Quando comecei o WPBeginner em 2009, decidi não incluir datas em nenhuma das publicações do meu blog. Fiz isso porque me considerava mais inteligente do que os outros. Minha teoria era que o WPBeginner NÃO é um blog. É um recurso como o WordPress codex ou a Wikipedia, nenhum dos quais tem datas em seus artigos. Além disso, minha ideia era que remover as datas das publicações do blog levaria os usuários a pensar que meu conteúdo é perene. Mas eu estava completamente errado. Nos últimos meses, tenho notado uma tendência de que cada vez mais profissionais de marketing da Internet e autoproclamados “especialistas em SEO” estão aconselhando seus usuários a remover as datas das publicações de seus blogs no WordPress. Neste artigo, fornecerei detalhes detalhados sobre por que optei por não incluir datas no início e o que me fez mudar de ideia mais tarde. Também abordarei se/quais são os impactos de SEO de ter datas nos posts do seu blog (pós-pinguim e panda). Por fim, meu objetivo é que, depois de ler todo esse post, você entenda que seu problema não é com as datas, mas com a data de publicação. Encontrei uma solução que agradaria a você, aos seus usuários e aos mecanismos de pesquisa.
Razões para remover ou não incluir datas
Quando comecei o WPBeginner em 2009, sempre o vi como um site de recursos semelhante ao WordPress Codex ou à Wikipedia. Se você já usou qualquer um dos dois, sabe que eles não têm carimbo de data/hora ou datas em suas entradas. Provavelmente está se perguntando qual seria a possível vantagem disso? Bem, como usuários, temos um preconceito embutido em relação a conteúdo desatualizado. No momento em que vemos uma data, somos programados para classificá-la em uma das duas categorias: desatualizada OU relevante. Em teoria, o fato de o conteúdo ser antigo não significa que ele não seja relevante, mas os usuários fazem essa suposição. Como blogueiro, esse pensamento foi perturbador para mim, pois eu queria que todos lessem meu conteúdo. Então, o que eu fiz? Decidi não incluir datas nas publicações do meu blog. Minha ideia era que as pessoas leem a Wikipédia mesmo quando ela tem informações relevantes que podem ou não estar atualizadas. Como o usuário nunca sabe a data original de publicação, ele dá a ela o benefício da dúvida.
Nos últimos meses, vi vários profissionais de marketing da Internet e de SEO darem seu veredicto contra a inclusão de datas em publicações de blog. Cada um deles tem seus próprios motivos, mas todos seguem a mesma palavra da moda: conteúdo perene. Quando blogs populares, como o CopyBlogger, decidem remover as datas, isso serve de exemplo para outros seguirem.
Eu já segui esse caminho e posso lhe dizer por que é um caminho errado.
Por que eu nunca mais removeria as datas
Não cometo o mesmo erro duas vezes. Não ter encontros no início foi um erro, e acho que não repetiria esse erro. Minha esperança é que, depois de ler isso, você faça o mesmo. Ao iniciar o WPBeginner, minha principal prioridade era ajudar os usuários com meus tutoriais do WordPress. Como outros blogueiros, eu queria pensar que meu conteúdo era perene. Mas, na realidade, NÃO é. Embora eu volte e atualize os artigos, simplesmente não é possível manter tudo atualizado o tempo todo.
No início, não tive problemas ou reclamações com relação à data. No entanto, depois de seis meses, comecei a receber e-mails de usuários reclamando de um artigo mais antigo. No início, eu simplesmente atualizava o artigo imediatamente. Entretanto, à medida que o site crescia, atualizar todos os artigos parecia se tornar cada vez mais improvável. Chegou a um ponto em que eu recebia regularmente vários e-mails, tweets ou mensagens no Facebook sobre as datas. Levei um ano e meio para desistir de minha teimosia e adicionar as datas na postagem.
Em retrospecto, percebi o grande desserviço que estava prestando aos meus usuários e à comunidade maior do WordPress por não ter datas no site. Eu queria ajudar os iniciantes no WordPress, mas às vezes acabava orientando-os de forma errada ou causando mais confusão porque eles não sabiam que estavam vendo uma captura de tela ou um tutorial mais antigo.
Com o tempo, também aprendi que pouquíssimas postagens são perenes. Você sempre aprende algo novo e seus métodos mudam. Você fica impressionado quando alguém cita suas próprias palavras em uma sessão em que você está falando e contradizendo uma publicação mais antiga. Adivinhe só, se essa postagem não tiver uma data, você não poderá dizer que esse artigo é antigo.
O ponto principal é que, se você realmente valoriza seus leitores, não removeria as datas. Os blogs, por definição, devem ser desatualizados. Quer tenha datas ou não, você ainda mostrará suas publicações em ordem cronológica inversa. Se você realmente acredita que seu conteúdo é perene, por que não muda essa ordem e exibe as postagens em ordem aleatória (sim, isso é um desafio).
Espere, como eu poderia ficar satisfeito sabendo que as publicações do meu blog estão desatualizadas? O Google não penaliza conteúdo desatualizado? Estou perdendo leitores por causa do preconceito dos usuários em relação a publicações mais antigas? Bem, estou satisfeito porque encontrei uma maneira alternativa de exibir datas que deixa a mim e a meus leitores satisfeitos. Suponho que isso também deixe os mecanismos de pesquisa satisfeitos.
Novo método de datas, leitores e mecanismos de pesquisa
Percebi que meu problema não era com as datas. Era com o recurso de “data de publicação”, porque ele não refletia com precisão a quantidade de trabalho que eu investia no site. O recurso de data de publicação é relevante para livros porque os autores de livros não atualizam o livro original. Em vez disso, eles lançam a versão 2. Como blogueiro, eu pessoalmente volto para atualizar um ou dois posts todos os dias no WPBeginner, mas esse post ainda aparece como publicado em uma data mais antiga. Felizmente, o WordPress também tem a capacidade de mostrar a “data da última atualização”, o que, na minha opinião, era a solução de que eu precisava o tempo todo.
Nos dados de métrica de postagem do WPBeginner, decidimos substituir a data de publicação pela data da última atualização. O código tem a seguinte aparência:
Last updated on <time datetime="<?php the_modified_time('Y-m-d'); ?>"><?php the_modified_time('F jS, Y'); ?></time>
A função de hora modificada no WordPress verifica a última vez que você atualizou a postagem. Se a última vez que você atualizou a postagem foi quando a publicou, ela mostrará a data em que foi publicada. No entanto, se você voltou para atualizar essa postagem seis meses depois, ela mostrará a data da última atualização.
Acredito que, no mundo de hoje, a data da última atualização é mais valiosa para os leitores do que a data real de publicação. A data de publicação é irrelevante quando você reescreveu o artigo inteiro.
Agora, quanto aos mecanismos de busca, se você acha que remover as datas do seu design os enganaria, então você é muito ingênuo. O mapa do site do WordPress contém a data da última modificação de cada artigo, e é provável que você tenha enviado o mapa do site para o Google Webmaster Tools. Pessoalmente, escrevo para os meus usuários e valorizo muito mais a opinião deles do que a de algum mecanismo de pesquisa. No entanto, o código acima segue a marcação de esquema adequada que informa aos mecanismos de pesquisa a hora da última atualização da postagem. Sim, isso significa que o Google mostrará a data da última atualização ao lado de sua entrada, em vez da data original de publicação.
Por fim, o recurso de hora modificada me satisfaz como blogueiro. Eu me mantenho em um padrão bastante elevado e sei que meus usuários também não me deixam na mão (obrigado a todos por serem duros comigo). Embora todos os blogs devam ficar desatualizados, o público do WPBeginner não permite isso. Recebemos relatórios regulares sobre artigos desatualizados e fazemos o possível para atualizá-los assim que possível. Se encontrar um artigo desatualizado, informe-nos enviando um tweet para @wpbeginner ou usando o formulário de contato.
Espero que essa solução deixe todos satisfeitos.
Hoje, ainda vejo o WPBeginner como mais do que um blog. Eu o vejo como o melhor site de recursos do WordPress e, ao adicionar a data, acho que o tornei ainda melhor. Ter relevância temporal não nos torna um recurso ruim, mas sim um site de recursos mais útil. Espero que, com minha opinião, eu o tenha convencido a não remover as datas das publicações do seu blog do WordPress. Estou sempre aberto a comentários e críticas. Compartilhe suas ideias sobre esse tópico nos comentários abaixo.
Suraj Barai
Awesome! I was going to remove the date from comments. But after reading this article. I can understand that we should not remove date..
Thanks.
WPBeginner Support
You’re welcome, glad our post could be informative
Administrador
Blair Witkowski
How about author? I use a css code to hide the author in my theme and on client websites because they don’t want a name appearing at the top of the page. For example, my client who is a realtor doesn’t want my name showing on their blog that I am the author. Does this hurt SEO?
WPBeginner Support
It shouldn’t have a major effect on your SEO
Administrador
James Early
I understand why dates are important to your readers because you have new info coming out. My blog is about the Bible and I share insights and stories that are more evergreen than what you’re doing. Is there a reason to have the date stamp on my plugs with my kind of content. What would the advantage be? Less than 5% of my posts are related to events or what’s going on in the world. The focus is on a message about a particular Bible story.
Thanks so much
WPBeginner Support
It could be helpful if you mention recent events in your messages but if you feel all of your content would be evergreen then it would be personal preference for the date.
Administrador
Robert
Hi, manual removing as well as wp meta and date remover and other plugins don’t work with urls containing date; dates still are in search result. What to do? I don’t want to change permalinks.
Tim D. Hodges
Write down a list of the old dates, Change the permalink, and then get a plug in that redirects the old URLs to the new URLs. Problem solved.
Sunil Kumar
Yes, it’ll be very hectic but this the solution.
Michelle
Hi Syed,
Do you have a plug in for “last updated?” The last time I tried to code something myself I got the white screen of death
Cheers,
Michelle
WPBeginner Support
Hi Michelle,
Please take a look at our guide on how to show last updated date for your posts in WordPress.
Administrador
Alexio
With your code the “Last updated on” will show up even on new posts.
I suggest to add this code so it only appears on updated posts:
<time datetime="”>
Yin Teing
Thanks so much for this post! This is so true even in 2017.
Your posts have given me the encouragement not to follow what most blogs are doing today, which is removing dates from their blog posts and the permalinks, then doing 301 redirects.
I’ve maintained a couple of older blogs in which the date is part of the url permalinks. After reading your blog posts, I’ve decided to maintain the permalink structure for my older blogs.
As for the newer blogs that I am setting up, I change the permalink structure not to display the dates, but I’ve included the date in the article.
Like what you mentioned “Bottomline is if you truly value your readers, then you would not remove dates.”….I totally agree with you.
I wish to thank you for all the wonderful tutorials that you have updated on this site.
WPBeginner Support
Hello Yin,
We are glad you fount this article helpful
Don’t forget to join us on Twitter for more WordPress tips and tutorials.
Administrador
Taylor
Just FYI: copyblogger.com is using dates now :). All of their stuff is dated (I checked).
Mohd Shabaz
I Have A Software Download Website And I Want To Add A Option When I Update The Post With The New Version Of Software The Post Will Be Published On The Same Date I Update It
Mariilyn Lesniak
I write recipes and want to bring them to my homepage as well as to rss feed. Is there a way to do this without changing the date as a scheduled post and let it republish at a specified future time?
Stephanie
Thanks for this post, very interesting perspective, I appreciate it! I actually found your post because my theme is putting the DATE in the URL! do you have any advice on how I could fix this so it’s just the blog title?
Ahmed
Edit your permalinks. go to Settings > Permalinks. Choose “post name” instead of “date and name”. Save settings
Catherine
Thank you I have installed this code and it shows my post has been updated on today’s date……but my other posts STILL show no dates…..where do I do to turn the date published back on?
Angelo B Hall
Ugh …..
Faith have it so i stumble upon your post about the same thing am looking to resolve .The date and time from my blog . I agree with you about making your own decision on keeping it or not most bloggers have looked over the fact of posts being old but in fact seeing the time stamp is like a memory lane which you wish to remember or like a birth date or a year in which you would love to relive . Sometimes we forget that pleasing everyone is not the best decision … We also often forget the reason we blog .. its not for time and date but for relevant content to help our viewers out or to give them some incite on what they never really thought about . You made my decision clear on keeping it .. & plus lol trying to remove it is harder than , I expected …..
Thanks for the good read
EMB
Perhaps all bloggers have been thinking about this problem.
Every person has the right to choose a suitable model for yourself.
I appreciate your article. It’s a proper thought.
Anthony Attard
One thing to note is that for sites that use Wordpress as an ecommerce site or any site that is not a blog, removing the date is very useful.
Tremi
Thanks for sharing this wonderful post. I also had this thought before. Later I add the data to post just for the sake of adding. But now I realise why dates are important in the blog post.
Sameer Panda
Very helpful. can I just replace the above mentioned code with my original code or what? Please guide me.
Bang Amri
I just thinking to remove date from my articles , cause I think outdated articles is no good for my SEO . also not good looking from visitor viewer when they read articles from date 2005.
nice share bro.
Brian Reich
Personally I think dates in the URL make them harder to share, look sloppy, and make them uneccessarily longer, which could have an SEO effect. So while I’ve used them on my blog since before I knew better, I haven’t used them in a whole and won’t use them going forward.
I agree with you though, the date that the post was last modified is critical. I like what Yoast and others have been doing: actually using their old, outdated content as a resource by updating it and reposting it. It gives readers who might have missed the old content a second chance at reading it, and provides readers that might stumble upon the old content an updated perspective on the article’s topic. It’s very much a win/win approach that I plan on adopting myself!
Raymond Selda
Thanks so much for putting my mind at peace. haha. I’ve already applied this tutorial on my sites.
Prabhudatta Sahoo
Hi There, I need a small help. Right now I am showing last modified date in my blog but even after that while in SERP it still shows my published date. Is there any reason for that? Or how do I change that to show last modified date in SERP as well?
Kelvin
I’m thinking of displaying date on my Blog BUT hiding date from Search engines.
How do I go about this?
Mark
try this if you’re trying to remove the dates from search engines, also worth clearing the cache.
add_filter( ‘wpseo_show_date_in_snippet_preview’, false); //Returning false on this will prevent the date from showing up in the snippet preview.
Mark
ps: add it within the functions.php file of your theme and may be wait till the bots crawl back again or re-submit the sitemap ..hope it helps
add_filter( ‘wpseo_show_date_in_snippet_preview’, false); //Returning false on this will prevent the date from showing up in the snippet preview.
Alfonski
Now I will never remove dates, but I shall update my articles from time to time
Nate
I was thinking of removing dates but only wanted to do so for particular posts that were evergreen. However using a “last updated on” date stamp seems like the perfect solution! Thanks for sharing this great idea.
Gabriel Livan
Thanks for this post guys. I agree that “last updated on” is so much better better than “published on”. I had a feeling about it and you confirmed that. Keep up the good work on WP Beginner!
John
old post I know (the date was on it )
… I am starting a brand new blog and want to write articles.. back-fill.. posts that should be dated from 2012.. its blog with a story of events. The site is not live so no xml sitemap has been submitted. Eventually the site will have many posts dated from 2012 until 2015.. then I will go live.
Will Google punish me for such behavior?
WPBeginner Staff
Yep, seems like they do show dates now.
James Artre
Out of curiosity, I went and checked over at Copyblogger… and they DO show the dates in their posts.
It could be that they have updated their setting since your last update of this post.
Syed Balkhi
If you’re doing a major rewrite, then sure you can do that. However if it’s minor edits, then it might become annoying for subscribers to keep seeing the old article in their RSS feed or worst in their emails (if you use RSS to email function).
kristl
Whenever I update an article, I actually change the publish date (to the date I updated it), so it moves to the front on my blog, and my subscribers see the new one. Do you see any problem with that?
Brett
If I do a full re-write to improve an old article, and paste the new article over the old one to retain the URL, should the post be marked “no follow” for a period of time to allow search engines to de-index it before allowing them to again follow the post and hopefully rank it higher, or does it not matter that I overwrite the old article and leave it immediately open to search engines?
Allyson Williams
Fabulous info. I update some blog posts annually and have been searching for a way to do this. I am using the Thesis theme. Can you walk me through how to do this for my blog?
WPBeginner Support
We do not offer support for individual WordPress themes and theme frameworks. Please contact your theme’s support, they will be able to help you better.
Administrador
Richard
I am TOTALLY baffled by how to go into Wordpress.com and alter any sort of code. I do mean TOTALLY baffled.
I like the idea of “last updated” solution–but I haven’t the foggiest notion of how I could alter the basic
stuff I get with my free Wordpress.com blog site.
My goal is to write a book-form blog about my recent visit to Myanmar aka Burma. I want the posts to be chronological and I am using a static front page and still trying to figure out how to make this all play nicely together.
Please tell me exactly how I would click through my Site Admin or Dashboard or whatever to modify the postings attached to the static front page to show “last updated.”
With gratitude.
Richard
WPBeginner Support
It would be difficult for you if you are using a free blog on WordPress.com. Please see our guide on the difference between WordPress.org vs WordPress.com
Administrador
George Almeida
Nice post! I tend to agree with having the date on your posts. I think it helps your readers for sure. One thing I’ve noticed with my blog is that even though I post the published data on all my blog posts, the date never shows up on the Search results. I’m not complaining really, it’s kind of the best of both worlds if you think about it. Anyone who sees one of my posts in their search, only sees the title and the Author but no date. If they click on the link, they will see the post AND the published date. This way, folks may not skip the post simply because it was posted 1 year ago and they do not get lost. It’s a win win. I wish I could tell you how I have this working but I don’t really know. I’m using a hosted WordPress blog. Thanks again for the article!
Jennifer Roberts
Thanks. As a reader I hate it when bloggers remove dates from time-sensitive posts. As a blogger, though, I’ve had some good posts get lost in search results because they weren’t new, even though I had updated them. This sounds like a great solution. I hope it works for me.
João Marcos
How add DATE to dinamic descripition using this code… ?
add_action( ‘wp_head’, ‘gen_meta_desc’ );
function gen_meta_desc()
{
global $post;
if ( ! is_home() )
return;
$meta = strip_tags( $post->post_content );
$meta = str_replace( array( “\\n”, “\\r”, “\\t” ), ‘ ‘, $meta);
$meta = substr( $meta, 0, 125 );
echo “”;
}
Rich Page
Awesome! Finally the solution I was also looking for – I was always wondering whether to remove dates or not for my classic old content – this is the perfect solution! Thanks!
Katiero Porto
It’s really simple! It depends on your niche, style and focus. If your blog is about something that is always changing, you will have to post almost everyday, update the posts sometimes and you can’t remove post dates.
Only those who have some sort of atemporal content, let’s say who are writing things about history or religion, those people can hide dates if they want to because their content is naturally evergreen. It will help the reader today and ten years from now.
So my suggestion is if you want to post less and think about long term you should choose an atemporal topic to blog, not something that changes everyday like internet marketing or wordpress.
Patty Ayers
But nobody wants outdated WordPress information, so WordPress info really *must* be either freshly written *or* evergreen, if it’s to have any value. And it can be.
Bloke
I want outdated Wordpress information.
Lora Y
I totally agree. My blog posts are not in any way time-sensitive, but more philosophical in nature. I don’t see the point in adding dates to these posts. My reason for removing them is so that readers wouldn’t realize how inconsistent I am at posting. Terrible. I know.
bernice
This post is great, thanks for making it. However, I am a real newbie. Where do I put this code?
Thanks again.
WPBeginner Support
In your WordPress theme or a child theme you would replace get_the_date(); or the_time(); line. These lines are usually spread in your templates and display a post’s published date and time.
Administrador
bernice
okay, thanks.
Kira
I disagree with this particular viewpoint but still a great article!!
Davide De Maestri
I disagree too
Hayslan
Wow! I was just installing my new blog and thinking in removing the posts dates.
Coincidentally I came here on the blog and at some point I saw the article about “How to Install and Setup W3 Total Cache for Beginners” somewhere and thought, “I’ve read this article before .. is it made another?”. I went to check and saw it was the same article with a difference: updated!
Not enough the article in question, just falling with a parachute here in this article .. let’s face it, awesome and helpful!
You simply rock!
Neeraj Pathania
I wanna ask you about something. I have a wordpress blog and what i do is update each post monthly. So here’s my doubt:” Is there any limit on the number of times any single post can be updated.” I know that the chances of that might be slim to none. But i want to be sure.
Please reply ASAP!
WPBeginner Support
There is no harm in that.
Administrador
Jim
Thank you for doing this post, I was actually thinking of getting rid of the dates on my site, and now I know why not to. I see how valuable they truly are, thank you again!!
Ian Thomson
Great post and I agree 100%. I am very pleased you are thinking about the reader. If I can’t find a date I ignore the post and move on as it has limited value without one. I have just left comments with another blogger who proclaims himself a “leading social media marketing and online marketing expert”. He evangelises not using dates and does not accept that all information ages. Oh well.
Naeem
What about the dates in Blogger Urls, like on my blog at
I am thinking of removing the date stamps in URL because they might affect SEO.
What are your views on it?
WPBeginner Support
We don’t use dates in WPBeginner’s URL structure. However, dates in URL can positively affect sites like newspaper sites, journals, other sites where dates are important to the relevancy and context of the content.
Administrador
Kenneth von Rauch
Thanks for the post, Syed. What you say makes perfect sense. I just want to add that it still depends on the niche. For example, you can use WordPress as a Welcome site for a brick and mortar company. Such companies still exist and they just want their contact details to be ‘available on the Web”. That said, I totally agree that in the case of WPBeginner.com, it’s beneficial to display post dates.
As for the code you offer, it works just fine, but you can just install the WP Last Modified plugin that does exactly the same. The advantage is that you won’t have to mess around with any code. The only issue with the plugin is that it does not remove the ‘Posted on’ text. I personally believe the users should have the option to decide whether to keep that text or not.
Dpot
I always prefer the use of date.
Personally it allows me to see in which date I published what!
Thank you
Chiranjeev
Hi,
Finally found the post that cleared my all doubts.
I was confused since long ago regarding Should I show date in search engine or not, But I got the right solution for it. It’s really good idea to update the post date instead off removing it from Google Search or other search engine.
Thanks a lot for detailed information.
Matt
Grammar errors aside, you make some valid points here. FYI – Wikipedia does post a date in their articles. It’s just not very easy to spot. Look in the footer and you’ll find a last modified date and time.
Zimbrul
Coming back here after I did it!
I’m using genesis and I’ve managed to drop the last modified date code using Genesis Simple Edits and a shortcode. Works perfectly and you have the freedom to drop the shortcode at the beginning of the article or at the end. Now, there is a problem. How do I style it to look like the theme’s post info?