Secrets to Writing Engaging Titles & Content for SEO - SEW recently revealed the Most Engaging Posts of 2012. As a shameless plug, my article "10 Old SEO Methods You Need to Stop"
ended up being among them and I proudly Tweeted and bothered my
co-workers with the news and the article gained another round of
attention.
Since this was the first time any of my musings had made such a list,
I spent a fair amount of time going over each of the well-deserving
articles. I began to notice a few patterns and thought it might be cool
to review what I found and explore some of the reasons. Were there any
secrets to be found?
Know Your Audience
In my years of writing here at Search Engine Watch, I have learned
(often times through trial and error) what differentiates this site and
its core audience from other related sites in the same space.
Understanding that difference is by far the most important part about
sculpting and creating content, as you are essentially learning who your
audience is and why they are on your site.
At a very base level, tons of people come to Search Engine Watch to
learn. But not just to learn about trends and news (although there is
definitely that as well).
It seems that readers here want to learn how to implement various
things. They want to validate their own actions, learn from others
mistakes, and be guided through the right ways of doing things in their
online marketing. This ranges from the very basic beginners to many
advanced techniques and strategy, so identifying this is helpful but
also gives a wide array of possibilities for topics.
Let's set that aside for a moment and take a look at something different.
Titles: The Not-So-Secret Secret to SEO Success
I know, I know... Talking about titles in SEO – how novel! But this
isn't about optimization per se, it's about engaging your audience.
Dedicated authors and blogs might have a certain set of readers who
will just blindly read everything they publish, but to the rest of the
world you have one line that has just one chance at letting people know
if they should click through and read or not. That's right, it's your
title!
Ask yourself this: If you blog, do you write your titles before or
after your write your content? My guess is that 90 percent of people
fall into the latter category and most spend all of about 10 seconds on
it, maybe 20 if you're directly optimizing for a keyphrase.
So, if the title is so important (on average, 8 out of 10 people will
read your headline as opposed to 2 out of 10 who will read beyond the
title, according to Copyblogger), why not spend some more time on it? Why not write it first and let it guide your article?
OK, now let's look at the list of Most Engaging Posts of 2012 again and see what we can see:
- Google Penguin Update: 5 Types of Link Issues Harming Some Affected Websites
- Bare Minimum SEO: 3 Things You Must Do
- 7 Time-Saving Google Analytics Custom Reports
- 10 Old SEO Methods You Need to Stop
- How to Create a Social Media Editorial Calendar
- Social Media ROI: How To Define a Strategic Plan
- Worldwide Social Media Usage Trends in 2012
- 23 Tips on How to A/B Test Like a Badass
- Killer Landing Pages: 3 Examples of Landing Pages that Convert
- Future of SEO: Change, Convergence, Collaboration
Of the 10 posts:
- 3 of them actually use the term "How To".
- 8 of them imply learning about something that could give a direct example at implementation.
- 6 of them are based around a numeric list.
Amazing what you'll find in a title beyond keyword stuffing and
character count, no? So the learning/implementation component is
reflected in 80 percent of the most engaging articles.
Lists. Lists? Lists!
But what about all those lists? Top 5 this and 10 tips on that.. what gives?
During an interview on NPR's Here and Now, Alan
Light, a contributor to Rolling Stone magazine, discussed their list of
the 100 greatest guitarists of all time. As you can imagine, any time a
list like this is released where the findings are arbitrary opinions
and not based on something as direct as sales figures, the readers go
nuts. Why is that guy from Black Flag on there but Steve Vai isn't?
Steve Vai could play circles around him or whatever.
In the comments on the interview piece I saw this gem:
Lists like this one from Rolling Stone can create controversy or
reassurance in one's own beliefs and practices. That alone can help
expand your engagement as people share and tell you their own opinions.
Most lists that elicit some controversy usually aren't written with
that in mind, so don't just think that pushing people's buttons will
bump you to the top of the heap. In fact, controversial conversation
(not arguing) can be a very useful tool in the learning process. I'm a
large proponent of Constructive Controversy.
Top 7 Reasons for Making a List
Beyond just that, the actual logic for using lists like this actually
can be even further reaching. Especially if you craft your titles first
and write your article to the title, lists can be helpful in other ways
by:
- Enabling the author to use their own voice to relate an opinion instead of coming off sounding like a press release.
- Focusing that opinion around a given direction.
- Setting a finite goal around author article completion.
- Stripping large amounts of fluff and clutter.
- Providing structure and format in an easy-to-read fashion.
- Giving the reader a timetable for reading and skimming. A checklist, if you will.
- Focusing readers on individual points to comment on and share with others.
Now, don't run out and just start making top lists of this or that or
all your articles educational walkthroughs. There is a time and place
for everything.
Mostly, the point here was to look at the trends of what drove
engagement here at Search Engine Watch in 2012. Other websites will have
wildly differing results so definitely examine your own results to
uncover trends and determine what type of content resonates the most
with your audience.
Summary
It all boils down to knowing who your audience is and why they are
(or aren't) reading your stuff. Write to the audience you have and the
audience you want to have and let your first impression (your article
title) be a good one.
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