Categories: About LiteracyBase

Why Generic Headlines Fail – and Secrets to Boosting Success

Titles are a very important component of the writing we do. The title and the opening words of our post are what generally show up in social media shares, and in the search results on sites like Google. There has been a lot of talk lately about how much we can earn with our posts and while I dislike talking about the specifics of anyone’s earnings, based on what others are saying about how much their posts are paying out, I know that some writers here on LiteracyBase could be earning twice or even four times what they are making now.

Could LiteracyBase Writers Be Earning More?

I wanted to explore something concrete, to show everyone how much room for improvement there is. So I took a sample of ten posts from LiteracyBase, and I compared them with another ten posts I found shared on a Facebook group for writers. You’ll be amazed at how much the ten LiteracyBase titles had in common! But I think most people will be disappointed when they see how poorly the titles scored.

The first part of this topic introduces my informal experiment, and it also looks at the length of the titles. In every single case, the LiteracyBase titles were too short to rank well for SEO purposes. Many were so short and vague, that a lot of human readers will skip over them completely.

If you are wondering why your posts are paying less right now, your titles are the first and easiest thing you can work on. Getting a better score for your title is the first step to earning better pay, and getting more people to read your posts. Read more about the tools that can help you write a better title, and follow the rest of my comparison here below!

 

Questions, Lists, and How-To Titles Perform Best

Titles that do the best on social media and in search engines follow certain styles. Among the most popular are the question, the list, and the how-to title. Other headline styles will use a negative (e.g, “Never Count Calories Again”) or will reference time in some way (e.g. “The Last Day I Spent on the Beach.”) Some titles leverage the desire to be on the cutting edge, or to discover something exclusive that other people don’t necessarily know (e.g. “Exciting New Trends for Entertaining” or “Secrets to Making the Best Pancakes.”)

Questions and how-to titles most often match the search strings that potential readers are plugging into Google or Bing. Generic titles are those that use none of these styles. They may include keywords for your topic (e.g. “Ram 1500 SXT Quad Cab 4×4” or “Surfing in the Philippines”) but generic titles are very plain and don’t really give potential readers enough context to know whether your post is what they’re looking for.

You’re best off writing a title that gives the potential reader more of an idea where you’re headed. Try something like, “Where are the Best Places to Surf in the Philippines?” or, “Top 5 Reasons You Want to Be Driving a Ram.”

 

LiteracyBase Titles are Too Generic

I continued my analysis of the ten titles from LiteracyBase, as always comparing them to another group of ten titles that had been shared on a Facebook writers group. To get the overall score for each title, I used a free headline analyzer that you can all access easily online. But for this part of the test, we don’t even need the analyzer to tell us the results. It’s easy to see which titles were questions, lists, how-to headlines, etc., and even easier to spot the generics.

How did LiteracyBase fare on headline types? Sadly, 90% of the titles were generic. In the Facebook sample, on the other hand, there was a much better variety of styles: 2 titles referenced time, 1 was a list, 1 was a question, and 1 a how-to. Only 50% of the Facebook group used a generic title. So we here at LiteracyBase have a lot of catching up to do!

 

Related Post

Success – or failure – often start with your title
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(Image from a public domain graphic by bogdanchr/Pixabay)

 

Why are Titles So Difficult to Compose?

Weak titles that leave the potential reader flat are common on sites that publish user-generated content. Titles tend to be generic, too broad or ambiguous, and many give no clue whatsoever to the reader as to the subject of the post. These titles are sure to be passed over, both by visitors who are already on the site and by anyone who comes across them in search engine results or social media shares.

Users on social writing sites don’t earn much for their work and as a result, they try to dash posts off very quickly to maximize earnings. Common time-saving strategies can result in a title that is both generic and vague – and sometimes even a title that has little or even nothing to do with the main topic of the post.

  • Inexperienced writers tend to draft a post without any planning or outlining, resulting in content that is too broad for anything but an ambiguous, generic title;
  • Writers often choose the title before they compose the content, and then may actually stray so far that the post only peripherally mentions the topic highlighted in the title;
  • Writers in a hurry to post once they’ve finished writing will choose a generic title quickly, thinking of it as just another hoop to jump through before their content will go live.

These habits result not only in generic titles but often in titles that bear little relation to the main theme of the post – which evolves as the user writes. Treating the title as an afterthought, rather than as an important component in the overall package of the post, leads to lower pay for an otherwise good post. And it means that the few pennies the post earns at the time of publication are probably all the post will ever earn – there are no significant passive earnings for posts that lack SEO and that little bit of glitz or polish that most readers are looking for!

 

Writers Can Learn to Improve Weak Titles

The results for this part of my informal experiment actually prompted me to write a separate post about how to transform a humdrum headline into a killer title. So if you’re a person who lacks inspiration when it comes time to compose the title, I hope you’ll check it out! I give three boring titles a lift, and ensure that all of them get the green light from CoSchedule.

 

This post the second in a series. The first part is “LiteracyBase vs Facebook Shares: Who Won the Battle?

Please watch for Part III, which will examine how LiteracyBase titles perform when it comes to power words and emotional triggers. I’ll also be issuing a challenge that I hope will help you improve your own headlines through a series of easy steps. In the meantime, check out this article on what makes a great headline!

 

Original content © 2016 Kyla Matton Osborne

This article was published on LiteracyBase. If you are reading this content anywhere else, it has probably been stolen. Please report it to me so I can address any copyright infringements. Thank you!

Need a place to publish your blogs? Join LiteracyBase now, and get paid while you build up your writing skills!




  • Kyla Matton Osborne (Ruby3881)

    View Comments

    • This is a very good observation. You have actually taken time to research the whole thing. Even when we compare the earnings per post here on LB, we will find that the posts with titles which start with a question or a list etc fare better than the generic ones.
      I will be looking forward to the next in the series.

    • @swalia I can't guarantee that LB writers will see an immediate increase in pay rates if they were to compose stronger titles. But what I do know is that posts with improved titles would perform better and therefore represent better sources of revenue for the site.

      So if many users here were to work on improved titling, the increased revenues would certainly leave open the option for the owners to increase pay rates. In the long run, it would mean better writing on the site. And improved skill for writers would mean more options to do freelancing and work for hire, as well.

    • Yes, writing articles is better than writing topics or titles on LB as I have written more than hundred articles now will make more than five thousands article sure because I have ideas floating on my mind screen. I advice the LB writers to write post may be they write increase pay rate in future.

      Titles are an important part of your total writing package. They are among the first things to jump off the page when a reader loads your page, and they are also part of the information that will be copied to a search engine or when a link from your page is shared on a social media site. Strong titles help to boost your search ranking, and they will attract readers too.

      Among several factors you should be considering when you compose a title for your content is the headline style. Most people find it challenging to choose a title; many will opt for a short, rather flat generic title because they really aren’t sure how to go about choosing their headline.

      It’s not really hard to transform a generic title. To prove this, I picked several posts from LiteracyBase, a writing site that publishes user-generated content. I scanned the titles in the CoSchedule Headline Analyzer. Then looking at the structure and content of the post, I rewrote the titles so they’d get a higher rating. In some cases, I was able to improve the score by 40 points or more. That kind of improvement could

      (Note: I’ve slightly altered the titles for publication here, out of respect for the original authors. But the scores cited are for the original title as it was first published here on LiteracyBase.)

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