Mar 21 2008
Interview with Aaron Wall from SEOBook.com Print
Friday, 21 March 2008
Aaron WallToday we're delighted a have the chance to talk with Aaron Wall from SEOBook.com. Aaron's SEO Book has been around since 2003 and he writes probably the best one-person SEO blog in the industry.

As we did here at Alledia, Aaron recently shifted his business model from pay-to-download-my-book towards a more community-based training system. His new site is built with Drupal, so we asked him about SEO and Content Management Systems:

1) You chose Drupal for your new site. Why did you feel this was a better choice than alternatives such as Wordpress and Joomla?

I wanted to create a membership site where I could keep adding lots of features - doing things like making some content fully available and other content partially available or not available to the general public, requiring a subscription to access the training modules (http://training.seobook.com). Drupal is much more enterprise class than Wordpress is. I never really compared Drupal to Joomla because the main programmer doing the job had done extensive work with Drupal and stood by it strongly enough to convince me it was the right call.

2) What modules did you find useful for getting your site to work the you way wanted?

I think FlashVideo, Drupal vB, pathauto, page title, nodewords, jRating, user review, custom error, autoresponder, books, and premium are all used on my site.

3) Now the site has been live for a while, do you think you've made the right choice? Are there things that Drupal could still do better out-of-the-box?

The site has lots of changes made beyond being out-of-the-box. So many of them were made before I saw it that I can't say how many issues it has out of the box, but I installed Drupal on AaronWall.com and it was quite easy to get clean URLs there. I have a decent server for SEO Book, so the page load times are good in spite of a fairly high traffic load, but I think my programmer had to set up some php caching levels and install a boost module to get that set properly.

4) If a customer or training member, who values SEO highly, asked you whether they should use a Content Management System, what advice would you give them?

In general if you want to stay competitive on the current web you need a way to interact with your customers. If you sell online customer reviews of product are important, and so is the ability to push out news that people can subscribe to and comment on. If you are not using a CMS to power your website you are at distinct marketing and efficiency disadvantages to the increasing number of websites that are.

If you use a top open source CMS you are essentially getting thousands of hours of programming, real world testing, and bug fixes for free. And you can tap the strong development communities to extend out leading CMSs to fit your needs much more affordably than you can build something from scratch.

Comments (7)Add Comment
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written by Good Web Practices, March 24, 2008
Interesting to learn more about Drupal... Great to see you managed to get Aaron Wall interviewed!
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written by Steve Burge, March 24, 2008
Drupal is a wonderful tool if you know what you're doing. The Formula 1 car of CMSs ... hard to control but really, really powerful when you learn how.
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written by Good Web Practices, March 24, 2008
Nice illustration!

So, if you were to rebuild Alledia tomorrow, would you rebuild it using Joomla or Drupal?
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written by Steve Burge, March 24, 2008
Joomla, simply because we've also been a business thats 80% Joomla and about 20% Drupal. If those figures were reversed, we'd be on Drupal.

It might have been easier sometimes to use an outside solution (we tried VBulletin for a forum for a while) but in the end we're stuck with 100% Joomla and haven't regretted it.
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written by bernard esterhuyse, March 31, 2008
Really interesting stuff. I must say it is always a question at the back of my mind whether Joomla is the bets CMS to go with. I suppose it is more a matter of preference, since the leading CMS systems are all so powerful and have big communities supporting them.
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written by Enrico, April 01, 2008
Interesting interview. I'd be honest I tried to play around with Drupal but since it took me many months to learn Joomla (and I'm still learning...now I'm studying the SEO thing smilies/tongue.gif), I wonder how much will it take to learn Drupal. I wish some template clubs exist for Drupal.
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written by Thomas Moseler, April 07, 2008
Nice review. Nice site in general, congratulations. You hardly find people that try to build bridges between the "worlds". I'm giving away my preference with my avatar smilies/wink.gif But the more time I'm following and working the CMS "scene", the more I think teaming up and tearing down borders would be of most benefit for all. As RDF is up and coming, how to work on an easy data exchange logic? Or having Joomla lectures on a Drupalcon and vice versa. Bert Boerland http://willy.boerland.com/mybl...dagen_days is doing it the other way round. We could learn a lot of the design powers, nice looks and intuitive interface that Joomla people are very good at (that is surely not all, but stands out as a major difference to me if I try to find them). Rock on Steve!

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