Scientific Approach to Writing Page Titles
We all know how important page titles are for SEO and just the
general success of our blogs and websites, don’t we? Well we are told often
enough, so we certainly should… But how many people actually give page titles
the amount of attention they actually deserve?
Most clever bloggers
spend a little thought on each page title—they think carefully about how to
word it in such a way as to get both the search engines and the potential
readers to pay attention. But let’s face it, if this is your method, all you are
really doing is typing something that “sounds good.”
Today I am proposing a
slightly more scientific approach to page titles.
Step 1: Keywords
Any diligent blogger will
already have some vague keywords in mind for their post—if you want to get some
nice natural organic traffic, you will need to rank. So decide on your phrase
and obviously make sure it is getting some searches.
I would recommend just
one phrase per post. By the very nature of blogging you will be writing more
posts soon, so there really isn’t any need to cram in more than one key phrase.
Also, the extra flexibility will allow you to write a better title.
Also, make sure your
phrase makes sense for a blog. Don’t bother optimizing your post for “electric
showers” because if someone searches for that phrase, they are almost certainly
looking for a retailer and not a blog post (try it: search for “electric
showers” and see how many of the results are blog posts)> People searching
on this phrase want to buy a shower, not read about it. A better
phrase might be “how to buy an electric shower”—that’s a much better fit for a
blog.
Step 2: Look at competitors’ titles
The great thing about
Google is that they will show you what works best before you even start. So the
next thing to do is Google the phrase you want to rank for. In 0.003 seconds
Google will conjure up a page full of sites which it has found to be relevant
for that phrase.
It stands to reason that
not only does Google consider these pages to have relevant titles, but these
titles have proven to perform well in terms of clickthrough rates (since Google
has recently admitted to using
user behaviour as part of the ranking algorithm).
Look for words which are
bolded and for any obvious phrases which come up more than once—the words in
the phrase you searched for will be bolded of course, but so will any other
words which Google thinks are closely related. Make a list of the phrases
Google likes most and consider using these in your title.
So, going back to our
example, if I Google “how to buy an electric shower,” I see keywords like
“buying showers, buying a shower, mixer showers.” I also notice the title:
Electric
showers: the basics – How to buy an electric shower – Bathroom & personal
care – Which? Home & garden
This looks like a
reasonable title, but it is way too long. This might be a good basic format to
work from though.
Step 3: Look at competitors’ posts
Hopefully at least a few
of the results will be blog posts. If you find that all of the results for your
phrase are other types of sites you might want to reconsider your target
phrase. Is this a sign that Google doesn’t think a blog is the right sort of
site for this phrase? Maybe, maybe not. Think carefully.
In this case, I notice
that for “how to buy an electric shower” the top two results are how-to style
posts and so is one of the lower results, but all of the others are commercial
sites. This makes me think that Google wants more blog style posts, but perhaps
there aren’t enough good ones—definitely a gap to fill!
Assuming you find some
blog posts, read them. Firstly, they will give you some ideas that could make
your post even better. Secondly, you are looking to check that these posts are
similar to yours (but hopefully not as good).
This stage is all about
understanding what Google thinks is relevant for the target phrase; if your
article is a lot different than the prevailing content, then consider which of
the following is true:
·
Your post offers a new insight or angle that hasn’t been
covered before (great, keep up the good work).
·
Your post isn’t really about the same thing as these posts
(again, consider whether you are targeting the right phrase).
After a snoop around the
top results I find that the number one post is actually just an intro which
leads to a four-part post about buying a shower (the second result is one of
these parts, too). There is a lot of good info here, but you could certainly improve
upon it.
Additionally though, I
suspect by splitting the post into four parts, the author is dividing their
link juice. So if I can create one, long definitive post, it could do well
here.
I also note that the
other three parts of the post are: FAQ, features, and installation tips. These
terms might also be helpful for building the title.
Step 4: Build a cracking page title
Okay, so you’re 100%
confident that you have picked a highly relevant target phrase for your post,
and you have a list of words that Google has told you it thinks are relevant to
the chosen phrase…
Start by slotting your
words together in the usual, obvious ways—ideally your target phrase should be
the first word(s) in the page title, then follow up with some related words
which add to the title.
Your page title doesn’t
necessarily need to be written in full sentences because that isn’t what search
engine users expect—make it concisem but not gibberish. The key is to catch
users’ attention and convince them to click.
So let’s see what we get.
I will start of course with our key phrase, and throw in a few extra words:
How
To Buy An Electric Shower: The Basics, Features & Shower Installation Tips
I have included a few
hooks that I liked from other titles and other posts, added the word “shower”
for extra relevance, and of course my target phrase is the start of the title.
I actually really like this, but unfortunately it is 78 characters long, so now
comes the dilemma of which bit to trim. Remember, Google will only show 70
characters.
How
To Buy An Electric Shower: Basics, Features & Shower Installation
69 characters! Okay, it’s
not as good a title, but I am still pretty happy with that, and I now have some
great ideas to go make my actual post even better. You may notice I have left
out the word “mixer showers”—that’s because that is actually a different type
of shower. However, I will probably at least mention them in the post and
perhaps make my next post about them.
Step 5: Learn and improve
Writing a good title is
more art than science. It is a skill. Hopefully the tips above will stop you
from making blunders and point you in the right direction, but to be a real
pro, you need to learn from past successes.
Once you have published a
few posts and got some rankings, you can start to monitor your traffic. Set up
your Google Analytics and Webmaster Tools if you haven’t already, and each time
you publish a new post go and check out your data.

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