How I Blog — The 21 WordPress Plugins That Keep Me Sane 166 Comments

Topics: Writing and Blogging


So, you want a high-traffic blog… (Photo: Bill Gracey)

The following post can be considered Part II in a series on how I blog. Part I, which covers mostly everything not below, is titled “How to Build a High-Traffic Blog Without Killing Yourself.

Beginning at the Beginning

My very first blog post of all time was December 31, 2006 (scroll down here). One comment! Ah, success…


Who the hell designed that atrocity? Oh, it was me…

For many months, I “blogged” by imitation, putting out a lot of boring stuff. I felt, and still feel, that this imitate-before-you-create phase was critical to finding my own voice. But, as one then DoubleClick manager put it to me over wine, after reviewing my posts:

“A mediocre blog is more of a liability than no blog at all.”

Taking this to heart, I upgraded, both in terms of design and writing. I started publishing more original long-form content and organizing around a few central themes. I invested $1,500 and launched the blog you now see. Well, it was close…

The very first post was March 7, 2007. It scored six comments (a 500% increase!)… and I was ecstatic.

This work was done in preparation for April 27, 2007, the launch date for The 4-Hour Workweek. I viewed the blog primarily as a marketing tool. This changed when lightning struck with “How to Lose 20 lbs. of Fat in 30 Days… Without Doing Any Exercise.

This post, my tenth out of nearly 400, remains my most popular post of all-time: 5,000+ comments and counting!

Since then, I’ve used this blog for social causes, as a confessional during hard times, as a diary, and for learning from people around the world. It’s now the heartbeat for everything that I do.

Here are some stats as of this writing:

385 posts
62 drafts
72,897 comments
Total spam deleted 1,170,822

These days, this odd blog often gets more than 1,000,000 unique visitors per month. It’s hard to believe.

How Do I Manage Things?

This blog is run by me and one assistant based in Canada. I don’t have an editorial calendar, nor a set frequency of posting. I have a few criteria for posts, and I try and write only when I can satisfy them. If that’s once every 3-4 weeks, so be it. If the spirit moves me three times in one week, that’s fine, too.

How I manage the tech, the trolls, the spam, etc. is perhaps best reflected in my tools.

This blog is run on open-source WordPress, hosted on a dedicated server at MediaTemple, and I use a collection of free plug-ins to keep me maximally productive in minimal time.

Below is the shortlist that keeps me sane.

Akismet
Used by millions, Akismet is quite possibly the best way in the world to protect your blog from comment and trackback spam. It keeps your site protected from spam even while you sleep.

All in One SEO Pack
Out-of-the-box SEO for your WordPress blog. WordPress is excellent for Google juice to start with, and this makes it even better.

Audio player
Audio Player is a highly configurable but simple mp3 player for all your audio needs. You can customise the player’s color scheme to match your blog theme, have it automatically show track information from the encoded ID3 tags and more.

Comment Probation AKA “Tim’s Probation”
This is my first plug-in! Well, kind of. While we drank vodka at the Word Championships of BBQ in Memphis, Matt Mullenweg and his team helped create this plug-in on the spot (Thanks Nacin, Otto, and Scott!). It solves an important problem for many bloggers. In WordPress comment moderation settings, you can typically choose between a) let everything through with no moderation (bad idea), allow comments to appear automatically for commenters who have previously approved comments, or moderate every single comment (hugely time-consuming). So what do you do if you get a smart but kinda snarky comment, one that makes you wonder if this guy is going to be a pain in the ass? If you approve him, he’ll have free reign to go nuts in your comments. If you have 20 comments a day, perhaps you can watch it all, but not at 100 or 1,000 comments a day. This plugin solves the issue: it allows you to put a comment author “on probation,” approving one comment, but not automatically approving future comments. Sweet!

Feedburner Feed Replacement
Forwards all feed traffic to Feedburner while letting through some important User-Agents.

flickrRSS
Allows you to integrate the photos from a Flickr RSS feed into your site.

Full Text Feed
Prevents WordPress 2.1+ from adding a more link to your website’s feed.

Jetpack by WordPress.com
Bring the power of the WordPress.com cloud to your self-hosted WordPress. Jetpack enables you to connect your blog to a WordPress.com account to use the powerful features normally only available to WordPress.com users.

Limit Login Attempts
Limit rate of login attempts, including by way of cookies, for each IP. I view this as a must-have, as people try to brute-force WP passwords all the time.

Mindvalley Comments Moderator
How do you let someone moderate comments for you without giving them the ability to change posts or accidentally cause other trouble? Use this plug-in, that’s how. It creates a custom role that enables only Comment Moderation actions and pages.

Page Links To
Allows you to point WordPress pages or posts to a URL of your choosing. Good for setting up navigational links to non-WP sections of your site or to off-site resources. Since my content is scattered all over the place, this is very helpful.

Post-Plugin Library
Does nothing by itself but supplies common code for the Similar Posts, Recent Posts, Random Posts, and Recent Comments plugins. Make sure you have the latest version of this plugin.

Similar Posts
Displays a highly configurable list of related posts. Similarity can be based on any combination of word usage in the content, title, or tags. Don’t be disturbed if it takes a few moments to complete the installation — the plugin is indexing your posts. Instructions and help online. Requires the latest version of the Post-Plugin Library to be installed.

Subscribe To Comments
Allows readers to receive notifications of new comments that are posted to an entry. Based on version 1 from Scriptygoddess.

Twitter Tools
A complete integration between your WordPress blog and Twitter. Bring your tweets into your blog and pass your blog posts to Twitter. Show your tweets in your sidebar, and post tweets from your WordPress admin.

VaultPress
Protect your content, themes, plugins, and settings with real-time backup and automated security scanning from VaultPress. Activate, enter your registration key, and never worry again. (Note: I pay for this one.)

WordPress Database Backup
On-demand backup of your WordPress database.

WP-Footnotes
Generate footnotes for posts.

WP Hide Post
Enables a user to control the visibility of items on the blog by making posts and pages selectively hidden in different views throughout the blog, such as on the front page, category pages, search results, etc… The hidden item remains otherwise accessible directly using permalinks, and also visible to search engines as part of the sitemap (at least). This plugin enables new SEO possibilities for authors since it enables them to create new posts and pages without being forced to display them on their front and in feeds.

WP Super Cache
Very fast caching plugin for WordPress. This is the only thing that could save the blog from crashing when I hit the front pages of Digg, StumbleUpon, etc.

And… that’s it!

What are your favorite must-have plug-ins? Also, did you like this post? Would you like to hear more about how I blog, or anything related to writing?

Thanks for letting me know in the comments.

###

Odds and Ends:

Here’s an update from my birthday challenge, which started one week ago, sent from Kushal, the CEO of Vittana.org:

Hi Tim,

Just thought you might enjoy a first-week update:

* You and the extended 4-hour family have raised over $81,000 in the first week! (This includes your match + $10,000 to kick things off.)
* 4-hour family from 23+ different countries including faraway places like Germany, Israel & Kenya have joined your Give-Back Birthday.
* On average, 100 people join your Give-Back Birthday every day. That’s one person every 3.6 minutes. More than 700 people have participated already.
* In total, you and the extended 4-hour family have already changed the lives of 152 Vittana youth studying 47 different livelihoods, everything from nurses to teachers to mechanics.
* The country your fans care most about? Bolivia is now #1, coming out of nowhere, with 38 helped youth. Paraguay and Philippines are close behind with 35 and 32 helped youth each.
* Your total impact already? More than $12 million in new lifetime income to fight youth poverty!

Want to know how your team has already made $12 million in “total impact”? Total Impact = the estimate of new lifetime income generated by your Vittana Loan.

Say, for example, you helped 25-year-old Ana Lizbeth increase her income from $5 to $9 a day by funding half of her loan. In that case, half of her $58,400 of additional lifetime income would get credited to your Total Impact score.

Why $58,400? She’ll earn $4 more per day, which works out to $1,460 more per year or $58,400 more in her working life.

How do we know it’s accurate? Our local partner gets current income, estimates 3-year earning power and we do annual follow-ups to make sure it’s tracking according to the original estimate.

Thank your readers, Tim — for EVERYTHING they do in this world! :)

To raise the full $100,000, we need to rally about 300 more people to join in the next 72 hours. I think we can do it, but it’d be a shame to fall short. Please keep it up!

Kushal

Could you be one of those 300 people?

Please visit this page (it needs to hit $60,000 for me to match to $100,000, as I already put in $10,000). Even $1 can make a huge difference. If the spirit moves you, here you go.

Thanks!

Posted on July 26th, 2012

Leave a Comment or Question

Comment Rules: Remember what Fonzie was like? Cool. That’s how we’re gonna be — cool. Critical is fine, but if you’re rude, we’ll delete your stuff. Please do not put your URL in the comment text and please use your PERSONAL name or initials and not your business name, as the latter comes off like spam. Have fun and thanks for adding to the conversation! (Thanks to Brian Oberkirch for the inspiration)




166 Comments

  • DerekJuly 26th, 2012, 7:52 pm

    I’ve enjoyed using the plugin called upPrev plugin. It creates that New York Times little popup at the bottom right of your blog.

    http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/upprev-nytimes-style-next-post-jquery-animated-fly-in-button/

    iIt’s not that intrusive… especially if you have a content column on the left and a sidebar on the right. And it generates decent click traffic.

    Reply
  • Scott DinsmoreJuly 26th, 2012, 7:56 pm

    Been waiting for this one for a long time. Nicely done.

    Gravity Forms is unreal for creating simple forms as well pretty complex tests and such with logic built in. Used it to create the Should I Quit Test and it worked like a charm.

    Thanks Tim!

    Reply
    • Davey — July 31st, 2012, 6:28 pm

      I agree with Scott. Plus, this was a very informative post Tim. A post like with monthly would be awesome!

      Reply
  • Mindy Drake — July 26th, 2012, 7:56 pm

    Editorial Calendar is one of my favorites.

    Reply
    • Luke StarbuckJuly 26th, 2012, 9:29 pm

      Also one of my favourites!!

      I’m actually not sure how I would live without this plugin – for anyone writing ahead of time, Editorial Calendar is absolutely necessary.

      I just wish I could also ‘schedule’ my Mailchimp campaigns on the same calendar!!

      Reply
    • Roxann Hendrickson — August 3rd, 2012, 4:00 pm

      Mindy & Luke, do you have a link to the Editorial Calendar you’re recommending?

      Reply
  • Stanley LeeJuly 26th, 2012, 7:56 pm

    Wow, Tim. Can’t believe the timing you shared about your very first blogging site. Btw, I emailed Amy re: whether you’ll be interested in hearing about a suggestion for your site, despite of you being on tight deadlines for the book. Is the best thing to do being to send the suggestions with screenshots and reasoning?

    Reply
  • Chuck RylantJuly 26th, 2012, 7:59 pm

    Thanks for sharing this Tim. Great post. I’m surprised you don’t use DiggDigg for social media links. Although, it seems to have a conflict with WP Super Cache and other cache plug-ins. At least on my end.

    Reply
  • Joel ZaslofskyJuly 26th, 2012, 8:01 pm

    Hey Tim,

    It’s always awesome to get a behind-the-scenes look at what simplifies your life. This is highly relevant to me so I’m taking notes and making an action plan for tomorrow to implement some of the stuff here.

    Thanks for the great WordPress resource man!

    Reply
  • Jamie AlexanderJuly 26th, 2012, 8:02 pm

    I like Optin Skin from Viperchill.

    Great for people like me who can’t make optin forms. You can basically put them anywhere in the blog.

    Reply
  • Mike JulyJuly 26th, 2012, 8:04 pm

    Hi Tim,

    Nice collection of plugins – a little more than the obvious essential ones but not over the top.

    A quick note… if you use the ‘Contact Form 7′ plugin, it has occasionally been noted to conflict with WP Super Cache. I’ve experienced this personally. Just something to be aware of.

    A couple you missed if I can so humbly point them out:

    Tiny MCE Advanced
    Sociable
    ShareThis
    Geopress by the WP Coach (installs a configurable KML file – essential for local SEO).
    Google XML Sitemaps

    Thanks Tim!

    MJ

    Reply
  • SkyeLoganJuly 26th, 2012, 8:04 pm

    Great read and hatting/tips! I Evernoted it for future ref. I actually forwarded it to a VA of mine as well for some correction for her! LOL!

    Reply
  • Casey CamilleriJuly 26th, 2012, 8:06 pm

    Akismet absolutely saved my life when I first started out. I’ve seen the Popularity Contest being used a lot and I love the concept plus from a user stand point it makes it so easy to learn about a new blog fast. Thanks so much for the useful tips Tim. The hits keep coming!

    Reply
  • Jon SymonsJuly 26th, 2012, 8:09 pm

    WPtouch – too much traffic these days on phones and tablets not to have a mobile optimized version of a site. This plugin does it.

    Reply
    • Doug — July 27th, 2012, 7:54 pm

      I agree, but instead of WP Touch I might would prefer to go with a responsive theme that adjusts layout depending on screen type desktop, tablet, phone. There are not as many responsive theme choices, but most of the ones I have worked with are pretty nicely done.

      Reply
    • baa — July 31st, 2012, 6:21 am

      oooh, thanks for this. Just tried it and it works great.

      Reply
  • MattJuly 26th, 2012, 8:09 pm

    Great list Tim,

    However I would suggest moving from All In One to Yoast WordPress SEO Plugin and form Super Cache to W3 Total Cache. They are more advanced than the ones you are using.

    Cheers,

    Matt

    Reply
  • Ben LongJuly 26th, 2012, 8:11 pm

    another timely post perfect for my current journey through the WP trenches!

    SEO by Yoast is a great free one too

    Reply
  • Scott DinsmoreJuly 26th, 2012, 8:12 pm

    Btw guys, meant to show you a couple examples of Gravity Forms in action if curious.

    Conditional logic that computes a score, for Should I Quit Test: http://shouldiquittest.com/

    A simple form creator for our Living Legends Reader Spotlights: http://bit.ly/OqGZiW

    My buddy Jonathan Fields turned me on to this last year and it’s been unbelievably useful.

    Hope it helps!

    Reply
  • BradJuly 26th, 2012, 8:13 pm

    Tim,

    Thanks for sharing your original design. While definitely cringe-worthy, it does show how far you’ve come. I’ve been a reader of yours since the 1st edition of 4HWW and have always loved your blog design. Keep up the great work and thanks for sharing!

    Brad

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissJuly 26th, 2012, 10:51 pm

      Thanks so much for reading my stuff (sometimes drivel, otherwise known as “dribble” on the Internet) for so long! Really appreciate it, man. Truly.

      Pura vida,

      Tim

      Reply
  • Christopher O — July 26th, 2012, 8:13 pm

    In addition to WP Super Cache try cloudflare.com. They provide free CDN services which significantly speed up and reduce your server’s load; plus code optimization (makes it smaller & faster), DDOS protection, downtime protection (caching), and anycast hosted dns.

    Also, your favorite Linux/FreeBSD + nginx webserver + PHP-FPM make a fantastic setup for both low and high traffic WordPress sites.

    Side note: I engineer this kind of stuff and I’m not affiliated with anyone mentioned.

    Reply
  • Brian CassingenaJuly 26th, 2012, 8:13 pm

    Wow Tim, thanks for the Comment Probation plugin, I have been using WP for years and didn’t realize – if you approve a comment, that account now has free reign to comment unmoderated? Sounds like a design flaw in WP, but this plugin will go on every site I own asap. Thanks mate! (PS Can I interview you for my new Copywriting Secrets Book?)

    Reply
  • John FotheringhamJuly 26th, 2012, 8:19 pm

    Compfight is quite useful. It allows you to find Creative Commons licensed photos for posts so you don’t have to waste time wading through Flikr or waste money buying stock photos.

    Reply
  • SethJuly 26th, 2012, 8:27 pm

    A couple plugins that I use on almost every WP site are Backup Buddy, Simple Social Icons, and Word Fence security.

    Reply
  • TysonJuly 26th, 2012, 8:27 pm

    Hi Tim,
    All of these are great plugins! I love wordpress, it is such a great cms. One neat plugin I use on a couple of my blogs is called Sharebar it adds a little floating share bar to the side of pages and posts for easy social sharing. You can then add whatever social network share buttons you want to the bar. Its really great for encouraging social sharing.

    Personally I would love to read more about your blogging/ writing habits. I know you have some information out there but specifically how do you come up with content ideas and your research methods.

    Thanks for another great read.

    Reply
  • Connor HoodJuly 26th, 2012, 8:32 pm

    WordPress 2.1 (re: Full Text Feed plugin)? Really, Tim?

    Reply
  • matt — July 26th, 2012, 8:35 pm

    Excellent post Tim! Thought it might be helpful to mention that some of the “free” plugins that you suggested do have monthly cost, specifically Vaultpress and Akismet. Both well worth it. Thanks again for the behind the scenes view of your blog.

    Reply
  • Thomas @ Mobile App TycoonJuly 26th, 2012, 8:48 pm

    Wow – a lot of plugins here that I’ve never heard of. Definitely the first one I’m going to try is Popularity Contest – I’ve been looking for something like that!

    Thomas

    Reply
    • Jason FordJuly 26th, 2012, 9:20 pm

      Thomas, I noticed you are a mobile app tycoon eh? Any chance you can use your coding skills to bring Popularity Contest into the WordPress 3.+ world?

      Reply
  • Jill KoenigJuly 26th, 2012, 8:48 pm

    Thank you!

    I will be adding several of these plugins to my blog.

    Jill

    Reply
  • Thanh PhamJuly 26th, 2012, 9:06 pm

    I’ve always wondered what some of your WP plugins were. Thanks for sharing.

    For anyone interested, here are some other plugins worthwhile looking into:

    * No Self Pings
    * Print Friendly and PDF (Tim: lots of your readers would love this one)
    * Tweet Old Post

    One thing to keep in mind for people who use subscribe-to-comments and alike. Some people will get emails from posts they subscribed to months or years ago, and they have the tendency to flag those emails as spam. This will hurt your email deliverability – especially if you have an email list on the same domain. Something to keep in mind and to consider.

    Reply
  • ChristineJuly 26th, 2012, 9:09 pm

    This comes at such perfect timing I can’t even tell you. I was just adding a Facebook page to link my wordpress blog. I have no idea what I’m doing with any of it but I love the process. Your work inspires me to be creative and live the best life. Thank- you.

    Reply
  • Jason FordJuly 26th, 2012, 9:18 pm

    Dude, I had been searching for the “Most Popular” widget on the right sidebar for so long! Sad to see the widget, Popularity Contest, is now deprecated, though. :( Anyone got skills in the Ferrissverse who can bring it back to life for WordPress 3.+?

    Reply
  • Jay SorianoJuly 26th, 2012, 9:28 pm

    Thanks Tim,

    I installed a couple on my websites. A few more everyone should consider:

    - Instapress – For showing off your Instagram photos

    - Use Google Libraries – Not really any reason not to have, speeds up website.

    - SEO Facebook Comments – On my blog, I like to keep things personal using Facebook Comments.. easier to make connections that way too.

    - WordPress SEO – Like Ben mentioned above, this plugin by Yoast is top-notch, and I’ve tried them all! It has an easy import option if you’ve used other popular SEO plugins as well.

    I use a couple others for different websites too.. really just depends.

    Reply
  • Luke StarbuckJuly 26th, 2012, 9:35 pm

    One of my favorite WordPress plugins that hasn’t been mentioned is ‘Comment Redirect by Yoast.’

    It allows you to provide a unique page to first-time commenters, after they have posted their comment. Great to offer some value-added content, or provide links to other useful resources for engaged readers.

    Luke

    Reply
  • Alex - TheAdvenTouristJuly 26th, 2012, 9:39 pm

    Thanks for this collection. Just bought BackupBuddy didn’t know about WordPress Database Backup.
    I hope that my blog will run into the problem that you use WP Super Cache for.. :-)

    Reply
    • Dr Martin RussellJuly 28th, 2012, 11:03 pm

      Hey Alex – you won’t need the WP Database Backup if you have Backup Buddy.

      Tim – Why do you have WP Database Backup at all? IMO WP-DB-Backup is THE most dangerous plugin ever. It is extremely popular but it fools people into thinking they are safely backed up, when really it just does the database ie only posts, comments and the like.

      You backup with Vaultpress from the makers of WordPress itself, which is at the high end, so why have more.

      And for those who don’t want that premium option there are other solutions as I cover here – http://bit.ly/PYcOTc

      Reply
  • M. McKeeJuly 26th, 2012, 9:46 pm

    My two cents. I like the Spyder Spanker Plugin from spyderspankerpro, Tim, because it lets me use a GUI to stop bots. Sometimes you look in your logs and see bingbot hitting your site like nuts, only to find it’s from a malicious IP address and is faking the user agent.

    Reply
  • Aaron WrightJuly 26th, 2012, 9:51 pm

    One plugin I always install by default on my blogs is Web Ninja Google Analytics. It makes it extremely easy to install Google Analytics, and even gives you a stats summary on your admin dashboard. Easy to use, works well.

    Reply
  • PamelaJuly 26th, 2012, 10:00 pm

    I also like Digg Digg. It adds a floating bar with share buttons to the blog.

    Reply
  • Iris EbenJuly 26th, 2012, 10:33 pm

    Thanks for the plug-ins recs Tim!

    Post request: A detailed post of how you begin, research and compose your articles for this blog. An expansion on your answers in “Paulo Coelho: How I Write”

    Are you a Scrivener fan? Do you have a preferred time for doing interviews? What is the lead time from draft to publish? How do you decide a topic? What role does your virtual assistant play in the process?

    Iris

    Reply
  • Aaron FriedmanJuly 26th, 2012, 10:48 pm

    Thanks for the great article. I liked the part about your stats. It’s amazing how blogs and message can really compound when you resonate with an audience. I appreciated everyone’s follow up comments as well. Here is a list of tools that I use on the blogs that I build.

    Publishing tools (content recommendation)
    Zemanta, Insights, Inbound Writer, Viper’s Video Quicktags

    Syndication and Sharing
    ABC3k, Network Publisher, Pinterest “Pin It” Button, TweetMeme Retweet Button, Google+ Plugin. Share and Follow

    Spam
    Bad Behavior, Growmap Anti Spambot Plugin, Akismet

    SEO
    SEOpressor, Internal Link Building, google xml sitemaps, Tag Grouping

    Add To Post (can add content before or after posts automatically)

    Reply
  • RasmusJuly 26th, 2012, 10:56 pm

    Hey Tim

    What are you actually using Jetpack for? It’s really just a collection of different nice to have plugins.

    I mine opinion however if you don’t use it all then it’s just a super heavy plugin taking up a lot of resources for those of us on a shared hosting account.

    Also regarding caching I’ve moved to W3 Total Cache. It makes advanced stuff like setting up CDN on amazon cloudfront a total breeze (if you jut have an Amazon AWS account it’s all point and click).

    Reply
  • Josh SchlottmanJuly 26th, 2012, 11:04 pm

    Hey Tim, thanks for sharing your blogging insights as I’ve always been curious about your blogging process. I’ve been following you since the 4HWW days and your blog is one of the few I actually still look forward to reading.

    I would also recommend the SI CAPTCHA Anti-Spam plugin for WordPress as well. It easily cut my spam by 80% just by putting in a simple CAPTCHA box in the comments section for free.

    Keep up the awesomeness!

    Reply
    • Ray — July 28th, 2012, 6:27 pm

      I wonder if it also affected the amount of comments you received. Did you notice a drop-off after you installed it?

      Reply
  • Paul — July 26th, 2012, 11:34 pm

    Thanks for sharing, Tim! How do you manage ad space?

    Reply
  • Corey — July 27th, 2012, 12:02 am

    Hey Tim,

    I enjoy your blog. Happy birthday, I donated $35 to the cause.

    Reply
  • CHris StottJuly 27th, 2012, 2:33 am

    Great to see the plugins used on a such a high traffic blog.

    Quick question: You have this design for quite a while now (how many dog years is one Internet year?). I was wondering if you had plans to update it (not that there is anything wrong with it per se), especially to make it more tablet and mobile optimised, with (I believe) a fully responsive design being the best option.

    I’d be happy to help to pay back for the reading and learning from your writing since 2008.

    Reply
  • Jurriaan — July 27th, 2012, 3:01 am

    In the past I used super cache to but now I run all wordpress websites in combination with Varnish caching. You do have to get varnish up and running on your webserver, but once configured, it makes your website fly.

    There is a wordpress plugin to make sure that the cache is cleared for a secific page when you hit save after editing. It also offers a full cache purge at the press of a button.

    As I mentioned, it takes a little effort or some help from a specialist but once running it will drastically decrease load time and high traffic will no longer be an issue.

    Reply
  • Ellis BenusJuly 27th, 2012, 5:16 am

    cForms II from Delicious Days (not in WordPress.org repository) is bar none the best forms tool for WordPress. VERY user friendly.

    Then Better WP Security might be a good idea too.
    It does so much I can’t even explain. :-)

    Reply
  • Ryan — July 27th, 2012, 6:34 am

    I loved this article and I forwarded it to many of my blogging friends, but I was hoping you could give some suggestions for a sales page/site.

    I am set to launch an info product in October per your recommendations in 4HWW, but I was hoping you had a new sample page or site recommendation to base our sales site off of. I have an early version of 4HWW and pxmethod.com is no longer available.

    Reply
  • Paulina — July 27th, 2012, 6:36 am

    you are just great.

    Reply
  • JeremyJuly 27th, 2012, 6:40 am

    Always good to see a glimpse behind the kimono :)

    Just keep in mind that “overusing” plugins can slow down your site, so make sure every one has a purpose and if there is a key aspect to your site you need a plugin for, don’t be afraid to get the paid version.

    Although it is slightly a “fad”, blogging can be such a powerful tool and I definitely get tons of value from your blog, Tim.

    Reply
  • David HennesseyJuly 27th, 2012, 8:09 am

    Hi Tim,

    Thanks for sharing and I am happy to share too.

    I see so far in the comments no one has mentioned a plug in if you wish to use a contact form. I use Fast Secure Contact Form which connects to Askimet to make sure the message I am receiving is not spam. It works great!

    Also, I like you Tim use VaultPress by WordPress to back up my site constantly. It saved me when my 300 plus article site was hacked a few years ago on another hosting companies system. I left them right after the event. All I need to do was contact the team at VaultPress when the hack happened and they re installed an uncontaminated version of my site and I was up an running in no time.

    Finally, I just thought I would put the word out there that I have a new site with a FREE e course to help people build their wellness businesses. In case, anyone is looking for extra ideas I have used to build my wellness business check out the Grow Your Wellness Biz site when you click on my name by the picture on this comment.

    Enjoy a wonderful day,

    David

    Reply
  • RobJuly 27th, 2012, 8:20 am

    Happy birthday Tim. It is a pleasure to donate to such a great cause.

    Reply
  • BennyJuly 27th, 2012, 8:22 am

    Great to see what’s behind the curtain.

    One of my fav plugins is ReplyMe. What is does is when I reply to a comment, that person will get an email with their comment and my reply.

    I like it cause it shows that I do appreciate their comment and did reply to it. Often we leave a comment on a blog and have no idea if it got a reply. The only way is to go back to the blog post and check.

    Reply
  • skip blankleyJuly 27th, 2012, 8:49 am

    might already be on here but SEO for wordpress by Yoast. i have seen incredible results from using this plugin

    Reply
  • J. DelancyJuly 27th, 2012, 8:54 am

    Thanks again, Tim. I just started blogging about three months ago, so many of these tools and plugins are unnecessary and confusing. As I get better, I’ll use this post as a resource on what to do next.

    All The Best

    Reply
  • Glenn NicholasJuly 27th, 2012, 9:18 am

    Really interesting timeline Tim.

    The OIO Publisher plugin is a useful (commission free) ad server.

    The Custom Post Type UI (user interface) plugin unlocks a lot of useful features in WordPress – it has a learning curve, but doesn’t need programming skills. Add in the Mini Loops plugin (a steeper learning curve – this plugin works on custom post types as well as posts), and the combination gives you many options for presenting rich content through WordPress.

    Reply
  • Peter TanhamJuly 27th, 2012, 9:20 am

    Awesome list Tim!

    One addition I use on a lot of WP sites, for those who can’t afford the (very reasonable) $15 /mo for VaultPress – “Updraft” is a great, free alternative.

    You can use it to do scheduled backups to almost any remote server (rackspace, amazon etc.)

    Reply
  • Jay CastilloJuly 27th, 2012, 9:37 am

    Hi Tim,

    Thanks a lot for sharing what’s running at the backend. First of all, I’m glad to see a high traffic blog like yours that actually has more than 20 plugins. Yeah, we all know that more plugins can slow things down but if they are essential and configured correctly, it wouldn’t be a problem and your blog is proof.

    I’m also pleasantly surprised to see a lot of plugins you use are very familiar as I use most of them as well, except for jetpack which I stay away from as I noticed it eats up a lot of server memory from my VPS.

    Those you use that I don’t use yet are vaultpress, limit logon attempts, comment probation, and popularity contest, and I’ll give them a try soon once I decide to remove some other plugins (20+ plugins are okay but 30+ might be pushing it too far… hehe).

    Some I use that I would recommend are W3 Total Cache (shaved about 3 seconds from my loadtime using WP Super Cache), Max Blog Press Subscribers magnet (effectively tripled my email subscription rate by making it easier for visitors to subscribe), and Ninja Affiliate for automated conversion of keywords to links (saved a ton of work for me).

    By the way, what wordpress theme do you use?

    Reply
  • Joe TimminsJuly 27th, 2012, 9:51 am

    Wow. Amazingly useful post — partly for the post itself but also for all the great additions by the commenters.

    [note apropos this topic: the auto spell check here flags "commenters" :) ]

    Can’t wait to play with everyone’s great suggestions.

    Reply
  • David ParsonsJuly 27th, 2012, 9:54 am

    been waiting for this list for a long time!!! Thank you soo much tim. The fact that you only configure a few plugins… im impressed!

    Reply
  • Jason — July 27th, 2012, 9:57 am

    Hi Tim,

    Not related to this post of yours but thought you might find this article interesting:

    http://www.scienceofrunning.com/2012/01/crossfit-endurance-tabata-sprints-and.html

    Reply
  • Brandon BreshearsJuly 27th, 2012, 10:05 am

    Awesome stuff Tim, I like this kind of post, I’ll use several of these plugins on my sites.

    Reply
  • JCJuly 27th, 2012, 10:16 am

    Thanks for the list, Tim! Just downloaded a few plugins from your list and messing around with them now. :)

    Reply
  • Eddie PhillipsJuly 27th, 2012, 11:41 am

    Thanks, Tim!

    I’ve been hesitant to invest too much into our blog until just recently. I really hate having to force people to register to post a comment, so I think I’ll start with Akismet. I expect the rest will be huge assets as well. I’ll post back on my experience with them.

    Reply
  • Kari KenefickJuly 27th, 2012, 11:55 am

    Not sure I remember 35, Tim, but I do ‘get’ being a Cancer…July 1 being my date. Obviously you’re a student of science and research…my M.S. is in bacteriology so I get the science bit. Work as a science editor now. Wondering how you lean spiritually? Do you believe that horoscope has any influence on personality or personal traits? My international friends (Trinidad and India) know detailed information based on astrological signs and I find it FUN and sometimes applicable.
    Just watched your 2009 video about blogging (linked in today’s post)…excellent and thanks. Haven’t gotten a blog off the ground yet, but get closer each month…you made some notable points..and I took notes.
    Finally, since you’re busy, and might not have time for pets(?) happy to cybershare either of my dogs…they will be the main blog topic once it’s up and running. Take care and keep up the good work. Don’t think you’re exactly the guy portrayed in the media–a good thing.
    Did I say thanks…

    Reply
  • Bob DunnJuly 27th, 2012, 12:21 pm

    Hey Tim, great list. Actually read all the comments as I see most of my favorites you are either using and or has already been mentioned. So excuse me if I repeat ; )

    I have gone through quite a few sharing plugins, and am using Twitter Facebook social share which has the main ones I need. I’m not a huge fan of the floating boxes, as they don’t work good on mobile and can also be lost on a certain smaller browser windows.

    I always install Google XML Sitemaps for page ranking, and Vipers Video Quicktags is a great one for embedding videos easily while have some customization on the video skins. Also Livefyre for commenting system and nRelate Related Content is great for sharing posts like the Similar Posts you are using. One has to be careful on related posts plugins and some can really slow down your sites performance.

    Reply
  • LeoJuly 27th, 2012, 1:00 pm

    Hi Tim,

    I was driving today and wanted to re-read one of your post … and it hit me ..

    I could not do this while driving … and when I get to my destination, I start doing something else. So …

    You should do podcasts!

    Really – record it, have someone transcribe it so you can post it… do your regular magic with adding images / videos / links, and this way, people who have time – will read it … and people on the run can listen to the same post.

    Just an idea – but I think it will be popular!

    Leo

    Reply
  • JamieJuly 27th, 2012, 2:11 pm

    This is a timely reminder I have to get all the plugins sorted for my new blog. It is also very interesting to look through your first blog as it is a lesson that everyone started somewhere and not everyone was an overnight success.

    How were you doing for traffic in those early days? I see you didn’t have many comments but were you getting the numbers in?

    Reply
  • Michael MurphyJuly 27th, 2012, 3:13 pm

    Awesome post!! I’ve got both of your books and love them both. I recently started my own blog/podcast and I already use some of the plugins you mentioned in this article. Hopefully someday my blog will have 1/10th the traffic yours gets! :)

    Reply
  • LeonJuly 27th, 2012, 5:17 pm

    Wow, there’s a lot of plugin’s I never even thought about using, especially from all you other commenters. I run 15 right now, and mine seems to be running r e a l l y slow. I couldn’t even think about adding another one. But I may have to give super cache a try. I like the compfight one though. Definitely would save alot of time looking for featured images to use.

    Thank you Tim and thank you guys for these suggestions.

    Reply
  • John JJuly 27th, 2012, 6:03 pm

    Its all about WordPress! There are a few I need to download. Thanks!!!

    Reply
  • Gino OrlandiJuly 27th, 2012, 8:31 pm

    Media Temple is a great host I use them. Also, I used all in one seo for a long time but switched to the yoast seo plugin and so far it seems pretty good.

    Reply
  • Doug — July 27th, 2012, 10:30 pm

    Tim, one of the things I love about your blog is that it starts a conversation that leads to suggestions and recommendations in the comments that rival those in the original post. I have worked with a number of these plugin solutions, but some of the suggestions you made and others made in the comments are going to make me sit down and create a new checklist of must-have plugins for new projects. I am beginning to wonder if this post is not your way of crowd sourcing some recommendations for the next version of your blog. As always, love the site.

    Reply
  • MarcJuly 28th, 2012, 3:54 am

    Nice list of plugins… I’ve heard great things about the “backup buddy” plugin, it’s a premium plugin though, so not free unfortunately:(

    Reply
  • KashJuly 28th, 2012, 4:06 am

    While its possible to get the list of plugins used at your website by looking at the source code :) it is really informative to get an insight into how you’re using them.

    Here is the list of must-have wordpress plugins I use and recommend to others:

    Insights: allows you to quickly search and insert information (links, images, videos, maps, news..) into your blog posts. http://bit.ly/N3gIpF

    nrelate Related Content: to display related content http://bit.ly/N3gFdm

    The Slide by SimpleReach: Random content post slider. Awesome to keep visitors on site (not that Tim needs this :) ) http://bit.ly/N3gMFT

    WordPress Automatic Upgrade: Extremely helpful. Allows you to upgrade your wordpress installation with few clicks. http://bit.ly/N3gTB7

    WordPress Editorial Calendar: Allows you to conveniently schedule your posts, especially when you have a lot of new content coming in or you work in a multi-author environment. http://bit.ly/N3gY7R

    Reply
  • Chad BJuly 28th, 2012, 8:10 am

    I’ve seen a few people mention W3 Total Cache as a replacement for WP Super Cache, and I agree, but no one has really explained why.

    The long of the short of it is that W3 allows for a wide range of opcode caches, which are generally mush faster at delivering content than disk based caching methods (when configured correctly). W3 also has very good built in minification, allowing a person to combine and minify stylesheets and js.

    That’s basically it, hope that’s useful to someone. :)

    Reply
  • Zach Even - Esh — July 28th, 2012, 6:42 pm

    Timmy – holy crap, time goes way tooooo fast!!! I remember sharing 4HWW first time on my blogspot blog, haha

    What is the plug in for the Tim’s caves, popular, etc?

    I need to throw one on my blog asap with all the content amassed

    Thnx Big time, brutha!

    Keep kicking ass!

    Reply
  • Maria LanningJuly 28th, 2012, 8:01 pm

    Thanks for sharing your stats. As a new blogger, its helpful to see the stats for such a large blog as yours, and know what to reach for. Great job on your success!

    Reply
  • BravoJuly 28th, 2012, 9:06 pm

    Limit Login Attempts=

    This is something I was always concerned about, but never even thought there was a plugin for this.

    18 lockouts since I set it up

    SCARY!!!

    Thanks again Tim for helping me make my blog even more awesome, and now even more secure!

    Reply
  • DannyJuly 29th, 2012, 9:42 am

    Been waiting for this post :)

    Reply
  • Roger KJuly 29th, 2012, 12:41 pm

    Tim,

    The caption under your initial blog design is interesting: “Who the hell designed that atrocity? Oh, it was me…” The CRITICAL thing about you then-new blog isn’t the design, rather, it’s that you got it up and running!! ACTION, baby… You took it. You weren’t perfect in your abilities/approach/design. But you moved past all of that and got it out there, then refined as you learned. For me, this is the big takeaway. The 21 plug -ins are great to know, and very, very helpful. But you didn’t start with all of them, and neither do the people trying to get their blogs up and running. They just need to do it!

    As always – thanks for guidance and insight – we’re all grateful to you for leading the charge!

    Reply
  • Anna — July 29th, 2012, 1:01 pm

    It’s seriously time for a new photo shoot, Ferriss. I don’t think you’ve even had hair since 2008. :)

    Reply
  • Ryan BradleyJuly 29th, 2012, 4:49 pm

    For those who like Mashable’s social media sharing system, its the Digg Digg WordPress plugin.

    Reply
  • Mohamed AnanJuly 29th, 2012, 5:07 pm

    Awesome list Tim.

    I have some favourites.

    1) ClickToTweet: Tweet a random text, a wisdom or any phrase worth to be the next famous “Tim tweet” and it would uniquely appear in the post. Next to it you would find “tweet this” button. Comes with Google Analytics integration and it’s customizable. Very effective for spreading viral tweets.

    2) Clicky: A plugin requires a clicky account. It’s awesome as it offers real time monitoring for your website visitors. You can use it to test visitors’ behaviour toward certain pages and links within pages “yea it’s that good” and it offers a boat load of analytical data. I know you love that Analytical stuff.

    3) Comment Redirect: simply direct your first time commenter to a special “Thank You” page. New commenters loves it. And encourage them to come back and builds a community.

    4) Sociable: best tool to encourage your readers to share.

    5) WordPress backup to dropbox: Requires a Dropbox account but it backup your blog and upload the copy to your dropbox account automatically. Less tasks. More productivity

    6) Studiopress Genesis framework: It’s not really a plugin but I can’t start a website with it. When my first online business got hacked it was a nightmare. This framework gave me better security and SEO customizability. I can’t thank these folks enough.

    This is my very first comment on your blog. But I was an avid reader for your blog for months. Studied everything you preach, practised and recommended it.

    Will do my best to participate and add value to be part of this awesome community

    -Mohamed

    Reply
  • michelle — July 29th, 2012, 8:01 pm

    Thanks for this Tim, your timing is remarkable as I have just set up a self hosted blog and have been wading through countless plugins and teaching myself as I go. This will save me heaps of time and increase my learning curve 100%.

    Reply
  • Ryan H. — July 30th, 2012, 12:23 am

    Wow, this is an awesome resource!! Thanks Tim!

    Quick question, I know most of you will be WordPress devotees, but does anyone use Weebly at all? I’m new to blogging, and started out with Weebly, as it’s so ridiculously easy to use for a non-techwise newbie like me! Anyone else a fan?

    Reply
  • SevenJuly 30th, 2012, 1:27 am

    Thanks Tim. Found a few plugins that I should have been using.

    Reply
  • Chris — July 30th, 2012, 4:10 am

    Hi Tim,

    I have tried to sign up that site but pay pal just tells me they cannot accept my card. Been trying for about 30 minutes now but looks like its not going to happen!

    Thanks

    Chris

    Reply
  • Coach Kip — July 30th, 2012, 10:22 am

    Great stuff there. I always recommend 4 plugins to my new bloggers. The only one not included that I recommend is The Google Sitemap plugin. Using this I know that Google knows where to go on my site.

    Reply
  • Marcia — July 30th, 2012, 2:49 pm

    Thanks Tim -

    Very useful post!

    I like Sociable (great selection of nice looking social sites icons in different sizes and formats).

    Reply
  • Mohan — July 30th, 2012, 3:32 pm

    Hey Tim – I know it’s your blog, your domain, your voice, a free country, etc., and I really enjoy your work. I just wanted to let you know that as a vegan / Animal Rights person, I was a saddened by the rodeo picture. I hope you won’t hold that against me because I really like your stuff.

    Reply
  • TimJuly 30th, 2012, 4:33 pm

    WC3 cache
    WP Book
    Redirection is a must
    ShareThis

    Reply
  • alamedarj — July 30th, 2012, 8:14 pm

    Hey Tim, I counted the plugins you shared and there are 20 plugins only not 21. I think you missed one plugin.

    Reply
  • alamedarj — July 30th, 2012, 8:35 pm

    I love php-exec plugin, it allows you to put php scripts on your posts or pages but in html or editor mode.

    I love also the custom permalinks plugin, it allows you to put .html, .php, .asp, .jsp, and other web extensions.

    or without extensions like with or without forward slash(/)

    See in this sample wordpress blog – http://frwt.comuv.com/frwt-html-asp-php-extensions

    Reply
  • Jasmin Manalac — July 30th, 2012, 10:02 pm

    Nice:)

    Reply
  • Jimmy — July 31st, 2012, 12:13 am

    Thanks for sharing Tim, I will use some of the recommended plugins.
    Also wanted to say I love your book ‘The 4 Hour Work Week’. I’m working @ making it happen for me.

    Cheers

    Reply
  • Ketil Berg — July 31st, 2012, 7:22 am

    Hello Tim! I will never forget the first reading of 4HWW. It opended up the door to a whole new world for me. Still working on getting throught that door, though, haha.

    How about SEO Facebook Comments, “This plugin will insert a Facebook Comment Form, Open Graph Tags and ALSO insert all Facebook Comments into your WordPress Database for better SEO” from the repo.

    Reply
  • Brian Busche — July 31st, 2012, 10:57 am

    I just started using the Facebook Plugin for WordPress (https://developers.facebook.com/wordpress/). It does a nice job of integrating WP posts with my Facebook brand page. It has additional features like adding like and share buttons, as well as some analytics benefits.

    Reply
  • Megan PanganJuly 31st, 2012, 11:41 am

    I love posts like this. It gives aspirational bloggers tools for the now. I immediately added the ones I didn’t already have. Thank you for your insight and generosity Tim.

    Megan

    Reply
  • George MihalyAugust 1st, 2012, 1:02 am

    Very useful post. Out of curiosity, what happened with the forum? I’m assuming that the spread of Facebook kind of took it’s place, but wondering if there is any insight regarding building a platform for users beyond comments or a Facebook page. Responses from former forum users are welcome. Cheers -George

    Reply
  • AndrewAugust 1st, 2012, 10:51 pm

    Hi Tim, just wanted to say thanks. Implemented a scaled down version of your PR strategies and immediate results!

    Reply
  • Louis Thompson — August 2nd, 2012, 3:09 am

    Great post Tim,

    Have started using some of these plug ins on client sites already.

    Thanks for all of the advice yet again.

    Louis

    Reply
  • Law Firm in San Diego — August 2nd, 2012, 3:55 am

    I have worked with a number of these plugin solutions, but some of the suggestions you made and others made in the comments are going to make me sit down and create a new checklist of must-have plugins for new projects.

    Reply
  • Max Orelus — August 2nd, 2012, 7:00 am

    Thanks for the list Tim! Planning on starting my personal blog sometime in the future. It’s amazing how things change in a matter of time.

    Reply
  • Ian ComaskeyAugust 2nd, 2012, 10:19 am

    Hi Tim,
    I´ve got a question re; blogging. Take for example the article you did on “7 reason to eat more saturated fat” where you credited Michael Eades and Mary Eades and used part of their book in your article. Is it sufficient for you in order not to breech copyright, to say “as written by Dr Eades” or do you need specific permission to quote other people´s work from them?
    Another example … If I wrote an article about mini-retirements and to back up my thoughts I said something like…
    “As Tim Ferris wrote in his book, The Four hour work-week”, the best way to achieve mini retirement is etc etc etc.
    Am I going to get sued for copyright?

    Hope this question is relevant enough to this particular post,

    Thanks in advance,

    Ian C.

    Reply
  • Jerome LuepkesAugust 2nd, 2012, 12:20 pm

    Hi Tim,

    Thanks for the great plug in tips. Very useful indeed, as is the rest of the blog.

    I read “4HWW” and it changed the way i work, I read “4HB” and it changed the way I ate and now I’m really looking forward to the next book, as I can’t cook to save my life.

    In ten years’ time, who knows, my bookshelf may also be lined with equally enlightening volumes such as “The 4-Hour Sex God” or “The 4-Hour Environmentalist” or even “The 4-Hour Total and Utter Genius at Everything.” Gosh, I hope so. :-)

    Cheers,

    Jerome

    Reply
  • TimmayAugust 2nd, 2012, 6:37 pm

    Yes, Im creepin’ on Tim, but your old blog actually has great info too… And a little insight into the “old Tim Ferriss”. Didn’t know you were/are a minister? Thanks for sharing!

    Reply
  • Shaun — August 2nd, 2012, 10:34 pm

    Hello Tim and friends (assistants) –

    Forgive me in advance if I’m duplicating efforts (cardinal sin of NR, I know) but you should know that one of the many websites out there is not only hanging on to your coattails but their website is, visually, eerily similar to yours…like, I’m-surprised-it’s-not-illegal-simillar. Just FYI – thanks for the books! 4HWW hasn’t changed my life yet but I’m hoping it will!

    http://www.4hourtemplate.com/blog/timothy-ferriss-at-it-again-automated-muse-creation-2-0/

    Reply
    • Pavlina — August 27th, 2012, 2:29 pm

      So this solves the mystery of how the new blogs of 2 top online marketers/speakers that I follow, look totally identical to Tim Ferris blog! I don’t know if normal readers notice, but it was so obvious to me its funny!

      On the other hand, this theme could have saved me the investment I am making now in designer and programmer to make a custom theme and would probably bring as good results as the custom made one if they copied all your features.

      Tim, what is your take on all these Tim Ferris copy blogs that have showed up online recently? Would you follow this strategy for saving time/money if you were starting a new blog and you were not Tim Ferriss?

      Reply
  • Paulina — August 3rd, 2012, 4:52 am

    Tim, you enthuse me.

    Reply
  • Roxann Hendrickson — August 3rd, 2012, 5:10 pm

    Can anyone speak to the design aspect of blogging. How do you get it to look and feel good? Are there any simple solutions as in working with fonts or other tools? Does it require hiring a designer or the banner and some key focal points? Any recommendations?
    Mahalo,
    Roxann

    Reply
  • Pete La Fond — August 4th, 2012, 7:42 am

    Hey Tim and everyone here who uses WordPress,

    After 1,500 non-stop bot hack attempts this July (on my very low traffic site), I no longer recommend relying on the Limit Login Attempts (LLA). Although the plugin is designed to stop brute force attacks, its effectiveness has been usurped (because of it’s reliance on client-side cookies). Brute force bots can now cut right through the plugin’s restrictions like a hot knife through butter — even worse, LLA no longer records the detoured attempts by most bots. Visit support in the WordPress codex for your reference.

    Instead, do this… install WP-Activity to log EVERY failed- and legitimate- login attempt by date – you’ll be surprised what you weren’t logging before. Then install Login Security Solution (as a replacement to LLA) to stop brute force attacks. This LLA replacement has a forced “Change Your Password” feature emailed to the admin and an auto-logout after a set threshold is passed.

    And everyone,STOP USING ‘ADMIN’ as a user. I do website consulting in Silicon Valley and it’s crazy how many webmasters still use that ID here.

    – Pete.
    Willow Glen, San Jose, CA

    Reply
  • Svetoslav GyurovAugust 4th, 2012, 2:32 pm

    Hi Tim,

    I’ve been reading your blog for three years now and I have to say WOW, you’re doing great job. I really like your writing, keep up the good work!

    About the plugins, these are some I really like and using for long time:
    1) Ozh’ Admin Drop Down Menu – I really like the design and the way admin page changes, gives you flexibility.

    2) SyntaxHighlighter Evolved – really useful, especially if you’re running technical blog, I’m using this one to highlight linux command and SQL queries.

    3) BackWPup – backups your WP database into the “cloud”, I’m using dropbox for this purpose. Keeping backups for one week and sync daily with my computer.

    4) Few plugins for stats in order of importance – Official StatCounter Plugin, WassUp Real Time Analytics, WP SlimStat

    Regards,
    Sve

    btw. Back then I followed your talk “How to Build a High-Traffic Blog Without Killing Yourself.” to setup my blog, thanks!

    Reply
  • Tim McAuley — August 4th, 2012, 5:32 pm

    Tim,

    Thanks so much for sharing your original design. I wish I’d taken a screen shot of my original, and the three attempts thereafter. I would have won some ugly blog contest for sure.

    I finally got smart and hired someone to chose a premium theme, layout and design. I should get to add my new logo tomorrow. So stoked.

    Thanks for all the plugin tips.

    Reply
  • Fernando Rivas — August 5th, 2012, 5:02 pm

    Hi Tim! a pretty cool post, I gonna try a couple of these plug-ins to see how it works ;)

    By the way! what a nice stuff that about Vittana and that thei are helping young ppl in Paraguay, realy didn’t know anything bout that before, very cool

    Greets from Paraguay

    Reply
  • Pascal — August 5th, 2012, 8:00 pm

    1. About the Comment System Tool.

    I see that Tim is sticking with the “in the box” WordPress’ commenting tool. As I’m about to start my own blog, I would like to know if you guys see a advantage to stick with WP ? I feel I should go with livefyre (over disqus). Maybe it’s better to own my comment rights if I stick with WP.

    At the same time, I read that a lot of happy users won’t go back after using a dedicated comment system as livefyre and disqus.

    I can understand that it would be a pain for Tim (as he started with WP) but I’m sure other blogger could give me their experience with or without WP comment system.

    2. To Tim

    First timer here. I bought the book 3 years ago and the updated version of it after. I can’t tell how much you and your work inspired me. I actually created my muse after 2-3 years thinking about it.

    I just want to tell you “Thank you Tim” for the book (and the Occam’s protocol in 4HB), the few keynotes you did and this blog. I wish I will shake your hands one day to let you know how I mean it. Thanks again.

    Pascal, Montréal, @icipascal

    Reply
  • ValerieAugust 5th, 2012, 8:23 pm

    Jetpack? Really? It doesn’t really do anything for a .org account, anyway. (The provided description sort of hints that you don’t really know what it does.) Most of the desirable features on the .com version aren’t available… yet.

    Reply
  • Peter Shaw — August 7th, 2012, 11:22 pm

    Mate, fantastic post. There were about 3 of them I can’t believe i was not using before, great time savers that I never knew I needed till i added them. Awesome!

    Reply
  • Allan GregoireAugust 8th, 2012, 5:16 pm

    Thanks for sharing Tim! I also had an atrocity for a website/blog (but I’m learning) but made some changes. The statement about having a “mediocre blog being a liability rather than having no blog at all” really struck a chord with me and made me realize I’ve got to stop “winging it” and commit to posting well-crafted content. Again, thanks!

    Reply
  • Jeff NabersAugust 14th, 2012, 9:15 pm

    Thanks. This is super helpful.

    Reply
  • RichardAugust 22nd, 2012, 8:53 pm

    Could you explain why you use basic WP comments vs something like Disqus or Facebook comments?

    Reply
    • JohnAugust 25th, 2012, 11:35 pm

      Because disqus/facebook comments essentially OWN your comments. Also for larger blogs like this one he would have to have a Pay per comment agreement with disqus, which if you host your own you don’t have to pay that at all.
      Facebook isn’t that nice because then if anyone wants to comment, that person would HAVE to have a fb account to comment and remove anonymity a little.

      Reply
  • Heyward — August 23rd, 2012, 12:15 pm

    Just donated $2.00 every little bit helps amiright?

    Reply
  • RomanAugust 30th, 2012, 1:21 pm

    Wow Tim, thanks for sharing your first blog, that’s a huge boost in hope for a few of us I think.

    Reply
  • Stephanie — August 31st, 2012, 6:57 am

    I don’t really understand what JetPack does for me. Can you elaborate on what “powerful features normally only available to WordPress.com users” you use?

    Thanks!

    Reply
  • Glen Craig — September 4th, 2012, 4:44 pm

    Hi Tim, thanks for the list! I have to second what others have said about Yoast SEO. It’s an awesome and powerful plugin. Free too.

    For your Most Popular section in the sidebar – is that a plugin or is it code? How could I get that?

    Reply
  • Mike — September 12th, 2012, 4:12 am

    How do you define which plugin to use to achieve this or that goal? Say, we have 100+ SEO plugins with very similar functionality – what to use?

    Reply
  • JJ Johnson — September 15th, 2012, 5:57 pm

    Hey, thanks for the insight. This is my first time here so I guess I am on probation…. Seriously though I have blogged for about a year and have not seen some of those plugins. They sound great. Cheers jj

    Reply
  • Shameer Shah — September 17th, 2012, 6:43 am

    Hi Tim, this is an awesome post elaborating on the various plugins that will keep not only you, but your blog sane :) One that you haven’t mentioned, I absolute feel is essential is a Mobile Plugin. Ok, some blogs may be pre-configured, but for those that aren’t should instal such a plugin. I use WP Mobile Detector which detects a mobile device and serves a mobile version of the blog. It keeps me sane as I know readers who are on the move a lot, like myself, will be able to read posts at ease.

    Great post mate!

    Reply
  • local seoDecember 8th, 2012, 4:03 am

    mobile barcode scanners were male in Q2, and the gender breakdown has not moved significantly from Q1, when 68% were male

    Reply
  • MichaelJanuary 12th, 2013, 1:42 am

    I started blogging not too long ago and it’s nice to know what big time bloggers (like you) are using.

    Thanks for the recommendations!

    Reply
  • Judi BolaJanuary 12th, 2013, 9:54 pm

    Cool plugin! Not to hack Tim’s blog, but I’m participant in your latest course and wanted to let you know it’s really great and I’m learning tons! Thanks!!!

    Reply
  • ManuelJanuary 22nd, 2013, 5:47 pm

    Just was looking for something like Similar Post, it is awesome.
    I also suggest a plugin for automate sitemap.

    Regards

    Reply
  • marilyn cada — February 3rd, 2013, 9:24 pm

    hi tim. i enjoyed reading your article. now i know what plug in to use for the wordpress blog. i am also aiming to reach 1,000,000 unique visitors a month :) thank u for the tips

    Reply
  • Mark EichenlaubFebruary 23rd, 2013, 8:50 am

    So…being hosted by wordpress is bad and I cannot use any of these plugins? Wish I’d known that sooner…

    Reply
  • Mark EMarch 5th, 2013, 10:46 am

    Thanks for this!

    Reply
  • Sunith BabuMarch 24th, 2013, 9:09 pm

    I find this post more interesting to me and helps me prioritize the posts for my blog

    Thanks a Ton

    Sunith Babu L

    Reply
  • judahMarch 30th, 2013, 11:45 pm

    Thanks for all the info on the plugins. I just recently built my site and need to add a blog to help generate traffic that will become members. I’m no pro so all the incite helps. Thanks! !

    Reply
  • Anna BoltonApril 10th, 2013, 10:09 am

    I used wordpress for a long time and use a number of plug-ins that are on your list of the best. But now change my system and use Joomla. It also has fantastic plug-ins. Some who are not have used, but I’ll try to do it. Thanks for sharing.

    Reply

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