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HubSpot Blog Marketing, sales, agency, and customer success blog content. Customer Blog Examples of how real customers use HubSpot for their business. Knowledge Base right Website right Blog right Manage your blog template and settings. Manage your blog template and settings Last updated: October 29, Applies to:. Select, create, import, or delete a blog settings settings icon in the main navigation bar.
In the Current View section, click the first dropdown menu and select a blog. To create a new blog, click the first dropdown menu and select Create new blog , then create a new blog. To import a blog, click the first dropdown menu and select Import blog. Learn more about different blog import methods. To select a multi-language version of the blog, click the second dropdown menu and select a language.
Learn more about working with multi-language blogs. In blog settings, you can select or create a blog with the dropdown menus at the top of the page. This name will not be visible to visitors. Blog header: the external blog name that will display if your templates use the group. Page title : the text that appears in the browser tab and in search engine results. It is recommended to keep the title below 70 characters.
Meta description: the summary that will appear in search engine results, in most cases. Control audience access: control the privacy of your blog. Public: your blog is public and can be accessed by anyone.
Private - Single sign on SSO required: your blog requires single sign-on authentication to access. Learn more about setting up single sign-on for private content.
Private - Registration required: your blog requires requires registration to access. Learn more about setting up member registration for private content. Select your blog templates On the Templates tab, you can view or change the templates applied to your blog posts and blog listing page.
In the Blog post section, click the Actions dropdown menu to manage your blog post template: Select Change template to choose a different template. On the template selection screen, select your new template, then click Done. Very often a merchant could have a range of different blogs, which cover different topics. The full list of attributes which apply to the blog object can be found in our Help Center.
Find your new favorite Markdown editor in our roundup. Sometimes, clients may want to write blog posts under an alias, or they may feature a guest blogger who they would like to credit as the author. This way, you can provide an experience to your clients which is as frictionless as possible.
By default, Ana would need an admin account in order for her name to be a selectable author name—but the client would rather display her name without assigning her an account.
The first step here would be to locate the Liquid object article. If you are using a sectioned theme, this object will likely be in the article-template. Otherwise, you may find it in the article. You will likely see something like the following, where your article. This means we could set up our control flow tags as follows:.
You can also see that we have added an else tag, which allows a follow-on piece of code to execute if the previous condition is not met. If you have a range of different guest authors, you can add additional if conditions for each one and create corresponding blog tags.
The same process would work for pseudonyms or generic brand names that your clients would like to display, without needing to create a specific staff account. A setting for optional previous and next article buttons gives users another level of navigation, and allows them to easily browse more blog articles. Thankfully the blog Liquid object has existing attributes that return the URLs of older or newer blog articles.
We can link these object attributes to buttons on the article page, and use section settings to create an option to display the buttons. You will notice that Beaver Themer has intelligently detected that you are building a custom blog layout and so it has created a layout out-of-the-box for you. I also deleted the top Posts Heading section. You can play with the other settings to design the blog layout exactly as you want. The Posts Module has a lot of settings to make your blog layout look the way you want it to look.
You can check out this official documentation of Beaver Builder to learn about everything else that the Posts Module can do for you. Similar to the Posts module, Beaver Themer adds a few more additional modules to the core Beaver Builder modules that you can use to build your blog layout. You can drag-and-drop these modules while building your blog layout or even while building any other WordPress Archive page layouts like the Category page layouts, Tag page layouts, etc.
You can check out the details of the other Archive modules of Beaver Themer in this official documentation. I am not going to add modules to this layout right now. But you can try out various modules and their settings while building your blog layout.
To apply the custom blog layout that you have just created to your blog page, click the Edit Themer Layout action in the top Admin Panel bar. You should now see the Edit Themer Layout page. On this page, select Post Archive in the Location field.
You can also apply this layout to other Archive pages, like the Category pages, Tag pages, Date Archive pages, etc. I think you have now got an idea of how useful the Beaver Themer plugin is. It really makes it easy to design all WordPress Archive pages, not just the blog page.
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