How Many Blogs Can I Create for Free on WordPress?
Learn more about my journey in this detailed timeline.I also decided it was time to get serious about work. After a year of night classes at Weston College, I earned my AAT certification in accounting, thinking I’d found a career for life. Oh, how wrong I was. Chasing overdue invoices with a pencil and a ruler in Credit Control? No thanks. That’s when I knew I wanted to work online.
How Many Blogs Can I Create for Free on WordPress?
You’re asking, “How many blogs can I create for free on WordPress?” Well, it’s free you see. Why stop at one? You can have as many blogs as you like on WordPress.com’s free plan, each with a wonderfully uninspired subdomain like yourblog.wordpress.com
. It’s like being given unlimited sandwiches, but they’re all egg mayo. Actually, I love an egg and cress sandwich, what’s my taste won’t be the same as your unique taste – or business idea.
Now, before you run off to start blogging about your new company or online business at home, ask yourself: do you have an SEO plan? Because without a strategy, all those blogs are just white noise words on a screen. And white noise doesn’t rank on Google. Learn how to begin exploring your SEO game with my Google tips on SEO fundamentals.
Free Google Business on Maps; Google GA4 Analytics and Google Search Console linking
To gauge your WordPress blog’s performance in Google, start by tracking organic traffic using Google Analytics or Jetpack’s site stats. Organic traffic reveals how many visitors find your site through search engines, highlighting the effectiveness of your SEO. Next, monitor your click-through rate (CTR) in Google Search Console, which shows how often users click on your site’s link after seeing it in search results. A low CTR might indicate that your meta titles and descriptions need improvement. Other key metrics include keyword rankings to see how well your targeted phrases perform, bounce rate to measure visitor engagement, and time on page to assess content relevance. High-performing pages often have low bounce rates and longer average session times.
Let’s be honest, flying blind is for amateurs. If you’re not using Google GA4 analytics on your WordPress blog, you might as well throw darts at a board and hope for the best. How will you know how popular, or miserably lacking your site is performing? Enter the free WordPress plugin Jetpack: the Swiss Army knife of blogging. It gives you data – proper data – on what your readers like, where they’re coming from, and how long they’re sticking around. (Spoiler: it’s never as long as you think.)
Linking Your Domain to Google Business Profile
To connect your WordPress blog’s domain to your Google Business Profile, log in to your Google Business account at Google Business Profile. Navigate to your profile and click Edit Profile > Contact > Website. Paste the URL of your WordPress blog (e.g., https://www.yourblogdomain.com
) and save the changes. This links your blog to your Google Business listing, enhancing local Google rankings and making your site more visible in search results for relevant queries. Ensure your domain matches your business name and includes essential pages like “About” and “Contact” to build credibility. For additional visibility, keep your profile updated with posts and reviews. Did you know before I was a freelance SEO I helped rebrand the Bristol-based personalised cards website that everyone knows asFunky Pigeon?
Password Protection: Keep the Riffraff Out
Maybe you’re writing a book, or you’ve got content you don’t want just anyone to see—your ex, your mum, or that bloke from HR who keeps “accidentally” liking your posts at 3 a.m. Either way, password protection is your best friend.
On WordPress.com’s free plan, you can invite specific readers, but they need a Google account. For proper password protection—where only those with the sacred key get in—you’ll need a self-hosted WordPress.org setup. Plugins like Password Protect Page make it easy to secure your content. Learn more about Google workarounds for additional privacy options.
Local SEO Services: Location-Specific Google Ranking
I offer hyper-targeted YouTube Video SEO and blogging services tailored to your local area or international needs:
If you need assistance with Google Blogger, the Blogger Help Center offers comprehensive guides and tutorials on various topics, including:
- Creating and managing your blog: Learn how to set up a new blog, add pages, and manage posts.
- Changing your blog’s appearance: Discover how to change your blog’s design and apply different themes.
- Troubleshooting common issues: Find solutions to problems like signing in difficulties or missing blogs.
Ask me questions and share your experiences with other users. or use YouTube to find 2025 tips on effectively managing your learning expectations. Let’s broaden your brain and you can take in some other SEO bullshit that you didn’t know you didn’t know.What is a Backlink?
A backlink is basically another website saying, “Hey, look at this!” It’s like a nod of approval in the school playground—except instead of boosting your ego, it boosts your SEO. When another site links to yours, it tells search engines your content is worth a look.
Key Points About Backlinks:
- Quality Over Quantity: One backlink from a big name, like the BBC, is worth more than a hundred links from blogs that look like they were designed by someone who thinks Comic Sans is cool.
- DoFollow vs. NoFollow:
- DoFollow: These links pass SEO juice, like a VIP pass to Google’s club.
- NoFollow: These are the links Google ignores, but hey, they can still send traffic, so don’t cry about them.
- Anchor Text: That’s the clickable text in the link. If it says “click here,” you’re doing it wrong. Make it something that actually helps you rank, like “best cat food blog.” Unless you’re not blogging about cats—then that’s just weird.
Why Backlinks Matter: Google loves backlinks. They’re like currency in the search engine economy. Get enough good ones, and you’ll be rich—in rankings, anyway.
What is Organic Traffic?
Organic traffic is the holy grail of website visitors. It’s the kind of traffic you don’t have to pay for, which is great because, let’s face it, no one wants to spend money on ads unless they have to. These are the people who find your site because you’ve impressed Google, not because you’ve waved a fiver in its face.
Key Characteristics of Organic Traffic:
- SEO-Driven: If your blog is ranking for the right keywords, people will find you. If it’s not, well, no one’s searching for “blog that never gets updated.”
- Free and Sustainable: Organic traffic costs you nothing but a bit of sweat and creativity. It’s like growing your own vegetables, but less muddy and way better for business.
- Quality Visitors: These folks actually want to be there, unlike the people who come for a competition entry and leave faster than your nan when you put on heavy metal.
How Backlinks and Organic Traffic Work Together
Here’s the thing: backlinks and organic traffic are like fish and chips—they just work together. Backlinks tell Google you’re legit, which gets you higher rankings. Higher rankings mean more organic traffic. And more traffic means you’re not just shouting into the void. So get cracking, build those links, and watch the visitors roll in.
More from My Blog
I write about SEO and much more, including local news, Latvian recipes, and music festival reviews: