Posts Tagged ‘meta title’

The Meta Title Tag: Increase Your Rankings in 60 Characters or Less!

February 25th, 2010 by Jessica Runberg

Search engine optimization is a complex process. From selecting keywords to building a comprehensive link building strategy, getting your website to rank highly in the engines takes time, hard work and patience. No matter what others promise you, nobody can get you on the first page of Google’s organic listings overnight. However, there are a few simple things that you can do right now to give your website a boost.

Among these “rankings boosters” is having a unique, keyword-optimized HTML meta title for every page on your website. This tag is written in your website’s HTML code and appears on the top left corner of your Web browser window. It can also be displayed in search engine results as the blue link above the site description.

This short line of text, usually no longer than 60 characters, has a BIG impact on your SEO. Search engine optimization experts consider a proper title tag to be the most important factor in defining how search engines classify a Web page. A poorly written title tag can eliminate the effectiveness of high quality link building and content creation.

Think of it this way: if the search engines ignored all other aspects of your on- and off-page SEO and only analyzed your meta title tag, what’s written here should tell them exactly what the page is about. The truth is, sometimes this scenario isn’t that much of an exaggeration. That’s how important the meta title is.

Although meta title tags should tell you exactly what the page is about, it’s amazing how many websites have chosen a generic and non-descriptive tag for their pages. This is one of the biggest mistakes many webmasters make. The other mistake is trying to cram too many keywords into the SEO meta title, including keyword variations that don’t complement each other. Over-optimizing is just as disastrous as the results you’ll get from not trying to optimize your title tag at all.

Like all aspects of SEO, the key is to strike a delicate balance. By including one or two of your top keywords in your title tag, you can clearly tell the search engines (and Internet users) what the page is about. Just make sure the keywords are unique to the page and do not conflict or blur with any other pages on the site.

Want to learn more? Please give us a call at 1-877-Rank-321. Our SEO consultants can evaluate your website for meta tag and SEO effectiveness.

Meta Title SEO Tips

July 31st, 2009 by Patrick Hare

People in the field of Search Engine Optimization are known for varying opinions about most SEO practices, but there isn’t much debate about the title tag, because a properly written web page title can literally change your rankings overnight. Several other factors have to be in play, such as having an established and trustworthy site with sufficient links from other web pages, but we have gotten surprising results for several clients with the right title tag.

Also known as the “meta title” by some, titles often have to be explained to novices and new SEO clients. For people using Microsoft Windows, we usually direct people to look at the wording in the browser window to the left of the button that minimizes the page. In many cases the original designer may have used such descriptive titles as “Home,” or “index.html” or the company name in all caps. Since search engines use titles to classify your on-page content, “home” will lump your site in with 208 million sites that use the same word.

How Many Characters?

Normally the first 60 characters in a meta title are important, since search engines like Google truncate the remainder of the title. Note that spaces, dashes, pipes, and ampersands count as characters. You can write longer titles, but should try not to go beyond 120 characters. Remember that the web page title defines the subject, and should be concise.

How to Arrange Keywords in Your Title

The arrangement of keywords in your page title is going to have an influence on search engine positioning. Whether you are doing optimization on a shoestring or a full budget, the homepage title should be about the most general subject matter relative to the site, and the most high volume keyword should be used. You can find high volume relevant keywords using the Google Keyword Tool, or you can use your biggest traffic terms in your sponsored search platform. Normally you can repeat a word or phrase once in the title. If you have a site that sells comic books, you might arrange your best keywords in a format like:

Comic Books Marvel & DC Comics For Sale Graphic Novels

Separating keywords with commas is not recommended, since it may look like you accidentally inserted your keyword list into the title, and you may incur a spamming penalty. On some sites the company name is inserted before the keywords in the title. While there may be a small positive impact by moving the company name to the end of the title, every little bit helps in the world of SEO.

Preventing Keyword Blurring

A full scale SEO project will involve unique meta titles on as many pages as possible. This actually involves careful planning, since similar or identical title information will keep search engines from selecting the best page. If Google sees several pages with the same category information, it will either try to pick the best one or it will give them all a lower placement than any single page would have gotten. For the comic book example, you would have more specific information on category level pages (“Spider Man Comic Books”) and detail pages (“Amazing Spider Man #37 – Spidey Tangles With a Robot.”) This type of detail helps a search engine create a hierarchy, and increases the number of site pages that match up with specific customer searches.

Another cause of keyword blurring in titles involves default titles that are defined in shopping carts and content management systems. If you are unable to create unique titles for multiple pages, making the default title into something generic (like your company name) can prevent blurring.

Dynamic Title Insertion

Have you got several thousand pages on your site, or multiple products for sale? If people are searching for items by part number, dynamic keyword insertion into your title can dramatically improve your exposure and sales volume. This requires some programming, since you are effectively inserting a variable (most likely your short product description) into the title tag. Most often, you will want some static text to go along with the dynamic text, so the code would look like:

[part number] Printer Ink Refills – Inkjet Replacement Cartridges

Depending on whether your page code is PHP, ASP, or Cold Fusion, this would be an “echo” command or a similar method of writing the code and rendering it as HTML. You may also want to see if your CMS or shopping cart has a plugin that does this for you.

Agreement with Page Content and Links

Anything that goes in your title should be reflected on the actual page. Search engines want to match up titles with content, which still has a high value to most search algorithms. One warning is that your header (h1) tags should not match the title exactly, or the page may get filtered for over-optimization. Similarly, links to your page should contain anchor texts that match up with title elements, but naturally the link texts themselves should be carefully mixed to prevent problems. If you have an entire batch of anchors that match up with the first phrase in the title, then you may encounter problems. As always, an experienced SEO company can advise you on page optimization.

Conclusion

The value of web page titles cannot be underestimated in the world of SEO. A well known survey of search engine optimization experts showed that the title is still the most important consideration in on-page optimization. Although the title should not be the only thing you do for your website’s SEO profile, it is one factor that will prevent your site from ranking if all other best practices are already in place. We have seen multimillion dollar companies with atrocious page titles, and they were getting beaten by mom-and-pop shops with better optimization. Anyone trying to grow a website’s online presence should consider the status of all the web page titles on their site, and how much traffic that good titles can bring.

Note: We have a meta tag generator that turns text tags into HTML code that can be pasted onto a site. To use this as a title generator, the other fields can be left blank.