The
Importance of a Good Web Page Title
Many
web designers focus just on the actual look and feel of
a page and dismiss seemingly minor details like the page
title. However,
a good title can, in just a few words, tell your visitors
what they can expect by reading your page.
More importantly, the page title is the only way
that many visitors will be able to identify and find your
page. A good
title can therefore increase the traffic to your site.
More
and more Internet users rely on search engines every day,
and search engines use page titles to generate the links
displayed after a search.
Lets suppose that you own a company called
The Attic, that specializes in vintage clothing and you
have just submitted your website to a search engine.
If the title of your page is:
The Attic.
Specializing in Vintage Clothing, it is OK.
Certainly, it is better than just Welcome to
the Attic.
However,
a better option would be: Vintage Clothing by The
Attic. The
reason is that, most likely, a visitor that comes to your
site from a search engine will not conduct a search for
The Attic, but probably will do it for Vintage
Clothing. The fact that those keywords are in your title, and especially
because they are at the beginning, will increase the chance
of the search engine displaying your page within the search
results, and will increase the likelihood that the user
will notice the link and click on it.
An
exception are large companies with superb name brand recognition.
They may be better off by starting the page title with the
company or the brand name, since they will be well known
to most users and their purpose will be evident. For
all that matters, they may even not need to rely on search
engines for traffic at all.
Another
reason to pay close attention to the page title is that
it is used by web browsers to name the page when it is bookmarked.
If a user goes through her favorite files and doesnt
recognize your page due to a lousy page title, she may by-pass
it, and, as a result, you will waste a precious opportunity
to get easy traffic to your site.
In
summary, you want to use a page title that clearly states
the purpose of the page, that will catch the users
eye when it is displayed by a search engine, and that will
be easily identifiable by the user when he browses through
his files in the Favorites folders.
About
The Author
Mario
Sanchez publishes The Internet Digest ( http://www.theinternetdigest.net
), an online collection of web design and Internet
marketing articles and resources. You can freely reprint
his weekly articles in your website, ezine, newsletter
or ebook, just include this resource box.
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