• I’m a wedding and portrait photographer with my blog’s content oriented towards consumers of wedding and portrait photography.

    I’m toying with the idea of publishing content on my blog that give tips and advice to other photographers to help them gain better search engine rankings for their keywords.

    Needless to say this is a different audience than the intended audience for my blog.

    I would like to try and keep both audiences linking and reading from my primary domain (http://www.glowimagery.com) for SEO purposes and, unfortunately, my provider says I am limited to just one blog for this domain.

    Is my answer the use of categories? if so how? Is there a way to hide consumer content from photographer SEO content? Is it simply a matter of just using categories? How would you do it?

    Insights into both technical how-to and any strategic blogging wisdom
    are welcome.

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  • I don’t think it’s possible to hide content from different general audiences. Is there a problem with other photographers seeing your consumer content? Other than that, I’d say that categories and tagging might be the way to go.

    You want to help others in the same business with some tips but don’t want them to see the tips in action?
    You could hide client stuff on password protected pages.

    Surely they’d be seeing the material now though – given that the blog is currently oriented towards consumers of wedding and portrait photography?

    If it’s a case of protecting client material, perhaps subscribing clients to the blog and publishing their material on private pages could be a solution?

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