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Rank Math settings can look simple during the setup wizard, but the choices affect indexing, schema, sitemaps, redirects, and how consistently writers optimize content later.
| Rank Math setting | Recommended starting point | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Sitemap | Enable posts, pages, products, and useful taxonomies only | Keeps search engines focused on indexable URLs |
| Title templates | Use readable title patterns with the brand at the end | Prevents messy titles across large archives |
| Schema defaults | Set Article, Product, or WebPage defaults by content type | Keeps structured data consistent |
| Redirects | Enable if you change slugs or merge posts | Prevents broken internal links and lost backlinks |
| Analytics | Connect when you actively review content performance | Makes refresh decisions easier |
Include URLs that deserve organic traffic and exclude thin archives, internal utility pages, duplicate tag pages, and empty taxonomies. A smaller, cleaner sitemap is often better than a huge one full of weak pages.
Use Article schema for most blog posts, Product schema for real product pages, and FAQ schema only when the article actually includes helpful questions and answers. Avoid stacking schema types just because the plugin allows it.
Use title templates as a baseline, not a replacement for editing. For reviews and comparisons, keep the product or comparison phrase near the front. For tutorials, include the task and platform, such as Rank Math setup, WordPress SEO, sitemap, or schema.
If your content strategy includes updating old articles, changing slugs, or merging similar posts, redirects matter. Enable redirects before you start content cleanup so old URLs have a clear destination.
Start with sitemap, titles, schema defaults, redirects, and basic indexing behavior. These affect the entire site.
No. Enable modules only when they support your workflow. Too many modules can make the dashboard harder to manage.
Include important posts, pages, products, and useful taxonomies. Exclude thin or duplicate archives that do not deserve search traffic.
Defaults are useful, but review schema on important articles, reviews, products, and FAQ sections to make sure it matches the real page.
No. Scores are editorial checks. Search performance still depends on intent match, content quality, links, technical health, and competition.