DEV Community

Cover image for Gridsome SEO Improvement Guide
Tyler V. (he/him)
Tyler V. (he/him)

Posted on • Edited on

Gridsome SEO Improvement Guide

Gridsome does an excellent job of enabling the "non-SEO" part of SEO (Search Engine Optimization - the act of creating and describing a page in the best way so Google can correctly serve it to the users that are looking for your site) thanks to being a static site and having optimizations included with the <g-image> tag for images (among other things). But how can you make sure you're pushing the SEO of your site to the next level?

With this checklist โœ…

This list can apply to non-Gridsome sites as well!

Wrap your main content in a <main> tag

The first thing you're going to want to do is make sure the correct HTML tags are getting used throughout our site. The first of which is the <main> tag to indicate where in your Layout the main content of the page lives.

In my Layout.vue Gridsome File I have the following layout:

<template>
  <div> <!-- Wrapper div until Vue 3 -->
    <header>
      My header title and navigation links go here
    </header>

    <main>
      <!-- This is where the page contents render -->
      <slot/>
    </main>

    <footer>
      Footer content goes here
    </footer>
  </div>
</template>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Use the <article> tag

Along the same lines as the above point, make sure you're using <article> tags where applicable.

The article tag calls out to Google that everything between the opening and closing tag will make sense to users without additional context from the page being needed.

On my site I use these tags in 2 ways - for the actual blog post contents and in my components that link to a blog post.

In my components:

<!-- Component --> 
<template>
  <!-- I pass in article as a prop -->
  <g-link :to="article.path">
    <article>
      <!-- Image/emoji/title/description of article here --> 
    </article>
  </g-link>
</template>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

In my template files:

<!-- Template File --> 
<template>
  <Layout>
    <article>
      <h1>{{ $page.post.title }}</h1>
      <div v-html="$page.post.content"></div>
    </article>
  </Layout>
</template>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Set your page's meta title

Have you noticed a trend with improving SEO? It's all about the HTML!

Inside of our <head> tag for each page we want to include a <title> tag which will be both the main header for our page when shown on Google, and update the contents of the tab title making our site look super cool ๐Ÿ˜Ž

In standard HTML this look like this:

<head>
  <title>The awesome title of our page ๐Ÿš€</title>
</head>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

For a static page in Gridsome we can achieve this like this:

<script>
import Layout from "~/layots/Default.vue"
// note that we don't need to import metaInfo()!
export default {
  components: {
    Layout,
  },
  metaInfo() {
    return {
      title: "The awesome title of our page ๐Ÿš€",
    }
  },
}
</script>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

And for our template pages:

<script>
import Layout from "~/layots/Default.vue"
// note that we don't need to import metaInfo()!
export default {
  components: {
    Layout,
  },
  metaInfo() {
    return {
      // This sets the title to the post title for the page
      title: this.$page.post.title,
      // If you're using something other than post, you'll need to update this accordingly
    }
  },
}
</script>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Set a canonical URL

The power of metaInfo() doesn't stop with setting the title of the page - we can also use it to harness the most powerful meta information a blogger can become familiar with - Canonical URLs.

In particular, for our blog post pages, we want Google to know that our page is the most legit page, so we need to add a tag that will look like this to our <head>:

<head>
  <link rel="canonical" content="https://yourdomain.com/slug/path/whatever/">
</head>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

In Gridsome's metaInfo() being generated for each page:

<script>
import Layout from "~/layouts/Default.vue";
// No need to import metaInfo()! 
export default {
  components: {
    Layout,
  },
  metaInfo() {
    return {
      title: this.$page.post.title,
      link: [
        {
          rel: "canonical",
          content: "https://yourdomain.com" + this.$page.post.path,
        },
        // Don't forget to swap in your domain! ^
        // You can also set this manually, for example on your About page
      ],
    };
  },
};
</script>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Learn more about canonical URLs in this post!

Create more sharable pages with OG and Twitter information

One of the coolest (and also more time consuming - but we'll get to that) things you can do with metaInfo() is the addition of details so that when someone shares your site on Twitter or Slack or Facebook, your page pops up with a snazzy cover image and description of what the page is about.

In order to do this, you'll need to add 2 sets of very similar information (thanks Twitter for insisting on being different). All the items with the twitter: prefix are for Twitter shares, while the og: prefix is for basically everything else (I think technically Pinterest wants something extra also, but I haven't dug into that hole yet).

<script>
import Layout from "~/layouts/Default.vue";
export default {
  components: {
    Layout,
  },
  metaInfo() {
    return {
      title: this.$page.post.title,
      meta: [
        {
          name: "description",
          content: this.$page.post.description,
          // You may notice there are 3 description items
          // This one is for Google, the others are for OG and Twitter :)
        },
        {
          name: "twitter:description",
          content: this.$page.post.description,
        },
        {
          name: "twitter:card",
          content: "summary_large_image",
          // Supposedly there are multiple options for this value
         // However, Twitter's docs only vaguely mention them existing
        },
        {
          name: "twitter:title",
          content: this.$page.post.title,
        },
        {
          name: "twitter:image",
          content:
            this.$static.metadata.baseURL + this.$page.post.twitter_image.src,
          // I'm using my twitter_image field from markdown for this
        },
        {
          name: "twitter:creator",
          content: "@authorsTwitterAccount",
        },
        {
          name: "twitter:site",
          content: "@siteTwitterAccount",
        },
        {
          name: "og:image",
          content:
            this.$static.metadata.baseURL + this.$page.post.cover_image.src,
          // I'm using my cover_image field from markdown for this
        },
        {
          name: "og:description",
          content: this.$page.post.description,
        },
        {
          name: "og:title",
          content: this.$page.post.title,
        },
      ],
    };
  },
};
</script>

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

So now the (relatively) bad news - in order to really optimize your site's "shareability" you'll need to be creating the images for og:image and twitter:image uniquely. The recommended image size for og:image is 1200px x 627px and twitter:image is 1024px x 512px (at the time of writing).

Make sure you're only using one <h1> tag

As a final tip to help optimize - make sure you're only using 1 <h1> tag on your page. The way I handle this is by plugging in the post's title as an <h1> in my template and starting all of my post headers with ## (or greater - make sure you always increase header levels by at most 1 at a time).

This has the added benefit of making cross-posting to DEV easier (although technically I write my posts on DEV then copy/paste to my blog, but that's not important here).

I look forward to seeing your posts at the top of my Google searches soon! ๐Ÿ˜‰

Top comments (0)