Prefer to watch instead of read?
Most wedding photographers are sitting on a hard drive full of gorgeous galleries that aren't bringing in a single inquiry. Not because the work isn't good — but because the blog structure is wrong.
A venue blog written the right way isn't just a place to share pretty photos. It's a resource that shows up on Google when engaged couples are actively searching for venues — long before they start looking for photographers. This post walks through the exact structure I use for SEO clients to turn a wedding gallery into a venue blog that Google can actually understand and rank.
Why Your Current Wedding Blogs Probably Aren't Ranking
Most photographers make one of two mistakes that quietly kill their chances of ranking.
Mistake #1: The scrapbook recap. You know the one — a title like Jack and Jill's Beautiful Spring Wedding, followed by a story about how emotional the ceremony was and how perfect the golden hour portraits turned out. That's a lovely thing to write, but Google doesn't rank lovely. It ranks helpful. The people who would find this blog through search aren't the couple who already booked you — they're engaged couples researching that venue right now. A blog that reads like a personal journal entry doesn't answer their questions.
Mistake #2: The gallery dump. Two paragraphs of copy followed by 127 photos. If that's what you're doing, you might as well post it to Instagram, because that's a gallery, not a blog. It overwhelms readers (who will leave), and it gives Google almost nothing to work with. Google needs words on the page to understand what the content is about. Photos alone don't explain anything.
The fix for both? Treat the blog like a venue guide, not a recap.
What Should a Venue Blog Title Actually Say?
Your title should include the venue name and location — never the couple's names.
Couples are not Googling “Jack and Jill's wedding.” They're Googling the venue. A title like Intimate BlackBerry Farm Wedding in Tennessee immediately tells Google what the page is about: the venue, the location, the event type. That's the information that gets your page into the right search results.
Your title is one of the first and most important signals Google uses to understand what your page is about. If it doesn't include the venue and location, Google has to work harder — and it may not bother. Names are optional. Venue and location are not.
How to Structure a Venue Blog Post for SEO
A well-structured venue blog reads like a helpful guide for a couple considering that space. Think of it like those high school essays — a clear title, then clearly defined sections. Google understands that structure, and so do readers.
Here's how to break it down:
H1 (your blog title): Venue name + location + event type (e.g., Intimate BlackBerry Farm Wedding in Walland, Tennessee)
H2 sections to include:
- About the venue
- Ceremony spaces
- Getting ready spaces
- Reception details
- Portrait locations
- Lighting and sunset timing
- Best seasons to get married there
- Nearby accommodations
- Call to action (introducing yourself as a photographer who would love to shoot there)
These sections do two things at once: they make the blog scannable for a human reader, and they give Google a clear picture of what the page covers. Google ranks content it can clearly understand.
How Many Photos Should Go in a Venue Blog?
Aim for 40–50 images, laid out to follow the structure of the blog.
This is the part that's hardest to get right — especially when the photos are beautiful and you want to include everything. But overwhelming the reader means they leave your site, and more bounces signal to Google that the page isn't helpful.
The layout should flow: intro copy → hero/exterior images of the venue's signature spaces → ceremony section + ceremony photos → reception section + reception photos → and so on. Copy comes first. Photos support each section.
Hero images — the signature spaces the venue is known for, like a ceremony backdrop, grand staircase, or mountain view — should appear near the top of the post. These are the recognizable images that immediately tell a reader (and Google) where this wedding took place.
Don't Skip the Alt Text
Every photo in your blog needs alt text. It's the description attached to your images, technically designed for screen readers and accessibility — but it also carries real weight for SEO.
When you see image previews in Google search results, that visibility is supported by alt text. The formula is simple: describe what's happening in the photo naturally, and include the venue name and location where it makes sense.
Yes, writing alt text for 50 images is tedious. I built an AI tool that handles it in one click — you give it the venue name, city, and photos, and it writes SEO-friendly alt text you can copy and paste. It's included inside Venue Blog BFF and it's genuinely the part of the tool I use most on client projects.
Why Not Just Use ChatGPT to Write the Whole Thing?
You can sit down and write one of these yourself — everything in this post is the exact framework I use for my own SEO clients. But where most photographers get stuck is the blank page. How do you structure it? What sections do you include? How do you talk about the venue without sounding repetitive?
The other issue: pasting a generic prompt into ChatGPT usually produces something that reads like… a generic ChatGPT response. It doesn't know the SEO structure for venue blogs. It doesn't know what Google wants to see. And it definitely doesn't sound like you.
Venue Blog BFF is a custom AI assistant built specifically for this. It already has the structure from this post built in, knows what Google needs in a venue blog, and is designed to write in your voice — not the default AI voice. Photographers using it are seeing their venue blogs appear on page 1 or 2 of Google within 48 hours of publishing.
You already did the hard part, which is photographing the wedding. This is just turning that work into something that keeps working for you.
Quick-Reference: Venue Blog Structure Checklist
- Title includes venue name + location (no couple names)
- Blog is written as a venue guide, not a day recap
- H2 sections cover ceremony, reception, portraits, getting ready, lighting, seasons, accommodations
- 40–50 images, laid out to follow the blog structure
- Copy comes before photos in each section
- Hero/exterior images near the top
- Alt text on every image (venue name + location included)
- CTA at the end introducing yourself as a photographer
Related Posts
- Wedding Photographer SEO Marketing Strategy: How Venue Blogs Help You Book Clients Earlier (Part 1 in this series)
- What Photos to Capture at a Wedding for a Strong Venue Blog (Part 2 in this series)
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