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Page Title Length & Keywords

Looking for Current Wisdom

         

Go60Guy

1:45 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Last year there was a thread concerning length of the page title (character count) and keyword placement in the title, etc.

[webmasterworld.com...]

The consensus seemed to be that up to 68 characters is optimum, and that its preferable to place targeted keywords at the beginning. Also, there was discussion of repetition of keywords in the title.

Since that earlier thread, I see snippet type references to these factors scattered about in various threads, and I'm suggesting that its time again to get a cohesive understanding of current wisdom on this important element of SEO.

pendanticist

2:04 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



My point of view (as the owner of an academically oriented directory) regarding Title Tags [webmasterworld.com].

Secondarily, there is a link off of this thread which may be of some help.

Whatever information your thread produces, I ask you all to please keep in mind there are folks out here who play hell changing the Title of pages (we include in our directories) because we feel ethically bound to Title a page exactly as it is Titled.

Thanks.

Pendanticist.

Robert Charlton

5:59 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Go60 - Here are two threads which contain many of the comments I'd make now.

[webmasterworld.com...]
[webmasterworld.com...]

I'm seeing that for PR4 and PR5 pages, Google and seems to be less dependent on title content than, say, Teoma or Inktomi. This isn't to say that titles aren't important on Google... they are. Also, note that, on Google, title word order and word proximity appear to be big factors.

Go60Guy

9:44 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Thanks Robert. Very helpful.

egomaniac

9:57 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Keep your title to 60 characters or less including spaces. After 60 characters, Google will cutoff the title when its displayed in the SERPs.

rfgdxm1

10:11 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Don't repeat words in title, although remember singular and plural are different words to Google. Google does chop off after around 68 characters. Also, try to avoid a pure string of keywords that looks ridiculous to humans. If it totally turns of humans reading a SERP, this negates it coming up high on the list.

Go60Guy

10:19 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I'm not so sure rfgdxm1. I seem to see keyword repetitions quite frequently in high ranking sites.

vitaplease

10:20 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



try setting up a title in google adwords.

rfgdxm1

10:31 pm on Apr 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>I'm not so sure rfgdxm1. I seem to see keyword repetitions quite frequently in high ranking sites.

But would they do just as well without the repetition? Odds are any site with such a title also is using a lot of other SEO tactics to rank high.

Robert Charlton

1:20 am on Apr 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Don't repeat words in title

The second thread I mentioned above (344.htm) is about keyword repetition in titles. Possibly worth looking at.... The question I posed in my post never got answered....

In the past, my tendency has been not to repeat the keywords... there used to be a rule of thumb to use a keyword once only in the title... but I see so many sites repeating words and ranking well that I'm wondering...

- Does an exact phrase match outweigh the risk of a repetition penalty?

- And is there a repetition penalty at all... or might there even be a boost for using the keyword twice?

Go60Guy

3:29 pm on Apr 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Good question Robert. Anyone have an answer?

John_Caius

3:34 pm on Apr 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I think rfgdxm1's point was that it's all very well turning up position 3 instead of position 10, but that's negated if your title looks so spammy that no-one will click on it.

That's not to say necessarily that you shouldn't repeat a keyword, but IMHO:

Widgets Inc. - supplier of blue widgets to the widget men

is better than

blue widget widgets red widgets widget red blue

(obviously)

:)

matkat

3:52 pm on Apr 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I changed the title on a site 3 months ago. It now has the main keyword repeated so that, as in the widget example, it makes sense for 2 phrases. It moved up from 2 to 9 positions (it's around #1 - 5 for the keyword phrases). The index page is PR5 and all the other SEO work has been done. A second page also was retitled without repeating and it jumped from nowhere to #5. I have obviously seen movement based on the title (as long as everything is optimised). I have a few competitors that have repeating titles that don't make sense and are still up there. From my experience it doesn't appear there is a penalty.
<edit>One more piece of the puzzle. If I search for a 2 word keyword phrase I'm at #1. If I add the state to the beginning It's #4. If I search with the state at the end it's #1. In the title the state is after the phrase and the company name contains the keyword phrase.</edit>

annej

4:47 pm on Apr 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



matkat,

You inspired me to try it. I put in two phrases that make good sense in my title. I'm at #11 on my top single keyword and would sure love to get on that first page.

How long did it take you to see the difference in the serps?

What I am wondering is if I will lose a bit because the title will no longer fit the anchor text for most the inbound links. The first phrase is still that anchor text though.

matkat

4:56 pm on Apr 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



On G freshbot pushed it up fairly quickly (days) but it would move up and down and didn't stabilize until the update to the index. I also moved up in the directory for the DMOZ category about 5 spots after the update.