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Title Tag & Meta Description Psychology

June 28, 2018 //  by Alyson Harrold//  Leave a Comment

Updated January 10, 2023

Reading Time: 3 minutes

How to Entice a Click

Title tags and meta descriptions are the mini organic “ads” that show up on a Search Engine Results Page. If your website has SEO authority and credibility for that keyword, you may appear on page one. There are only ten slots available; the top three get the lion’s share of clicks. These two pieces of metadata influences click-through rate (CTR), not how a search engine indexes your content. Since title tags and meta descriptions exist primarily for humans, knowing a little psychology can help make this teaser copy more enticing. Here are 7 tips to incorporate into your SEO writing:

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Keyword Focus

The reason your Title Tag and Meta Description showed up on a SERP is because of a specific search phrase. Google knows that a human searcher wants to quickly identify results that best match to answer their question. That’s why they bold the keyword. We recommend using the keyword at the beginning of your title tag followed by your brand name. In the meta description, use the keyword to set an expectation of what your visitor will see if they click on your title tag link. Give them context. The better the match to their search intent, you’ll see higher click-through rates (CTRs), and lower page bounce rates. If you’ve provided enough quality content, you should also see the time on site stat increase as well as the number of pages visited.

But Don’t Keyword Stuff

Mentioning your keyword once in the title tag is sufficient. Then use it again once in the meta description. Any more and it’s a turnoff because it feels manipulative.

Character Limits

Google continues to test title tag and meta description lengths. Currently (although recently this has been subject to some change), title tags range from 50-60 characters (depending upon how many pixels used by each letter. For meta description, character lengths range from 150-160 characters. You literally have room for one or two sentences. Make each letter count. Complete sentences aren’t necessary. If you go beyond the character limit, it gets shortened by search engines. There are also some variations to what search engines display. For example, Bing hovers around 150 characters. So, by keeping within the space limit, you control what your potential visitor reads.

Relevancy Affects Bounce Rate

Have you ever clicked on a search result only to figure out it has little or nothing to do with what was promised in the meta description? Annoying, right? That’s why it’s so important to make sure that your title tag and meta description matches the content on your web page You’re making a subtle promise to a visitor. If there’s a disconnect between your mini-ad and your content, then you are delivering a poor impression. And, it negatively affects your bounce rate. Search engines pay attention to this metric. It indicates a poor search experience. If it happens often enough, your organic SEO rankings can suffer.

Don’t Duplicate From Another Meta Description

Your website may have multiple pages that use the same keyword. Copying the same text over and over in your title tags and meta descriptions is a no-no. Why? It’s considered an error. By duplicating text, you aren’t differentiating between pages. Unique and enticing descriptions are clicked more often. In Search Console, Google tells you if you have missing or duplicate title tags and meta descriptions. Find and fix them.

No Cheesy Offers

Limited time offer. Call Now. Click Now. Yuck! Online searchers are smarter than these tactics. Again, summarize the page content from the reader’s point of view, don’t try to trick them into taking action, persuade instead.

Don’t Copy/Paste from the Page’s Text

It may be tempting to copy/paste a sentence from the webpage’s actual text. You’re wasting a prime opportunity. By its very nature, ad copy is meant to entice. Your title tag and meta description is your chance to tempt a searcher. You’re demonstrating to a human that your webpage is the answer to their search query.

What gets you to click on a meta description? What would you add to this list?

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Category: SEO// Author: Alyson Harrold

About Alyson Harrold

Alyson is Co-CEO and Chief Storyteller. Prior to forming the agency, her career spanned media (NBC-TV affiliates and city magazine, international ad agency) and positions like C-Suite financial services marketer and digital marketing consultant. Alyson learned how the right medium with the right message can attract the right audience. With her team, Alyson helps brands have meaningful customer interactions. Now she teaches those lessons—among others—as a UC Berkeley Extension instructor in her SEO and Digital Marketing courses since 2014. Alyson shares her knowledge as a speaker at preeminent digital marketing conferences around the country like Digital Growth Unleashed and more.

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