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November 2006- How to Write Web Page Titles
to Enhance Your Site Exposure
by Kempton Smith
A carefully-written title for your web page can enhance your site
exposure and attract more visitors. Here's how to write an effective
web page title.
What is a web page title?
In your web page HTML code, the page title (also called the title
element or just the title) is the text that is enclosed by the opening
and closing TITLE tags.
The title should be placed between the HEAD tags, ideally just after
the beginning HEAD tag and before the first META tag.
The title is one of the most important elements of a web page for
a variety of reasons.
*Most browsers will display your page with the title at the top
of the browser window.
*If visitors bookmark your page in their browsers, their bookmark
lists will show your page using just the title. Many web page titles
default to "Home Page." So if the title of your web page is "Home
Page", your visitors' bookmark lists will contain a lot of "Home Page" listings.
*Google and other search engines present the results of a search
by displaying page titles as links in the first line of each query
result. Search engines doesn't like to display "Home Page" as the
best they can do for a user searching for "purple people eaters," for
example.
*Most search engines will order the results of a search engine query
based on the relevancy of your page to the keywords used for the query.
One of the factors in determining this relevancy is how closely your
title matches these keywords. If your small startup company makes
purple people eaters, don't give your home page the title "Unknown
Business, Inc." It's not relevant to the search.
You can see that the title of your web page is highly visible to
others, and it can impact the search engine ranking and visibility
of your web page. It is therefore worthwhile to spend some time carefully
writing each page title.
Practical tips for writing page titles.
Here are some practical tips you can use for crafting an effective
web page title.
*Start by thinking hard about how your potential visitors will search
for your site. What keywords or keyword phrases will they use for
a search engine query? Use one or two of the most important keyword
phrases for your title. In our example, the home page title could
be "Purple People Eaters."
*Don't just use the same title for all your web site pages. Your
About page title could be "About Unknown Business, Inc., Your Source
for Purple People Eaters." Your Order page title could be "How to
Order Purple People Eaters."
*Don't include your company name in the title unless it is a commonly
recognized name or the page is about your company. Use the limited
real estate in a title for relevant keywords. You can include your
company name in the description META tag of your web page.
*Make sure the title does not exceed 66 characters. Google will
not display more than 66 characters of a title in the search results
page. Truncated titles irritate search engine users.
*Don't use more than 7-10 words in your title.
*Be careful when using some web page generators or editors. Many
will either ignore the title or make up an ineffective title like "your
title goes here."
Summary.
Understand what the title element of a web page is, why it is important,
and follow these practical tips for writing your web page titles.
Your internet visibility will be improved, you will improve your search
engine ranking, and you will get more visitors to your web site.
About the Author
Kempton Smith writes articles for internet businesses. For a free
report on how to use articles to promote your product or service,
visit http://article-promotion.blogspot.com.
Copyright © 2005 by Kempton Smith.
This article may be freely published provided you leave it intact.
Note: These articles do not represent the advice or opinions of
Apollo Hosting. They represent the thoughts, advice and opinions of
the individual authors.
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