SEO titles
SEO Titles That Match Intent (Without Sounding Robotic)
A practical framework for title tags and headlines: align with query intent, keep promises honest, and still sound like a human wrote them.
SEO titles
A practical framework for title tags and headlines: align with query intent, keep promises honest, and still sound like a human wrote them.
The best SEO titles do two jobs at once: they help search engines map your page to a cluster of related queries, and they help a distracted human decide your result is worth opening. When those jobs fight each other, intent should win—because a click that bounces teaches algorithms the wrong lesson.
A keyword is a string. Intent is a situation. Someone searching “best running shoes for flat feet” is not asking for poetry; they want a short list, credible criteria, and a reason to trust your recommendations. Your title should mirror that job in plain language, then add specificity (audience, constraint, timeframe) where it helps.
You can always spot template stacking: “Best + keyword + year + ultimate guide” with no proof of depth. It might rank for a while, but it erodes trust on the SERP itself—especially as AI summaries compress answers and users compare sources faster. A stronger approach is one clear primary phrase, one human benefit, and one proof cue (method, dataset, practitioner experience).
If your title is the contract, the article is the delivery. Keep the contract fair.
If you want a repeatable workflow, draft three variants in Title Tool Pilot—literal, benefit-led, and curiosity-led—then pick based on where the traffic comes from (search vs. social vs. email). That is not keyword stuffing; it is distribution-aware packaging.