Title Tag Do’s & Don’ts
Let’s talk about the HTML title element within the source code of your webpage.
This is the on-page source code element that continues to be the primary element that the search engines use to determine what keywords your page is actually about—and ranks your pages accordingly. We are also talking about the descriptive element within the SERPs that people use when choosing which link to click.
So, let’s take a minute to make sure you’re getting this important element of keyword placement correct.
The best title tags focus on three characteristics.
1. They include the exact phrase the page should rank for.
2. They place that exact phrase at the very beginning of the title.
3. They repeat that phrase in some variation within the tag.
Let’s say your goal is a top ranking for the search term Dog Collars. Take a look at a couple of very good title tag examples:
good title tag
Dog Collars – Find the Best Collars for Your Dog – Doggy World
good title tag
Dog Collars – Find the Best dog collar at Doggy World
As you can see both of these title tags place the most important keyword phrase at the very beginning of the title tag. Then you want to strategically reinforce the main keyword with a closely related variation of the keyword. By doing so you are helping to boost the ranking for the closely related keyword-phrase variations. In the first example we repeat the exact phrase while the second uses a slight variation of the phrase to repeat the target keywords. Both strategies are excellent.
When deciding to target a singular or plural version, or to pursue word-order variations, you should consider two factors:
* Your keyword research — How much traffic are those related keywords getting?
* Your competitive analysis — How hard will it be to outrank the competition for those keywords?
Keep in mind that the example title tags above are kept under the 65-character limit Google uses when displaying titles in their search results. While the Google bots will spider (but not display) titles of well over 1000 characters, they will crop longer title tags off mid-sentence when displaying them to users. This will result in unattractive title tags that will lower click-through rates.
As you can also see, the company name—Doggy World is placed at the end of the title where it will interfere less with the importance of your primary keywords. It is debatable as to whether the company name belongs in the title tag at all. It is a fact that the company name does not belong at the beginning of the title unless, for some strange reason, your company name is also your target keyword.
It is usually unnecessary to put your company name in the title tag at all. This is because your company name is not a competitive keyword. Nor should it be difficult to rank for. In general, the only good reason for adding a company name to a title tag is for branding purposes. This is an important title tag fact to keep in mind.
Stay tuned for part 2 of Title Tag Do’s & Don’ts.












