Useful WordPress Plugins, Part I
Most of us who blog seriously use WordPress software, own our URLs and pay for private hosting. It’s the most secure and flexible solution for a blog. WordPress has its limits, however, and lots of developers solve this problem by creating a plugin to perform a specific function, like allowing people to subscribe to comments.
In this article I review the following plugins I’ve recently found at MaxBlogPress.com:
- Different Posts Per Page
- MaxBlogPress DealDotCom Widget
- BlogRush Click Maximizer
- MaxBlogPress Unblockable Popup
These plugins require free registration and a password to download them. You will also see some one-time offers when you register your first plugin. Since blogging is a business for me, I find the offers, in the form of an upsell, very interesting. The marketing techniques that go along with the plugin registrations are a lesson to behold. Some may find the offers a bother, but as students of internet business and marketing, as well as business owners and operators, I think we should all study the process when we sign up to download one of these plugins.
You will only see the one-time offers once when you register your first plugin, no matter which one it is. If you don’t take advantage of the offer or offers then, you won’t see them again when you register any subsequent plugins. These are truly one-time offers!
How to Install These Plugins
There is a little different procedure for installing and implementing these plugins than the ones you get from WordPress.org. Here’s how to do it:
- Download the plugin, unzip it and upload it to your server into the wp-content/plugins folder using your FTP program
- In the WordPress administration panel, click on plugins, locate the plugin and activate it
- Click on settings in the admin panel (options in older versions of WordPress)
- Click on the newly activated plugin and register it (enter your name and email address)
- Once registered, set the plugin’s options and save them
- If the plugin is a widget, go to design and add the widget to the sidebar or where ever you want it to display on your blog
- You’re done!
Different Posts Per Page
One thing I find cumbersome about WordPress is you can set the number of posts per page, but it’s static across all your pages, categories and archives. If you set 5 posts per page, you’ll have 5 posts on your main or home blog page, 5 listed per page for each category and 5 per archive page (usually archives are stored by month and year).
What if you want 3 posts on your home page but 10 listed on each category page and maybe 30 on each archive page? You can’t do it without a plugin. The plugin that does this easily and seamlessly is Different Posts per Page. You can download it at the following link:
This plugin lets you put different numbers of posts on each page, including each category page. It’s amazing to have total control over this function. It gives you the flexibility to easily display each part of your blog the way you want it displayed.
If you click around to the different pages on this blog you’ll see I have 3 posts on the home page, up to 20 on each category page, up to 20 on each archive page, and 5 posts will be displayed through my RSS feed.
You can set a different number of pages for each category. This is handy for grouping notes together or perhaps keeping all posts together that form a course of study. I plan to use that benefit on my Thirty Day Challenge blog.
The training category on that blog needs to be split up into years (2007 & 2008), and all notes from training for each year need to stay together in ascending chronological order. Yes, you read that right. You can set the order on each page to ascending or descending. Blogs default to descending order only, which makes sense on the home page, but not on pages where a topic starts at the bottom and ends at the top of the page. When you want to organize a category from day 1 to day 30, you want the page to start at day 1, and this plugin allows you to sort posts in ascending order!
I absolutely love this plugin and all the flexibility it gives me.
MaxBlogPress DealDotCom Widget
If your blog is an ecommerce blog, you can join the affiliate program and display the DealDotCom deal of the day using this widget.
What is DealDotCom? I’m glad you asked. DealDotCom is a sales website that sells only one, single product each day for a very low price, a real steal of a deal. A product is available for one day and the price is usually insanely low compared to its regular price. There is a limited amount of the product for sale each day, and it’s available until midnight or until it sells out. Once it sells out there won’t be any more available.
The DealDotCom commission structure is generous. Affiliates earn 35% on direct sales from their widgets and 15% on the second tier. That means if someone goes to the DealDotCom site and joins the affiliate program through your widget, you earn 15% on the sales through their widget. You also earn a commission if a buyer buys anything again in the future from DealDotCom, no matter how they return to the site.
Here’s the link to the MaxBlogPress DealDotCom Widget:
MaxBlogPress DealDotCom Widget
I have this widget installed on this blog in the sidebar and on a couple of my other blogs as well. The thing I like about the MaxBlogPress widget over the DealDotCom widget is you can adjust the width it displays in pixels. The other widget isn’t adjustable, hung over the edges of my sidebars and was kind of tacky-looking compared to my blog themes.
If you want to offer useful software, ebooks and training courses for insanely low prices to your readers, this widget is the one to have.
BlogRush Click Maximizer
If you’re a member of BlogRush you know that sometimes the post titles that show up in the widget are way off-topic to the category your widget is supposed to contain. As bloggers we also maintain the right to publish an off-topic post we want our regular readers to see. We may not want that post syndicated all over the blogosphere, however.
To make sure only your best posts are syndicated through BlogRush, BlogRush Click Maximizer is the tool to use. When you write a post you have the option of including that post in your BlogRush feed and you can change the post title to something short and catchy so it will fit in the widget. Here is the download link:
The widget is located on the write page in the WordPress administration panel and you set it when you compose or edit a post. If you don’t tick the “include this post in BlogRush feed” box, it won’t be syndicated. Since you have to turn it on, you control which posts are syndicated. The rest aren’t syndicated.
BlogRush has an automatic filter you can set on your account page, but the filter has to be specific enough to not filter out too many of your posts. You run the risk of syndicating something you don’t want on the widget or filtering out something you do want on the widget. I don’t like hit-and-miss when it comes to building traffic to my blogs and this plugin lets me make sure I only put highly targeted posts out on the blogosphere.
If you’re a member of BlogRush, this plugin is necessary to increase traffic through the widget to your blog.
MaxBlogPress Unblockable Popup
Ordinarily I hate popups, all popups. But there are a few places where they are beneficial to the reader. They can be used to remind a visitor to register for an event, direct them to special offers, highlight an update, subscribe to your RSS feed or a newsletter or join an email list. Popups are also useful when they are specific to a particular page or post, so you’re not seeing random ads popping up all over the place.
This widget allows you to customize popups for your site. The annoyance factor is easily eliminated by only allowing the popup to appear to any visitor on a single visit and then they will never see that popup again. If they’re interested in what was offered in the popup and you want it available, they will be more willing to look around your site to find the update or subscribe button or email signup box. But they don’t have to see a popup ever time they visit your site.
Honestly, if I saw a popup every time I visited a site, I would hit the unsubscribe button so fast it would make your head spin. This plugin allows you to use popups without the annoyance of popups.
I’m not currently using this plugin, but I have some ideas and future plans where it might be useful to something specific. If used wisely, I believe this plugin can be used to the benefit of your readers and you. You can download it here:
MaxBlogPress Unblockable Popup
I’ll be writing about some more useful plugins in future posts. I hope you’ll give these a try. I find the first three very handy. When I try the unblockable popup plugin I’ll post an update about it.
Here are the plugin links again:
- Different Posts Per Page
- MaxBlogPress DealDotCom Widget
- BlogRush Click Maximizer
- MaxBlogPress Unblockable Popup
When you get to the download page, you can go ahead and download all the plugins at once or you can download them as you need them. You will see the one-time offers when you register your first plugin only. After that you will never see those one-time offers again. The marketing strategy is really interesting and I hope you’ll study it closely and go through the whole process to see how it’s done. It may be something you want to use in the future when you launch a product of your own.
If you enjoyed this post, please subscribe to my RSS feed!










June 23rd, 2008 at 9:53 pm
Useful WordPress Plugins, Part I | Home Office Organization–21st Century Style…
Most of us who blog seriously use WordPress software, own our URLs and pay for private hosting. It’s the most secure and flexible solution for a blog. WordPress has its limits, however, and lots of developers solve this problem by creating a plugin t…
June 23rd, 2008 at 10:29 pm
Useful WordPress Plugins, Part I | Home Office Organization–21st Century Style…
Most of us who blog seriously use WordPress software, own our URLs and pay for private hosting. It’s the most secure and flexible solution for a blog. WordPress has its limits, however, and lots of developers solve this problem by creating a plug…
June 24th, 2008 at 2:54 pm
I use quite a few of the MaxBlogPress plugins and am a big fan of their work.
June 25th, 2008 at 2:27 am
Thanks a lot. There are some handy plug ins in your list and I appreciate your description of them.
June 25th, 2008 at 12:58 pm
BlogRush? REALLY!? It was one of the most hyped services but doesn’t send traffic to most people who used it. FAIL!
June 25th, 2008 at 2:11 pm
I don’t know but I don’t find those useful at all. But I guess it depends on the blog.
June 26th, 2008 at 1:22 am
Blaine and Karen, thanks. I find I really like MaxBlogPress plugins better than some of the others.
Ice Road Truckers Guy, BlogRush was overhyped, no doubt. It is more successful for some than others. The thing that really gets traffic growing from BlogRush is for your overall traffic to grow. The widget won’t fix the inherent problems with BlogRush, but it might get your blog’s name seen just a little more often than without it.
Jenny, it does depend on your blog. Different people need different functionality from WordPress. I find these plugins useful, but not everyone will.
June 26th, 2008 at 11:13 pm
The Different Posts Per Page plugin sounds wonderful, I’m going to check that out right away… thank you so much for sharing this with us!
August 3rd, 2008 at 12:41 am
Thanks for the post
August 5th, 2008 at 7:37 am
Excellent post.
August 17th, 2008 at 2:30 pm
I read similar article also named Useful WordPress Plugins, Part I, and it was completely different. Personally, I agree with you more, because this article makes a little bit more sense for me