If you’re wondering how to write awesome article titles for SEO then this tutorial should help to address this question.
I use the same strategy for other articles that appear on this website and for posts I’ve published elsewhere.
My goal is to not just write something that a human would appreciate but also to conduct some basic research in an effort to find a long-tail keyword (LTK) that will also appeal to search engines, the Google Search Engine being my primary concern, and to include that target keyword combination in the title.
I use various ChatGPT prompts when engineering the post title and we’ll cover this too.
This article started as an update on LinkedIn where I put together a few ideas regarding how we can engineer the best SEO titles for the purposes of appealing to both the human reader as well as to search engines.
There are seven steps we need to follow and the first involves doing a bit of research about article titles.
There's extra information included in the original article.
Step One: Review Several Articles On The Best SEO Headlines
Below I’ve included several articles that can help develop a better understanding of strategies and tactics you can use to develop an awesome blog post title.
Quoting from the article entitled 13 Types of Blog Headlines That’ll Get You More Traffic [+ Examples]:
You might not realize it, but your headline could be the reason you’re losing traffic. In fact, on average, only 20% of those who read your headline will click through to read your article. That means good headlines lose 80% of your audience.
Great headlines, though, can make a dramatic impact in the opposite direction. You can increase the traffic to your articles by as much as 500%, based solely on the headline.
Below I’ve included several of the best SEO headlines by type:
How-to titles
"How to Make the Perfect Cup of Coffee"
How-to titles are actually quite important and can be helpful as backlink magnets.
List-based titles (list posts / listicles)
"10 Reasons Why Yoga is Good for Your Health"
List-based articles, also known as list posts or listicles, can perform very well because they’re generally easy to scan and read.
List posts are also easy to post on social media platforms so when reusing content, the title in this case can have an importance that extends well beyond the article.
Question-based titles
"What are the Benefits of Meditation?"
According to the article entitled Google Search Statistics (dated 2020):
…14.6% of all Google searches come in the form of a question.
so when developing a question-based title, it will likely benefit the writer to use the exact question people are searching for as their article title.
Opinion-based titles
"Why I Think Veganism is the Future of Food"
Benefit-driven titles
"The Benefits of Going for a Morning Run"
Power words
"Discover the Secrets to a Better Life"
Time-sensitive titles
"Why Now is the Time to Start Investing in Real Estate"
Controversial titles
"Why I Disagree with Popular Parenting Techniques"
Personal experience titles
"My Journey to Becoming a Better Writer"
Numbers-based titles
"5 Simple Ways to Improve Your Productivity."
See also the Backlinko link bait article and any other articles on this specific subject. I’ve included some tweets to threads about this subject in the original article.
The article entitled How To Write Great SEO Titles suggests that we should prefer to use title or sentence case and that, while this doesn’t matter to SEO, per se, how we choose to capitalize can impact the reader (See the sections entitled "Capitalize Properly" and "Does Capitalization Affect SEO Rankings?").
Step Two: Determine The Search Intent
Search intent, or user intent / audience intent, refers to the reason behind a user’s search query.
When it comes to Search Engine Optimization (SEO), understanding search intent is important because it helps to optimize content in order to meet the user’s needs and provide relevant search results.
There are four main types of search intent: informational, navigational, transactional, and commercial investigation.
We’ll briefly cover each of these below — for more information see the Yoast article entitled “What is search intent and why is it important for SEO?“.
- Informational Search Intent: People looking for specific information.
- Navigational Search Intent: People looking to visit a specific website.
- Transactional Search Intent: People looking to buy something now.
- Commercial Search Intent: People looking to buy something in the future.
When it comes to optimizing content, this includes the title too.
In step three we’ll perform some basic target keyword research and knowing what the search intent is should help to narrow down an appropriate long-tail keyword with a search intent that matches what the user is looking for.
Step Three: Locate a Long-Tail Keyword for SEO Purposes
For step three I’ll use the SEMrush Keyword Magic Tool to find a long-tail keyword (LTK) combination.
Ideally, the long tail keyword should be both high volume and low competition — if we end up ranking for this target keyword combination we may end up getting a decent amount of traffic to the post — especially if we end up in the top three positions in the search engine results page (SERP).
If you have a long-tail keyword already in mind, then make sure this is included in the headline.
Designing a compelling headline which incorporates a long-tail keyword may require some creativity especially if the target keyword requires many characters.
What is a Common Benefit to Long-Tail Keywords?
Targeting long-tail keywords is an important search engine optimization (SEO) strategy and involves finding target keyword combinations that are focused, less competitive, and which should help to drive traffic to a website.
The following quote is from the Search Engine Land article entitled Back to basics: What does 'long-tail' keyword really mean?:
If a particular niche has a total search volume of 100,000 and is accompanied by 1,000 keyword opportunities, then by this logic, an estimated 20 to 30 percent of them will be short-tail keywords, while long-tail keywords will account for the remaining 70 to 80 percent.
and the quote below is from the AIOSEO article entitled How to Find Long Tail Keywords and Increase Organic Traffic drives this point home:
...long tail keywords make up for 70% of search traffic. So if you want to get more organic traffic and improve your SEO rankings, you should definitely use long tail keywords in your content.
Why you should also target zero search volume keywords
It’s important to keep in mind that tools like the SEMrush Keyword Magic Tool are often estimating search volume and, from time to time, we may find a target keyword that looks attractive and yet have zero search volume.
Below I've quoted this tweet by @NicheCampus about zero-volume keywords:
Some of my BEST and BIGGEST volume keywords came from digging around for “zero competitive keywords” which had “zero search volume” (from tools etc)
Not only are these free and easy to win Google’s #1 spot, they often have much more traffic than people expect.
I can speak with experience regarding this suggestion as I’ve used zero search volume keywords for various posts and was pleasantly surprised when the actual search volume was higher than I anticipated.
Step Four: Use ChatGPT To Research and Write the Title
In step four, we use a ChatGPT prompt to help us write the title.
ChatGPT can be incredibly useful for research purposes and that includes developing a title for a blog post.
In this example, we ask ChatGPT to create a blog post title that is no longer than 55 characters and also uses the long-tail keyword we discovered in the previous step.
We can ask ChatGPT to give us several variations and in a few seconds we can review many choices and either use one, take ideas from the results, or use one and improve it such that it works with our post.
Using ChatGPT in this manner can be a significant time-saver and is a strategy that I’m using with some frequency.
and
Note that if we can generate one blog post title, we can just as easily generate ten, 50, or 100.
The result can be useful in that we can use the blog post title exactly as generated if it’s appropriate, or we can take something which is close to what we need and improve it.
Step Five: Use The MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer Tool To Develop An Award-Winning Headline
Step five requires that we use a tool such as the MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer (MIHA) to engineer a solid headline that incorporates the long-tail keyword combination found previously.
ChatGPT may also give us a great title that requires no adjustment however if the score is not satisfactory we may want to rewrite the title in an effort to improve the score.
What is The MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer?
The MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer tool is a web application designed to assist users craft compelling and engaging headlines for their content.
By analyzing the quality and effectiveness of headlines, the MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer provides insights that can improve the overall impact of articles, blog posts, or marketing materials.
The MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer tool evaluates factors such as word choice, length, emotional appeal, and headline type to gauge the headline’s potential effectiveness.
MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer users can write SEO headlines that are both optimized for search performance and captivate readers, increase click-through rates, and ultimately enhance their content visibility.
The MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer suggests that you should strive for a score of 70% and above — we can set this bar higher and aim for 75% as the minimum score.
It may not be easy or even possible to achieve all of this given the parameters I’ve outlined and we may need to sacrifice something to make it work — in this case, I’m thinking the first to go will be the MonsterInsights Headline Analyzer score goal of 75% or better.
In this SEO headline example, we have text which is 46 characters long and the Monster Insights Headline Analyzer score is 90%, which is very good.
What Is The Best Length Of A Title In SEO?
We should endeavor to keep the length of the headline to no more than 60 characters however note that a character count of 55 appears to be the ideal length according to the article entitled The Ideal Length of Everything Online, Backed by Research.
Do we benefit from placing the long-tail keyword at the beginning of the blog post title?
ChatGPT suggests that the answer to this question is "no"; other supporting evidence is unavailable at the moment, and even if it did matter, it would be only one of many ranking factors and likely a negligible one at that.
Step Six: Add a Relevant Emoji To The Title ⛳️
In this step we can, if we choose to, and assuming we have enough space to do so, add an emoji to the title.
We need to be careful with this one and just because we can add an emoji to the title it doesn’t mean we should.
Also, note that where we place an emoji may be important too — we’ll get to this in a moment.
This exact subject has been studied already and below is a quote from the findings in the SEMrush article entitled "SEO Split-Testing Case Study: Should You Add an Emoji to the Title on Recipe Pages?" (August 2021) and to be clear, the variant group, in this case, is the title that contains the emoji:
The lines start to diverge right away in the first week. This means that the traffic to the variant group is performing better than predicted and shows that the test is a success. Ultimately, based on organic sessions, we see an increase in organic traffic of no less than 11.3%.
Where we place the emoji may be important as well.
In posts and pages on this site where emojis are included in the title these usually appear at the end of the text.
Google can rewrite titles and according to the SearchPilot article entitled “Can emojis in title tags be beneficial for SEO?” (April 2022):
Google was choosing not to include the emoji, and everything before it, leaving us with a shorter title than before the test, while also removing the primary keyword for the page from what was displayed in search results.
— and this is not good, of course.
This site has several pages which utilize emojis in the title however they appear at the end of the text and in several cases Google has decided to remove the emoji however the remainder of the title appears as it’s been written and without any negative consequences.
So my advice, given what’s been experienced above, is simply to make sure that an article title that contains an emoji is appearing correctly in search results once Google has indexed the page — if it does not appear correctly then you may need to move or remove the emoji and resubmit the URL for indexing in the Google Search Console.
I personally do not like this approach as we end up being forced to wait for the update to happen and, in my experience, that could take several weeks for the change to appear.
When developing the best SEO headlines, the emojis we have available are specified as a unicode standard and tools such as the All In One SEO Pack for WordPress include these emojis as one of the many product features.
Step Seven: Check that the title doesn’t already exist
If the exact title developed is already in use by another website, we should consider rewording the title as we don’t want to fall into direct competition with a page which has been ranked using verbatim the text we’ve developed.
Use ChatGPT To Generate Variations Of Your Best SEO Headlines With Emojis
If we’re not sure which emojis are appropriate for the title, we can use ChatGPT to quickly generate a few variations and then we can pick one.
In this example I use the ChatGPT prompt:
Provide me with ten example titles with appropriate emojis added to the end for the WordPress post entitled “Does your blog post have one of the Top 100 Best Headlines” and do not change the post title.
and we can examine the results in the image below.
Note that there’s likely a more concise way to word this ChatGPT prompt however in this case I needed to demonstrate how this works and intend to revisit this in time.
We could also prompt ChatGPT to create title variations (see step #4) with the emoji included and possibly kill two birds with one stone.
Emojis In The Title Do Not Help Or Hurt SEO
According to the Search Engine Journal article entitled "Google Says Emojis Won’t Hurt Or Help SEO" the presence of an emoji won’t hurt or help SEO.
But, as we’ve already discussed, there can be a positive return regardless and the presence of one or more emojis in the title can have the potential to improve traffic from search engines as well as social media platforms because people may still see the graphic.
Article Conclusion
This article was initially published on my blog on the 10th of November 2022 and has since then undergone many revisions including new content and adjustments for clarity as well as for SEO.
Top comments (1)
Marvelous! ✨Thanks for sharing 👏