Unlike the title of your book, the title of your blog posts depend less on creativity and more on careful, pinpoint strategy. A compelling blog post title will include relevant keywords, attract readers and encourage those readers to share with others to grow your reader audience.
Here are six recent favorite articles full of great advice about building better titles for your author blog posts. Happy blogging! (Graphic courtesy FreeDigitalPhotos.net)
The Blogger’s Guide to Creating Catchy Blog Post Titles | Blogelina
The Blogger’s Guide to Creating Catchy Blog Post Titles. With so many blogs in for readers to choose from, you need to make yours stand out from the rest by capturing a prospective reader’s attention from the outset. The body …
Writing Sharable Blog Post Titles | Social Media Today
Every single person who chooses to read your blog has invested their time to do so and there’s nothing worse than being lured into reading a blog post because of a catchy title that has little to nothing to do with the content.
How to Use Keywords in Title of a Blog Post
Keywords are keys for getting organic traffic, organic traffic means traffic from search engines, if you have read my blog post about basic SEO tips from Google then probably you know, how blog post title is important to get your …
Four Reasons Why Blog Post Titles Matter – by John Haydon
Why blog post titles are one of the largest factors how your readers share, how you rank in search, and how effectively you’re targeting your audience.
Best Blog Titles: Make Great Posts Without Dropping in Names
Titles are a significant part of your content strategy because they draw readers into your content. Discover our 9 secrets for writing awesome blog post titles.
A respected and much-used guide for writing compelling blog titles is Jon Morrow’s 52 Headline Hacks available at http://boostblogtraffic.com/.
Great, thanks for letting us know!
Some good advice, but some of these links take you to bloggers who have real problems with the English language. For example, these sub-heads: “It should be long and unique one” and “Always Try to limit it at least of 66 words mainly” That particular site is rife with stuff like that.
Huh, what? This person is giving advice about how to write headlines?
This is a subject that has been written about a lot by true experts. I’m not sure the sources chosen for this post are the best written or most credible, especially when there are so many really good ones to choose from. This post isn’t up to the usual Where Writers Win standards.
Thanks for the heads-up, Jen – We curated these from the most recent written and chose for tips, but our bad in not reading each thoroughly… We’ll get the yucky ones out of there!