Divi looks like a good choice until you start working with SEO and other optimization. You can, for example, not add rel="sponsored"* to a button.
I regret that I bought a lifetime license some years ago because I have wasted so much time making workarounds for stuff that you would expect that worked out of the box.
@frog said:
Divi looks like a good choice until you start working with SEO and other optimization. You can, for example, not add rel="sponsored"* to a button.
I regret that I bought a lifetime license some years ago because I have wasted so much time making workarounds for stuff that you would expect that worked out of the box.
Yes, quite strange to not allow custom link tags for buttons.
Though, I'd bet a beer that adding "nofollow" (which is possible) will be enough as far as Google is concerned - if an affiliate/paid promotion link has to be done via a button.
What other SEO related problems did you have?
What other optimization related problems?
Can you compare it to other page builders (not themes)?
@frog said:
Divi looks like a good choice until you start working with SEO and other optimization. You can, for example, not add rel="sponsored"* to a button.
I regret that I bought a lifetime license some years ago because I have wasted so much time making workarounds for stuff that you would expect that worked out of the box.
Yes, quite strange to not allow custom link tags for buttons.
Though, I'd bet a beer that adding "nofollow" (which is possible) will be enough as far as Google is concerned - if an affiliate/paid promotion link has to be done via a button.
Yes, for now, because the ugc and sponsored are relatively new attributes. Updating all pages when that changes will be a nightmare.
@bikegremlin said:
What other SEO related problems did you have?
What other optimization related problems?
Can you compare it to other page builders (not themes)?
I no longer use Divi, and I don't remember all the problems in detail. But I very often ended up making the page content manually.
Each time I asked ElegantThemes support for help with technical SEO issues, they came up with a jQuery workaround that rarely worked.
The last time I checked, Elementor was up to date when it comes to SEO. But it was some time ago. My needs have changed, so today, I program my websites with Django.
@frog said:
Divi looks like a good choice until you start working with SEO and other optimization. You can, for example, not add rel="sponsored"* to a button.
I regret that I bought a lifetime license some years ago because I have wasted so much time making workarounds for stuff that you would expect that worked out of the box.
Yes, quite strange to not allow custom link tags for buttons.
Though, I'd bet a beer that adding "nofollow" (which is possible) will be enough as far as Google is concerned - if an affiliate/paid promotion link has to be done via a button.
Yes, for now, because the ugc and sponsored are relatively new attributes. Updating all pages when that changes will be a nightmare.
@bikegremlin said:
What other SEO related problems did you have?
What other optimization related problems?
Can you compare it to other page builders (not themes)?
I no longer use Divi, and I don't remember all the problems in detail. But I very often ended up making the page content manually.
Each time I asked ElegantThemes support for help with technical SEO issues, they came up with a jQuery workaround that rarely worked.
The last time I checked, Elementor was up to date when it comes to SEO. But it was some time ago. My needs have changed, so today, I program my websites with Django.
A simple search-replace can fix the nofollow problem - unless Google starts penalizing links that have "nofollow sponsored sponsored" - if you already have some links with "nofollow sponsored," and some with just the "nofollow." But that too can be fixed with another search-replace.
My websites are full of "ordinary" (not done using buttons) affiliate links that are just "nofollow." If it becomes an issue, I think I'll go the search-replace route instead of editing hundreds of links manually.
As for the other problems you mentioned - how long ago have you stopped using Divi, i.e. how up-to-date is your feedback? Asking because from what I could gather, they did improve noticeably. Over two years ago, I was comparing the available options and at that time, Elementor looked like the lesser of the available evils (good tutorials did play a large part in my decision). But now I'm giving Divi a test and it's not looking bad (still learning the ropes though).
Well - Divi seems to still be relying on shortcodes.
When you remove Elementor (for whatever reason), you get the basic of the layout still existing.
When you remove Divi - you just get [divi-shortcode-xyz fsdljkfalkjsdfkljsadfklsdjafklsdjfkljsdflksdjflkčsdfkljfsdfds]
That's something to consider. Especially if you build a lot of pages with Divi.
Also, Elementor seems a bit more intuitive, but maybe it's just me - needing to get used to a different tool.
Top class super fast support though - it must be said.
@frog said:
Divi looks like a good choice until you start working with SEO and other optimization. You can, for example, not add rel="sponsored"* to a button.
I regret that I bought a lifetime license some years ago because I have wasted so much time making workarounds for stuff that you would expect that worked out of the box.
Yes, quite strange to not allow custom link tags for buttons.
Though, I'd bet a beer that adding "nofollow" (which is possible) will be enough as far as Google is concerned - if an affiliate/paid promotion link has to be done via a button.
Yes, for now, because the ugc and sponsored are relatively new attributes. Updating all pages when that changes will be a nightmare.
@bikegremlin said:
What other SEO related problems did you have?
What other optimization related problems?
Can you compare it to other page builders (not themes)?
I no longer use Divi, and I don't remember all the problems in detail. But I very often ended up making the page content manually.
Each time I asked ElegantThemes support for help with technical SEO issues, they came up with a jQuery workaround that rarely worked.
The last time I checked, Elementor was up to date when it comes to SEO. But it was some time ago. My needs have changed, so today, I program my websites with Django.
A simple search-replace can fix the nofollow problem - unless Google starts penalizing links that have "nofollow sponsored sponsored" - if you already have some links with "nofollow sponsored," and some with just the "nofollow." But that too can be fixed with another search-replace.
My websites are full of "ordinary" (not done using buttons) affiliate links that are just "nofollow." If it becomes an issue, I think I'll go the search-replace route instead of editing hundreds of links manually.
As for the other problems you mentioned - how long ago have you stopped using Divi, i.e. how up-to-date is your feedback? Asking because from what I could gather, they did improve noticeably. Over two years ago, I was comparing the available options and at that time, Elementor looked like the lesser of the available evils (good tutorials did play a large part in my decision). But now I'm giving Divi a test and it's not looking bad (still learning the ropes though).
@MichaelCee I have been with them since a couple of years now and, so far, it doesn't seem like the Lifetime Deal will be discontinued. That being said, bf is around the door
Comments
I agree, but before the Divi update happened my pagespeed score on that site was in the 50s-60s iirc
Divi looks like a good choice until you start working with SEO and other optimization. You can, for example, not add rel="sponsored"* to a button.
I regret that I bought a lifetime license some years ago because I have wasted so much time making workarounds for stuff that you would expect that worked out of the box.
*) https://developers.google.com/search/docs/advanced/guidelines/qualify-outbound-links
Yes, quite strange to not allow custom link tags for buttons.
Though, I'd bet a beer that adding "nofollow" (which is possible) will be enough as far as Google is concerned - if an affiliate/paid promotion link has to be done via a button.
What other SEO related problems did you have?
What other optimization related problems?
Can you compare it to other page builders (not themes)?
BikeGremlin I/O
Mostly WordPress ™
Yes, for now, because the ugc and sponsored are relatively new attributes. Updating all pages when that changes will be a nightmare.
I no longer use Divi, and I don't remember all the problems in detail. But I very often ended up making the page content manually.
Each time I asked ElegantThemes support for help with technical SEO issues, they came up with a jQuery workaround that rarely worked.
The last time I checked, Elementor was up to date when it comes to SEO. But it was some time ago. My needs have changed, so today, I program my websites with Django.
A simple search-replace can fix the nofollow problem - unless Google starts penalizing links that have "nofollow sponsored sponsored" - if you already have some links with "nofollow sponsored," and some with just the "nofollow." But that too can be fixed with another search-replace.
My websites are full of "ordinary" (not done using buttons) affiliate links that are just "nofollow." If it becomes an issue, I think I'll go the search-replace route instead of editing hundreds of links manually.
As for the other problems you mentioned - how long ago have you stopped using Divi, i.e. how up-to-date is your feedback? Asking because from what I could gather, they did improve noticeably. Over two years ago, I was comparing the available options and at that time, Elementor looked like the lesser of the available evils (good tutorials did play a large part in my decision). But now I'm giving Divi a test and it's not looking bad (still learning the ropes though).
BikeGremlin I/O
Mostly WordPress ™
I stopped using Divi last year.
Since "nofollow" and "sponsored" means 2 different things, it is risky to replace them all with find and replace.
I guess Divi is now on my list should I ever have a project backed by a budget in the future.
Hopefully it stays relatively affordable?
Michael
Well - Divi seems to still be relying on shortcodes.
When you remove Elementor (for whatever reason), you get the basic of the layout still existing.
When you remove Divi - you just get [divi-shortcode-xyz fsdljkfalkjsdfkljsadfklsdjafklsdjfkljsdflksdjflkčsdfkljfsdfds]
That's something to consider. Especially if you build a lot of pages with Divi.
Also, Elementor seems a bit more intuitive, but maybe it's just me - needing to get used to a different tool.
Top class super fast support though - it must be said.
BikeGremlin I/O
Mostly WordPress ™
The rel="sponsored" etc seem to be indeed an issue. Didn't need it so far. There seems to be yet another workaround on Stacksocial (not tested): https://stackoverflow.com/questions/60694552/can-we-add-attributes-to-buttons-in-divi-theme
@MichaelCee I have been with them since a couple of years now and, so far, it doesn't seem like the Lifetime Deal will be discontinued. That being said, bf is around the door
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