You just finished writing an amazing article and can’t wait to share it with the world. But first, you need to come up with a great SEO title. The kind of SEO title that’ll not only help you rank in Google but also make people excited to read your article. Following the advice I gave a few months ago is a good start. But you may wonder: how does a good SEO title look in the real world?| Grow With Less
Your headline is the first part of your articles your readers see. And it may very well be the last part they see. That’s why a catchy headline is not nice to have, it’s essential. Without it your article may as well not exist because nobody will read it. But how do you write a headline that’ll capture your readers’ attention and bring thousands of visitors to your blog? Hint: headline analyzers are definitely not the answer.| Grow With Less
Copywriting legend David Ogilvy once said that “on the average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy. When you have written your headline, you have spent eighty cents out of your dollar.” That’s great news because it means a great blog post title has the power to attract lots of readers to your blog and to help you build your business. Unfortunately, it also means that nobody will read your article if the blog title sucks.| Grow With Less
What do you do when you spent hours writing awesome articles only to realize your mom and your best friend Dave are the only people reading them? That’s the question I asked myself 7 years ago after writing dozens of articles for my new blog French Together. I followed 10,000 words guides showing me how to optimize my site for traffic, sent hundreds of outreach emails, wrote guest posts and installed fancy Wordpress plugins.| Grow With Less
A title tag is an HTML element that specifies the title of a web page. Title tags are displayed in SERPs and are important for usability, SEO, and social sharing. The title tag of a web page is meant to be an accurate and concise description of a page's content.| Moz