Writing Headlines For The Web
1. Focus on Descriptive Words and
Phrases
Because
of the nature of the web, "Smith Wins!" doesn't go far enough to tell
users about the story. Who is Smith? Did he or she win a marathon, a lottery or
the Republican primary for U.S. Senate? You've probably learned that short
headlines grab more attention than longer ones, but for the web, short
headlines can undersell your story and cost you click throughs.
"Roxanne
Smith Wins Bitter Republican Primary Struggle for U.S. Senate" is a
headline that is more descriptive and is more likely to be clicked. Keep in
mind that if your headline isn't necessarily connected with a photograph or is
transmitted automatically to social networking sites, you need to write
something that can stand on its own.
2. Use Search Engine Optimization
When Writing Headlines
Search
engine optimization is another reason to write a longer headline than
"Smith Wins." Google, Bing, Yahoo and other search engines use your
keyword phrase to help readers find your story.
When writing headlines
for the web, your goal should always be to have your story show up on the first
page of a search engine's results. There are many
factors in succeeding, but writing a headline that contains keywords
for your story is a start.
"Roxanne
Smith," "Republican Primary" and "U.S. Senate" are all
terms that a search engine will notice and remember. Those are also words that
a search engine user will likely type in a search box. Put the two together and
your story on the election will attract more readers.
3. Draw the User Into the Story
We've
all seen headlines that inform us but do not entice us to click through to read
the story. If you're a website writer, that's a lost opportunity to build your
stats. If I'm a reader and all I want to know is who won the race, "Smith
Wins" answered my question. Unless I want details on the vote count, I
will likely move on.
But by
adding the words "Bitter" and "Struggle" to your headline,
you will pique users' interests beyond the election night victory to get them
to click to the story. In some forms of media, this is called tease writing --
you are teasing the user into wanting more information.
In
this case, you did it by adding two words to a static headline. Why was the
race bitter and a struggle? You are forcing users to click through to find out.
Writing
effective headlines for the web takes some thought. But with just a little
practice, you can boost your site stats by building straightforward, yet
compelling headlines that sell your story to the search engines and to your readers.
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