john mark larida

My Experience as a WordPress Website Designer Focusing on On-Page SEO

As a website designer with a strong focus on WordPress, one of the most valuable skills I’ve developed over the years is optimizing websites for on-page SEO. Design may catch the eye, but without proper SEO, even the most beautiful site risks getting lost in the search engine shuffle.

Understanding the Foundation

My journey began by learning that good SEO starts with solid site architecture. WordPress makes this manageable thanks to its structure and plugins. One of my first major realizations was how important it was to use SEO-friendly themes and clean code. Bloated themes slow down load time, which affects ranking — a lesson I learned the hard way after designing a gorgeous but sluggish site.

Tools That Made a Difference

One tool I now consider essential is Yoast SEO (and more recently, Rank Math for some projects). These plugins helped me fine-tune key on-page elements like:

  • Custom page titles and meta descriptions

  • Proper heading structure (H1, H2, H3…)

  • Focus keyword integration

  • Readability and content analysis                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          Yoast was particularly useful early on, providing real-time feedback. It’s not perfect, but it helped me adopt best practices, especially around keyword density and internal linking.

Creating SEO-Optimized Content

Designing a page means thinking visually, but with SEO, I had to develop a new mindset: design for users and search engines. This involved:

  • Adding alt tags to every image

  • Ensuring mobile responsiveness and fast loading speeds

  • Writing descriptive URLs (e.g., /seo-tips-wordpress instead of /page?id=123)

  • Using structured data with plugins or manual schema markup                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      I also started collaborating more closely with content writers, making sure each page had a clear keyword strategy and followed a logical content hierarchy.

Real Results

One of my proudest achievements was redesigning a local service provider’s website. After implementing on-page SEO improvements — optimized titles, image compression, internal links, and a mobile-first layout — their organic traffic increased by 45% in under three months. Their site jumped from page 3 to the top 5 search results for several key phrases.

What I’ve Learned

  • SEO is not a one-time task; it’s ongoing.

  • WordPress gives you the tools, but you need to know how to use them.

  • Design, content, and SEO must work together.

  • Speed and user experience matter just as much as keywords.