cleaning up the unintended classes as part of the fix, no action is needed on your part.”

The functionality was rolled out on June 2nd, which means that sites with affected content have been out there for at most two weeks.

The free version of the plugin has also been updated. The changelog offers this explanation:

“This is a maintenance release which is required to align with changes to Yoast SEO Premium 25.3.1.”

Can This Have Impacted Rankings?

It’s probably unlikely that this has affected rankings but at this point it’s unknown if Google would have noticed.  Google would have to specifically look for those classes which in themselves do not indicate anything about content quality. So again, it’s probably unlikely that this bug had an effect on search rankings.

Nevertheless users of the premium version of the Yoast SEO Plugin should update immediately to version 25.3.1 to fix any potential issues from this bug and users of the free version should update their versions as well, even though it’s not affected.

Featured Image by Shutterstock/Jihan Nafiaa Zahri

seo enhancements
Update on Yoast AI Optimize for Classic Editor 

Recently, we announced the rollout of Yoast AI Optimize for the Classic Editor in WordPress. We’re excited to see the positive response and engagement with this new feature. 

During the initial rollout, we discovered a technical issue where unintended classes were being added to content for some users. While these added classes are harmless and do not impact the functionality or appearance of your content, they should not have been added, that’s on us.

We take this seriously, and to maintain the quality you expect, we’ve been actively working on a solution. We’re pleased to share that a fix has now been released, and the issue has been resolved. For users already affected, we are automatically cleaning up the unintended classes as part of the fix, no action is needed on your part.

As part of our commitment to delivering reliable and thoughtful features, we have also temporarily disabled the AI Optimize feature for the Classic Editor. This will give us time to reconsider our approach and develop an improved solution. We’ll keep you updated and reintroduce the feature as soon as we’re confident in its performance.

Please update your Yoast SEO plugins to the latest version where available. Should you have any concerns, feel free to contact our support team.

Thank you for your understanding and continued support.

Google Launches ‘Search Live’ Real-Time Voice Search In AI Mode via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google is rolling out Search Live with voice features through its AI Mode Labs experiment.

You can now have natural, spoken conversations with Search while receiving web links in real-time.

The was previewed at Google I/O and is now available today for U.S. users.

How Search Live Voice Works

You can access the feature by opening the Google app on Android or iOS.

Tap the new “Live” icon under the search bar, as shown below.

Once started, you can ask questions out loud and get AI-generated audio responses. Google says it uses a custom version of Gemini with advanced voice features.

The system remembers what you talked about before, which lets you ask follow-up questions naturally. For example, you could ask about preventing wrinkles in linen clothing while packing. Then you could ask what to do if wrinkles still happen.

Key Features & Functionality

Search Live keeps working even when you switch to other apps. Your conversations continue while you check email, browse social media, or do other things on your phone.

A “transcript” button shows you text versions of the audio responses. This means you can switch between talking and typing in the same conversation.

The feature also saves your conversation history. You can go back to previous Search Live sessions through your AI Mode history.

Web links show up on your screen alongside voice responses. This gives you quick access to source content if you want to dig deeper.

Technology & Implementation

Google’s custom Gemini model for Search Live builds on the company’s existing search systems.

The setup uses what Google calls a “query fan-out technique” to find diverse web content. This aims to give you different sources and viewpoints during your search sessions.

Google plans to add more Search Live features in the coming months. This includes camera integration for real-time visual queries.

Visual search was also previewed at I/O. It would let you show Search what you’re seeing while talking about objects, locations, or situations around you.

Why This Matters

Voice-driven conversational search could be a big shift in how people use search engines.

Google’s continued focus on natural language queries means optimization must go beyond traditional keyword targeting.

Web links still appear with AI voice responses. Marketers should test it out and consider how their content appears in conversational situations. This matters more as people ask follow-up questions and explore topics through natural dialogue.

This change may also affect how we understand search intent. Conversational queries often show more detailed needs than regular typed searches.

Getting Started

To use Search Live, you must join the AI Mode experiment through Google Labs.

Once signed up, the Live icon appears right away in the Google app.

Agentic AI In SEO: AI Agents & Workflows For Audit (Part 2) via @sejournal, @VincentTerrasi

Building on our previous exploration of Agentic SEO’s ideation capabilities, this article takes a closer look at the second pillar: Audit.

As promised, we’ll look at how AI agents can transform the SEO audit process by providing corrections and thorough analysis that would otherwise take hundreds of hours of manual work.

Traditional SEO audits are often time-consuming, involving multiple tools and manual reviews.

With Agentic SEO, however, this process can be streamlined through autonomous AI agents that identify problems and recommend and implement solutions in real time.

AI Agents For Advanced Site Analysis

Full Website Analysis With Real-Time Corrections

Agentic SEO transforms the review process by:

  1. Comprehensive crawling: AI agents can systematically analyze entire websites, including hidden pages and dynamic content that traditional crawlers might overlook.
  2. Intelligent pattern recognition: Unlike rule-based tools, AI agents can detect patterns and anomalies that may indicate deeper structural issues across your site.
  3. Real-time remediation: As well as identifying problems, the agents can generate code fixes, content improvements, and structural adjustments that can be implemented immediately.
Image from author, May 2025

Example: Firecrawl Demo

With advanced AI crawling, Firecrawl can meticulously analyze HTML structures, extract microformats, and provide detailed performance metrics, revealing critical areas that need optimization and might otherwise be missed.

Image from author, May 2025

Example: Similar to tools like Cursor integrated with GitHub, Agentic SEO enables immediate application of code fixes.

When an issue is identified, the agent directly suggests optimized code changes, allowing seamless implementation through direct integration with your repository, ensuring rapid and error-free remediation.

I’m confident that OpenAI’s Codex and Google’s Jules will be equally effective for these tasks.

Image from author, May 2025

Workflow Architecture For Effective Auditing

Similar to our idea workflows, audit workflows consist of specialized components.

Image from author, May 2025

The audit workflow typically includes:

  • Data collection agents: These collect information from your site, competitor sites, and search engine results.
  • Analysis agents: These specialize in identifying technical issues, content gaps, and optimization opportunities.
  • Recommendation agents: They prioritize issues and suggest specific solutions based on potential impact.
  • Implementation agents: Generate corrected code, optimized content, or step-by-step implementation guides directly.

Practical Use Cases

Technical SEO Auditing

AI agents excel at identifying technical issues that are often overlooked:

Image from author, May 2025

The agent doesn’t just flag the problem. It provides contextual recommendations and implementation guidance.

Content Gap Analysis

Beyond traditional auditing, AI agents can identify content gaps by:

  1. Analyzing competitive content structures.
  2. Identifying SERP features you’re missing.
  3. Discovering semantic relationships between existing content.
  4. Suggesting opportunities for content consolidation or expansion.
Image from author, May 2025

Internal Linking Optimization

One of the most powerful applications is internal linking analysis:

Image from author, May 2025

How To Build Your Audit Agent

Creating an effective audit agent requires:

  1. A specialized knowledge base: Provide the agent with SEO best practices, Google guidelines, and industry-specific benchmarks.
  2. Tool integration: Connect the agent to existing tools such as Screaming Frog, Moz, and Semrush, or custom APIs for comprehensive data collection.
  3. Human-in-the-loop checkpoints: Despite automation, human expertise is still needed to validate critical recommendations.

Case Study: Ecommerce Site Optimization

In less than 30 minutes, our Agentic SEO Audit System identified 347 critical technical issues for a mid-sized ecommerce site with 15,000 product pages.

  • It generated optimized title tags and meta descriptions for underperforming pages.
  • It discovered and mapped content gaps in product categories.
  • It created a comprehensive action plan based on revenue impact.

Implementing these recommendations resulted in a 32% increase in organic traffic within 60 days.

Current Challenges And Limitations

Although powerful, Agentic SEO auditing does have its challenges.

  1. Tool integration complexity: Connecting Agentic to all the necessary data sources requires technical expertise. For instance, setting up MCP (or Model Context Protocol) servers can be a challenging task.
  2. Evolving standards: Agents require regular updates to keep pace with changes in search engine algorithms.

Tools to Build Your Own SEO Audit Agent

Here are some practical tools to help you get started:

  • Open-Source Workflow Automation – n8n is a powerful, open-source automation tool that allows you to create complex workflows without coding. It’s ideal for orchestrating SEO tasks like crawling, data extraction, and reporting.
  • Python Framework for Multi-Agent Systems – CrewAI enables the development of multi-agent systems in Python, allowing specialized agents to collaborate on tasks such as data collection, analysis, and implementation.
  • Agentic AI Platform – DNG.ai (Draft & Goal) is a no-code platform designed to automate complex SEO workflows using specialized AI agents. It offers features like:
    • Agentic Workflows: Automate tasks such as keyword optimization, content creation, and data analysis.
    • Multi-Agent Collaboration: Coordinate multiple agents to handle large-scale projects efficiently.
    • Integration with Over 20 Marketing Tools: Seamlessly connect with tools like Google Search Console, Google Ads, Google Analytics, and more.

Resources to Learn and Get Started

To improve your understanding and skills in building SEO audit agents, you can also explore these resources:

Summary: Agentic SEO Is A Fundamental Shift

Agentic SEO’s audit capabilities represent a fundamental shift in how we approach technical optimization.

By combining AI’s pattern recognition abilities with the strategic insight of human experts, we can create audit systems that are more comprehensive and actionable than traditional approaches.

In our next article, we’ll explore the final pillar of Agentic SEO: Generation. We will examine how AI agents can generate missing content, optimize existing assets, and scale content production while maintaining quality and relevance through the “SEO Expert in the Loop” approach.

Stay tuned, and experiment with these techniques to transform your SEO workflow!

More Resources:


Featured Image: Deemerwha studio/Shutterstock

Wix Acquires AI Platform That Enables Anyone To Create Software via @sejournal, @martinibuster

Wix announced it is acquiring Base44, an AI-powered coding platform that enables users to create software and applications with natural language prompts, no coding experience necessary. The acquisition is a bold step because it reimagines what a content management system can be, enabling its users to do more with Wix than with any other platform.

Base44 provides an easy to use chat-based interface that enables users to create any kind of app without having to subscribe to third-party tools, all within the Wix platform. The acquisition is further establishes Wix as a leading platform for Internet entrepreneurship.

Maor Shlomo, CEO of Base44, commented:

“I honestly can’t think of a better fit. Wix is probably the only company that can help Base44 achieve the scale and distribution it needs while maintaining, if not accelerating, our product velocity. Our market is massive. It has the potential to replace entire software categories by enabling people to create software instead of buying it. Wix’s DNA – its customer obsession, innovation, and speed – perfectly aligns with ours, and its scale will catapult Base44 forward at exactly the right time.”

Avishai Abrahami, CEO and Co-founder of Wix observed:

“This acquisition marks a pivotal milestone in Wix’s commitment to transforming creation online. Maor and his team at Base44 bring cutting-edge technology, strong market penetration, and visionary leadership that seamlessly align with Wix’s dedication to enabling users at all levels of expertise to express their intent while intelligent agents manage execution.

Maor’s exceptional talent and innovative mindset will reinforce Wix’s mission to push the boundaries of AI-driven creation and accelerate the evolution of intuitive, intelligent tools that redefine how digital experiences are built and enjoyed.”

Featured Image by Shutterstock/Valery Brozhinsky

CMOs, The Time Is Now To Assign An AI Leader via @sejournal, @dannydenhard

There are three types of marketing leaders right now:

  1. The one worried about performance and just had enough time in leadership meetings to hear what everyone else’s opinion is on AI.
  2. The marketing leader who is having to firefight and has spoken to their team about AI and the implications.
  3. The marketing leader who has played with some AI tools and used a few prompts to see if it’s useful.

There should be a fourth who is planning for the future, trying to work out where AI sits in their organization and how to get ahead, so they do not get lost and can confidently say we have an internal owner.

Right now, I only know a handful of chief marketing officers who are taking it seriously enough.

The Challenge: Trust

The challenge for most is, “Who do I trust enough to do a great job in pulling the department, and often the non-technical parts of the company, on the AI journey?”

As someone who’s held both CMO and chief growth officer titles and now coaches C-Suite leaders and consults, I decided to dedicate the last six months to going deep into AI.

I have worked with companies in and around AI since 2022. However, over the last six months, we have seen AI transition from a set of tools and models to help, to starting to influence the reduction of team headcounts and being responsible for hiring freezes unless you can prove AI cannot do it first.

If you haven’t started, it will become a hotly discussed talking point in board and leadership meetings.

The promise of AI is exactly what everyone is looking for: productivity gains (not starting from zero every time), cost savings (on hiring, having to rely on data analysts or agencies), and the ability to leverage competitive advantages. We are seeing some of this play out.

The return on investment of going first and early will mean you are ahead of competitors, you will quickly understand the investment case, and you will be able to calculate ROI early.

The Solution: Two Strategic Approaches

Where to start? Most people struggle with where to start and where it makes sense to kickstart the AI agenda.

With coaching and consultancy clients, I offer two ways to tackle this:

1. Find Your AI Champion: Apply The Owner, Co-Owner, Collaborator Model To AI

You must have an owner – someone who will be there with the team and responsible for championing tech and tools and integrating them into their workflow.

When that owner says something is important, the teams treat it as such. You need an owner for when something breaks, they take control. This is a high-trust role with a lot of status attached.

You have co-owners, those who feel connected – the team members who don’t like being left behind but aren’t confident enough to own it themselves. You might say these are the ones who are likely on the fence about leaving.

Last are the collaborators, the team members who need to learn, need co-workers to help them develop and talk through what the tools have done and where they have likely used AI to get themselves out of missing a deadline or a situation where they’ve missed something.

2. Org Design/Org Redesign

This requires a strong and forward-thinking department leader who requires reshaping your teams to adapt to the new technology shift.

A proactive and visionary department leader is now essential. This leader must restructure teams to embrace and adapt to the significant shift towards new technologies.

You are not just shifting for hires and skills gaps, as most do. You are reshaping for the next two years.

You have to plan out how the next six, 12, and 18 months will change, move team members around, where there will be headcount reshuffles, and in this situation, a new technology that will reach all marketing disciplines.

The Opportunity: You will need to assign a natural long-term leader to AI. AI is not going away and will be the driving force in most businesses for the foreseeable future. You have to get ahead of when boards and C-Suites push you for your plan.

The Threat To Be Ahead Of: You must identify those who just will not naturally fit in the short to mid-term, and reshuffle your team members.

In this “do more with less” era, you will have to be at the front, leading and potentially losing headcount. AI has already seen mass layoffs, and this is unlikely to stop.

You will need to be ahead of the industry shifts. Being ahead is critical. Being close to your new owner or captain is pivotal.

The AI Owner

Who will be the owner of AI? And, how will you reshape your department?

Whether you are a marketing leader or a growth leader, you have to think about where these elements connect and who has the most exposure and muscle memory in big shifts.

Potential AI owners could come from several areas:

  • Social: Is it a marketer from social media? Being led by platforms to change their content types, to understand the subtle algorithmic changes, and in most cases, had to ramp up the quantity of output.
  • Search: Is it a search marketer? Is it a leader from organic search? If you have a strong SEO leader who understands other channels, you have someone who has seen huge changes in their industry. They have likely faced major algorithmic updates and had to adapt to a large number of changes since the early 2010s.
  • Growth: Are you a modern-day growth organization or an evolving marketing department? Do you have growth pros who look after paid, organic, and potential social?

You will know who fits best in your department. However, I predict it’s likely the search or growth team.

You need someone who is used to unpicking shifts – someone who can understand technical aspects and interface with product teams and engineers while teaching their colleagues.

For the top tier of SEO or search professionals, this is something they have had to do for years.

This is an opportunity for your team members, particularly in search, as Carl Hendy and I discussed in a recent podcast: It’s time to reset, mature, and take ownership from across different disciplines.

How To Find Your AI Leader

A core skill to look out for in the right candidate is having the ability to understand the importance of changes for the whole business and be able to hold their own with C-Suite executives.

The AI leader will have to hold strong, informed opinions based on knowledge of what is happening and how they assign budget and resources across the business.

Your AI lead will be a close colleague in many important meetings, so you trusting them and being able to learn and gain reverse mentorship will be essential.

The 90-Day Action Plan

Immediate: Week 1-2

  • Write your AI plan and create a dedicated presentation to guide the team’s success. Have a formalized kickoff: Start with the basics, explainers, examples of what success looks like, a set of approved tools and prompts, and workshops.
  • Assign a budget line for AI initiatives.
  • Address the department’s AI fears through transparent communication.
  • Launch formal AI kickoff workshop.

Short-Term: 30-90 Days

  • Department Problem Solve: List out all of your existing problems within your department and work through how you can identify existing tools, leverage, and build internal tools and processes with AI to address these.
  • Establish bi-weekly AI progress updates.
  • Begin cross-functional AI coordination and start to rebuild roadmaps.
  • Implement weekly team training and development sessions.

The Long-Term Plan: 6-18 Months

  • Develop an AI-focused hiring strategy and plan a reorg with this in mind.
  • Build executive presence for AI champions.
  • Create measurable ROI frameworks.

Remember, in an ever-evolving AI landscape, you can be on top of being proactive and be well prepared for when your business needs to be reactive.

Good luck on your AI journey!

More Resources:


Featured Image: DC Studio/Shutterstock

AIO Hurting Traffic? How To Identify True Loss With GA4, GSC & Rank Tracking [Webinar] via @sejournal, @lorenbaker

Wondering if AI Overviews (AIOs) are stealing your clicks?

Are these AI answer engines eating into our traffic, or just changing the shape of it?

Google’s AI Overviews now appear on up to 40% of search queries, but what impact are they really having?

Stop Guessing. How To Measure AIO’s Real Impact

Get the on-demand webinar, where we explore the three main tools that can help you:

In this tactical on-demand session, Tom Capper, Sr. Search Scientist at STAT, will walk you through a practical framework for assessing AIO impact using three tools you already rely on.

You’ll learn to pinpoint if, where, and how AIOs affect your traffic so that you can respond with clarity, not guesswork.

Start Measuring the Real Impact of AIOs on SERPs Today

Don’t rely on assumptions.

Grab this free on-demand webinar now to accompany the slides below; uncover if AIOs are actually hurting your traffic, and what to do about it.

Join Us For Our Next Webinar!

Lead Local SEO: How To AI-Proof Your Rankings With Reviews

Join Mél Attia, Sr. Marketing Manager at GatherUp, as she shows how consumer trust and AI updates are reshaping Local SEO, and how agencies can lead the way.

seo enhancements
How to find the perfect SEO-friendly WordPress theme

We’ve seen it happen so often. You have a great blog or site, and at some point, you decide to go for a new look and feel. There are a couple of things you’ll look at, usually in the order: layout/look and feel, usability, and optionally, room for advertising. If the theme meets your needs in all three of these points, you might download and install it. If that sounds familiar, this post describes how to find the perfect SEO-friendly WordPress theme!

Table of contents

Finding the right SEO-friendly WordPress theme

An SEO-friendly theme has quite a few things to take care of, and a lot of themes miss out on these. This overview should help to keep you out of trouble when you’re looking for a new theme. If you’re thinking of installing a new theme, please give the following points some thought. Keep in mind, your new theme should be accessible, compatible, customizable, integrable, and standards-compliant.

Define your needs

Whether you are in the market for a free theme, a premium theme, or want to hire a developer to build one especially for you, the first step is always the same: define your needs. Write down what the theme should do, now and in the future. You might not need an eCommerce option at this time, but what about in a year from now? What should your site look like? Which pages do you need? What types of content are you planning to publish? Once you have a clear picture of the requirements, you have a better chance of finding your dream theme.

Find a trusted reseller or developer. How’s the support?

Should you build a theme yourself? Or will a general free theme do? The discussion on whether a premium theme is better than a free theme continues to rage on. Both sides have their merits. There are loads of crappy free themes, but there are just as many crappy premium themes. What you should do is find a reseller or developer that you trust. Look for social proof; how many reviews does a theme get? Is there an active message board? When did it receive its last update?

While themes on WordPress.org undergo initial scrutiny for safety, it remains crucial to perform your own thorough checks. Also, vetting doesn’t mean they’re awesome. Theme resellers offer loads of premium themes in varying degrees of awesomeness. But just because you pay for them, doesn’t necessarily make them better than free themes. In addition to that, since you only receive the files when you pay for a theme, there’s no way to check the quality upfront. Despite social proof, it’s still a leap in the dark.

How flexible is the theme?

A static theme won’t do you any good when you want to change the page layout in a couple of months. Make sure to choose a theme that is flexible in its appearance as well as its functionality. Be sure that it supports blocks so you can use the block editor to fill the design. Don’t choose a design that screams for full-width images when you only need a well-presented place to write your poetry. Check what happens to a theme when you turn off all massive images; does it still function? And is it possible to change colors, fonts, and other visual elements? Many themes, like Total or GeneratePress, come with a number of demo examples that give you an idea of all the different styles they can handle.

Your SEO-friendly WordPress theme should have room for widgets, plus it should support featured images and offer multi-language support. Lots of themes have a page builder on board; these help you construct your bespoke layout. But, this is something you should be careful with because these could generate less than stellar code that hinders your SEO. Do check if your theme works well with site builders like Elementor. Also, modern themes like the Twenty Twenty-Five default theme work with block patterns that let you fine-tune your design.

Make sure your WordPress theme plays nicely with third-party plugins to boost your site’s functionality and SEO. Themes often come with built-in features, but these can sometimes clash with essential plugins. Make sure your chosen theme is flexible and well-coded to work smoothly with popular plugins like Yoast SEO, WooCommerce, and Elementor. This compatibility lets you enhance your site without dealing with conflicts or performance dips. Checking for plugin support makes sure that you can easily add features while keeping your site running securely and efficiently.

Which post and page templates does the theme support?

Another way to keep things flexible is for an SEO-friendly WordPress theme to offer multiple posts and page templates. That way, you could start off using a basic template with a main content area and a left sidebar, but have the flexibility to change to a full-width content area or one of the many other options. If a theme has only two choices, that might become problematic in the future. Pick a theme with enough sensible templates.

Does it function as a parent/child theme?

Parent and child themes are a great combo. If you use any of the theme frameworks like heavy-hitter Genesis, you know how powerful these are compared to regular themes. A child theme gets its functionality from a parent theme. So if you’re making changes to your child theme, the parent won’t see these. You won’t break the parent theme if you make a mistake. The same goes for updates; if you update your parent theme, which happens often, it won’t wipe the changes you’ve made to your theme because it’s a child and doesn’t contain the functionality.

Whether you need a theme framework depends on your needs. Almost all WordPress projects will benefit from a theme framework, but it might be overkill if you only need a tiny amount of its functionality and you know exactly what kind of theme you need.

Watch out for theme bloat

Many themes are bloated, which increases loading time. If the developer of a particular theme included everything but the kitchen sink, you might get a feature-complete product but an extremely complicated one as well. Try to find a theme that offers everything you need instead of everything there is. Your theme should be lean and mean.

Prioritize security

When choosing a WordPress theme, don’t overlook the importance of security. It’s important to select a theme that is well-maintained and regularly updated to fix vulnerabilities. Check if the theme has a solid security reputation by reading user reviews and checking update logs. Make sure it complies with secure coding standards and supports two-factor authentication and other security measures. Using themes directly from the official WordPress repository or trusted marketplaces adds an extra layer of assurance. Always test the theme with security plugins like Sucuri to identify potential issues before going live.

Check site speed and mobile-readiness

Your website should be mobile-friendly from the start. Its theme should load swiftly and provide an excellent page experience, reflected in strong Core Web Vitals scores. Opting for a lightweight, efficient theme could help you achieve this.

Begin by evaluating the theme’s responsiveness. Use tools like the Google Lighthouse to verify compatibility across various devices. Additionally, input the theme’s demo site URL into Google PageSpeed Insights to uncover any loading issues that might affect performance.

Remember, these tests offer a starting point, but they only provide part of the picture. For a complete assessment, test the theme’s speed on your actual server setup, as server performance can significantly influence load times.

Is the theme really SEO-friendly?

While Yoast SEO fixes a lot of WordPress’s SEO issues, a good theme helps a lot. Most WordPress themes will claim that they are SEO-friendly, but make sure to check them. One of the good examples is Twenty Twenty-Five, which offers a clean design that performs really well. Find out if the theme’s code is nice and clean or an intangible mess. Has it been updated recently? And will it be supported in the future? How many JavaScript libraries does the theme depend on? Does it support Schema.org structured data? If you’re eyeing a free theme, make sure there are no hidden links to the developer’s website, as this can hurt your SEO efforts. In general, keep Google’s Search Essentials documentation in mind when hunting for SEO-friendly WordPress themes.

Is the theme’s code valid?

Some theme authors are more designers than coders, and thus, they sometimes hack around until it finally looks the way they want without bothering to check whether the code they’ve written is valid HTML. If it’s not, current or future browsers might have issues rendering the content correctly. You can check whether the code is valid by using the W3C’s validator.

Test, test, and test again

Once you’ve chosen your favorite new SEO-friendly WordPress theme, it’s time to kick it into gear. Start with a development setup to test your new theme through and through. Run every type of test you can think of. This might be a security check with the Sucuri plugin or a theme check with the Theme Check plugin. Load your site with dummy data from wptest.io to see if every element is represented and functioning. Run pagespeed and mobile-friendliness tests to see if problems arise. Fix the issues, or find a new theme.

Bonus checks

That’s just to get you going. There’s a lot of stuff you can check before you install your brand-new theme. Start with these three checks, if you will:

Hooks

WordPress plugins use so-called “hooks” to be able to perform their designated tasks. These hooks allow, for instance, to add extra output, tracking codes, etc. A lot of issues with plugins will arise for you when a theme author forgets to add these hooks. This is how to check for them:

1. In header.php, it should have a small piece of PHP code that looks exactly like this wp_head(); or this do_action('wp_head');, usually just before a piece of HTML that looks like this: .

2. In footer.php, it should have another small piece of PHP like this wp_footer();, or this do_action('wp_footer');

3. In comments.php and/or comments-popup.php, there should be a piece of code like this: ID); ?>, just before the HTML tag.

Template files

Another wise thing to do when you’re changing themes is to compare theme files. If, for instance, your current theme has an author.php file, which contains the template for your author profiles, and your new one doesn’t have that, that might be an unpleasant surprise when you install the theme. The files you should be checking for in your old and new themes:

  • home.php: the homepage template.
  • single.php: the template for single posts.
  • page.php: the template for pages.
  • category.php: the template for category indexes.
  • author.php: the author template, used when someone wants to find all posts by a certain author.
  • date.php: the date template, used when someone tries to look at, for instance, a certain month of posts on your blog.
  • archive.php: this template is used when either category.php, author.php, or date.php isn’t there.
  • search.php: used when someone searches on your blog, a very important template to look at if you’re concerned about usability, and whether people can find posts on your blog.
  • 404.php is used when WordPress can’t find a certain post or page. It’s a very important template file to have!

How is your theme handling titles?

It’s essential to modernize how your theme manages page titles. While older practices involve directly altering the  tag in header.php, consider utilizing add_theme_support('title-tag'); in your theme’s functions.php. This setup allows WordPress and plugins like Yoast SEO to handle titles optimally, ensuring a flexible and SEO-friendly title structure.

// Add to your theme's functions.php
add_action('after_setup_theme', function() {
add_theme_support('title-tag');
});

Now, Yoast SEO can take care of all the titles. We have a great article on crafting good titles if you want to learn more.

A guide to finding SEO-friendly WordPress themes

If the theme you are looking at fits your goals and the points made in this article, you should be quite okay. For those of you with more tech skills, it’s also an option to go headless with WordPress if you want more flexibility. Good luck with your new theme!

Read more: Need help with WordPress? 10 tips to avoid common mistakes »

Yoast SEO WordPress Plugin Adds Support For LLMs.Txt via @sejournal, @martinibuster

Yoast announced the addition of llms.txt capability to both the premium and free versions of their SEO plugin. Users can now add llms.txt files to their sites to future-proof them for AI search engines.

LLMS.Txt

llms.txt is a proposal for a new standard that will enable large language models (LLMs) to access a publisher’s content in a way that is easy for LLMs. The main content is presented to LLMs without advertising and other page elements that target humans.

The proposed standard uses markdown in pages with the .md file name, duplicates of existing pages that only contain the main content. Google’s John Mueller has alluded to the inherently untrustworthiness of the proposed standard because there’s nothing to stop unscrupulous SEOs from adding whatever they want to the LLMs.txt web pages.

It simply makes more sense to just grab the content from the normal web pages. Additionally, LLMs aren’t currently looking for those pages and it’s quite likely that they will continue to use the normal web pages.

Yoast’s announcement states:

  • “Helps AI tools understand your site better: Guides large language models like ChatGPT and Gemini to your most relevant content.
  • Highlights your key content automatically: No need to decide what to include. Yoast SEO detects your most important and recently updated pages.
  • No technical setup required: The file is generated and refreshed weekly, no coding or manual work needed.
  • Future-proof your website for AI search: Make sure your site is ready for how people find information today, and tomorrow.
  • Built into Yoast SEO, free for everyone: Available in one click, no upgrade needed.”

Read the Yoast SEO announcement here:

Future proof your site for LLMs llms.txt

Featured Image by Shutterstock/Cagkan Sayin