When writing headlines and title tags, we're often conflicted in what we're trying to say and (more to the point) how we're trying to say it. Do we want it to help the page rank in SERPs? Do we want people to be intrigued enough to click through? Or are we trying to best satisfy the searcher's intent? We'd like all three, but a headline that achieves them all is incredibly difficult to write.
In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand illustrates just how small the intersection of those goals is, and offers a process you can use to find the best way forward.
For reference, here's a still of this week's whiteboard!
Video transcription
Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're going to chat about writing titles and headlines, both for SEO and in this new click-bait, Facebook social world. This is kind of a challenge, because I think many folks are seeing and observing that a lot of the ranking signals that can help a page perform well are often preceded or well correlated with social activity, which would kind of bias us towards saying, "Hey, how can I do these click-baity, link-baity sorts of social viral pieces," versus we're also a challenge with, "Gosh, those things aren't as traditionally well performing in search results from a perhaps click-through rate and certainly from a search conversion perspective. So how do we balance out these two and make them work together for us based on our marketing goals?" So I want to try and help with that.
Let's look at a search query for Viking battles, in Google. These are the top two results. One is from Wikipedia. It's a category page -- Battles Involving the Vikings. That's pretty darn straightforward. But then our second result -- actually this might be a third result, I think there's a indented second Wikipedia result -- is the seven most bad ass last stands in the history of battles. It turns out that there happen to be a number of Viking related battles in there, and you can see that in the meta description that Google pulls. This one's from Crack.com.
These are pretty representative of the two different kinds of results or of content pieces that I'm talking about. One is very, very viral, very social focused, clearly designed to sort of do well in the Facebook world. One is much more classic search focused, clearly designed to help answer the user query -- here's a list of Viking battles and their prominence and importance in history, and structure, and all those kinds of things.
Okay. Here's another query -- Viking jewelry. Going to stick with my Viking theme, because why not? We can see a website from Viking jewelry. This one's on JellDragon.com. It's an eCommerce site. They're selling sterling silver and bronze Viking jewelry. They've actually done very classic SEO focus. Not only do they have Viking jewelry mentioned twice, in the second instance of Viking jewelry, I think they've intentionally -- I hope it was intentionally -- misspelled the word "jewelry" to hopefully catch misspellings. That's some old-school SEO. I would actually not recommend this for any purpose.
But I thought it was interesting to highlight versus in this search result it takes until page three until I could really find a viral, social, targeted, more link-baity, click-baity type of article, this one from io9 -- 1,000 Year-old Viking Jewelry Found On Danish Farm. You know what the interesting part is? In this case, both of these are on powerful domains. They both have quite a few links to them from many external sources. They're pretty well SEO'd pages.
In this case, the first two pages of results are all kind of small jewelry website stores and a few results from like Etsy and Amazon, more powerful authoritative domains. But it really takes a long time before you get these, what I'd consider, very powerful, very strong attempts at ranking for Viking jewelry from more of your click-bait, social, headline, viral sites. io9 certainly, I would kind of expect them to perform higher, except that this doesn't serve the searcher intent.
I think Google knows that when people look for Viking jewelry, they're not looking for the history of Viking jewelry or where recent archeological finds of Viking jewelry happened. They're looking specifically for eCommerce sites. They're trying to transact and buy, or at least view and see what Viking jewelry looks like. So they're looking for photo heavy, visual heavy, potentially places where they might buy stuff. Maybe it's some people looking for artifacts as well, to view the images of those, but less of the click-bait focus kind of stuff.
This one I think it's very likely that this does indeed perform well for this search query, and lots of people do click on that as a positive result for what they're looking for from Viking battles, because they'd like to see, "Okay, what were the coolest, most amazing Viking battles that happened in history?"
You can kind of see what's happened here with two things. One is with Hummingbird and Google's focus on topic modeling, and the other with searcher intent and how Google has gotten so incredibly good at pattern matching to serve user intent. This is really important from an SEO perspective to understand as well, and I like how these two examples highlight it. One is saying, "Hey, just because you have the most links, the strongest domain, the best keyword targeting, doesn't necessarily mean you'll rank if you're not serving searcher intent."
Now, when we think about doing this for ourselves, that click-bait versus searched optimized experience for our content, what is it about? It's really about choosing. It's about choosing searcher intent, our website and marketing goals, or click-bait types of goals. I've visualized the intersection here with a Venn diagram. So these in pink here, the click-bait pieces that are going to resonate in social media -- Facebook, Twitter, etc. Blue is the intent of searchers, and purple is your marketing goals, what you want to achieve when visitors get to your site, the reason you're trying to attract this traffic in the first place.
This intersection, as you will notice, is super, uber tiny. It is miniscule. It is molecule sized, and it's a very, very hard intersection to hit. In fact, for the vast majority of content pieces, I'm going to say that it's going to be close to, not always, but close to impossible to get that perfect mix of click-bait, intent of searchers, and your marketing goals. The times when it works best is really when you're trying to educate your audience or provide them with informational value, and that's also something that's going to resonate in the social web and something searchers are going to be looking for. It works pretty well in B2B types of things, particularly in spaces where there's lots of influencers and amplifiers who also care about educating their followers. It doesn't work so well when you're trying to target Viking battles or Viking jewelry. What can I say, the historians of the Viking world simply aren't that huge on Twitter yet. I hope they will be one day.
This is kind of the process that I would use to think about the structure of these and how to choose between them. First off, I think you need to ask, "Should I create a single piece of content to target all of these, or should I instead be thinking about individual pieces that hit one or two at a time?"
So it could be the case that maybe you've got an intersection of intent for searchers and your marketing goals. This happens quite a bit, and oftentimes for these folks, for the Jell Dragon Viking Jewelry, the intent of searchers and what they're trying to accomplish on their site, perfectly in harmony, but definitely not with click-bait pieces that are going to resonate on the web. More challenging for io9 with this kind of a thing, because searchers just aren't looking for that around Viking jewelry. They might instead be thinking about, "Hey, we're trying to target the specific news item. We want anyone who looks for Viking jewelry in Danish farm, or Viking jewelry found, or those kind of things to be finding our site."
Then, I would ask, "How can I best serve my own marketing goals, the marketing goals of my website through the pages that are targeted at search or social?" Sometimes that's going to be very direct, like it is over here with JellDagon.com trying to convert folks and folks looking for Viking jewelry to buy.
Sometimes it's going to be indirect,. A Moz Whiteboard Friday, for example, is a very indirect example. We're trying to serve the intent of searchers and in the long term eventually, maybe sometime in the future some folks who watch this video might be interested in Moz' tools or going to MozCon or signing up for an email list, or whatever it is. But our marketing goals are secondary and they're further in the future. You could also think about that happening at the very end of a funnel, coming in if someone searches for say Moz versus Searchmetrics and maybe Searchmetrics has a great page comparing what's better about their service versus Moz' service and those types of things, and getting right in at the end of the funnel. So that should be a consideration as well. Same thing with social.
Then lastly, where are you going to focus that keyword targeting and the content foci efforts? What kind of content are you going to build? How are you going to keyword target them best to achieve this, and how much you interlink between those pages?
I'll give you a quick example over here, but this can be expanded upon. So for my conversion page, I may try and target the same keywords or a slightly more commercial variation on the search terms I'm targeting with my more informational style content versus entertainment social style content. Then, conversion page might be separate, depending on how I'm structuring things and what the intent of searchers is. My click-bait piece may be not very keyword focused at all. I might write that headline and say, "I don't care about the keywords at all. I don't need to rank here. I'm trying to go viral on social media. I'm trying to achieve my click-bait goals. My goal is to drive traffic, get some links, get some topical authority around this subject matter, and later hopefully rank with this page or maybe even this page in search engines." That's a viable goal as well.
When you do that, what you want to do then is have a link structure that optimizes around this. So your click-bait piece, a lot of times with click-bait pieces they're going to perform worse if you go over and try and link directly to your conversion page, because it looks like you're trying to sell people something. That's not what plays on Facebook, on Twitter, on social media in general. What plays is, "Hey, this is just entertainment, and I can just visit this piece and it's fun and funny and interesting."
What plays well in search, however, is something that let's someone accomplish their tasks. So it's fine to have information and then a call to action, and that call to action can point to the conversion page. The click-bait pieces content can do a great job of helping to send link equity, ranking signals, and maybe some visitor traffic who's interested in truly learning more over to the informational page that you want ranking for search. This is kind of a beautiful way to think about the interaction between the three of these when you have these different levels of foci, when you have these different searcher versus click-bait intents, and how to bring them all together.
All right everyone, hope to see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.
Rand, a great WBF, however, that isn't a misspelling with "jewelry". It's the usual locale changes with British English vs. American English (https://grammarist.com/spelling/jewelry-jewellery/).
The UK results show both variations along with Google's auto suggest.
Yes! Commented on that below - thanks for the catch, and will keep it in mind for the future (when my jewellery business takes off) :-)
Tiny mistakes are not to be mentioned or spinn out...The matter is that, if the mistake leads us to a wrong way or the right way. If it leads us the right way then forget about it Ryan.. Lets sit and enjoys the post and learn from them together.
Hi Rand! Another very informative Whiteboard Friday.
But: you described "jewellery" as a misspelling. In fact, that's the correct spelling in British English, and I think most countries outside of North America and Canada too. So there are a few million people who would say it's you lot across the pond spelling it wrong! ;)
Keep up the great work.
P.S., Where on Earth can we buy that amazing T-shirt?
A fellow-Brit, I was on my way to make the same observation. Rand, does your point about SEO bad practice still stand in light of this? Is this mid-Atlantic inclusivity or just spam in your opinion?
Thanks for the catch! Given that, I'd say it might be a good move on their part if they're targeting customers from multiple regions.
Interesting approach to reach that goal :)
I think all of us Brits were thinking "hang on a second" when the jewellery comment was made ;)
Interestingly, and a little bit off topic, although Google is getting a lot better with synonyms and ranking websites based upon synonyms of target keywords, they do seem a little slow on the uptake with American vs British spelling and also words that have multiple variations such as Treehouse, Tree house or Tree-house.
I want that t-shirt
Great T-shirt Rand. Where did you buy it?
Great post, Rand! One question though, where can I get that awesome T-shirt?
I found it in a shop off brick lane in London last fall (when I was there for Searchlove). I need to wear it more - I think this is only the second time I've put it on!
Let me be the first to tell you that shirt is EPIC!
Let's not forget the heroes at: https://twitter.com/huffpospoilers doing a great and noble task.
HI Rand,
i always see you WBF videos and try to implement the things in my website. just wanted to understand how can we build traffic for a real estate blog if there is nothing intresting to post about.
I have this same problem with roofers. I will sometimes go and write "review" blog posts where I use Google Trends, Google Alerts, and satirical sources to find interesting news articles. Then, I'll read them and write a post in a newsletter format and have a bunch of small reviews of bigger news stories. At the end, without being too promotional, I'll add in a small snippet of a similar event happening locally and find a way to tie them all together. In my opinion, it shows that I'm staying relevant on current events that my demographic may be interested in. Also, it might not be a bad idea to check a local event calendar on the city's government website and write about that stuff. Remember, blogs can be very flexible, unlike your top category landing pages. Mention neighborhoods in and around the area. 1 out of every 3 pieces I write will promote the business. The other two usually highlight interests, news from around the country, industry news and events, etc... Every client/business has a story to tell. As a good marketer, it's up to you to get your client to really open up and share those stories and experiences in a way that makes it accessible to their potential customers.
Same issue with us, I think, list building will work
Rand
Great post.
The connection between the title tag and description in the search result and the keywords words/phrases used are a critical aspect of to getting searchers to optimize click through. Optimize your tile tags and descriptions to the searchers intent and you will get the click throughs.
Great WBF. One thing that I hadn't thought of before is your point that with click-bait articles you don't always want to drive traffic to a conversion page. There are other uses for such articles, such as generating links, topic authority, driving social traffic and brand awareness, etc.
And of course, search intent is really the big takeaway here. If you're not thinking of searcher intent when you're crafting headlines and meta titles, then you're missing the point.
Thanks Rand! And thanks to the Moz commenters as well: TIL that Jewellery with two l's is the correct spelling in the UK.
Wow. This was a great wbf.
Sticking with this theme I would like to see the "Viking Stuff" done out to other topics and products. Maybe some actual wordsmithing methods for the title tag. There is just so much to learn here.
Thanks EGOL! I'm not a trained copywriter and I don't have the innate talent that many copywriters do to pull in visitors and keep them reading, but I think it's a topic we could certainly solicit and think about for the future. If you haven't already checked them out, Isla McKetta's posts: https://moz.com/community/users/409781 are excellent on that topic.
Thanks Rand, you are right. I found a really good one by Isla here.
If you want truly creative examples of click-bait titles, just head to Reddit. The users there frequently make up their own title when linking to an article, and it's usually much better than the original, resulting in a lot of clicks.
Hi Rand, another great WBF topic - Love it. Great info and insight into the changing dynamics of SEO and Google's ever increasing accuracy to determine searcher's intent.
Thanks for sharing and keep the great WBF topics coming
Alex
Excellent WPB as usual Rand! What I really take away from this post is to use the social (viral) focused titles as a channel to the more content driven pieces. What advice do you have for implemented these changes and striking a balance between the two forms ?
Not a ton other than what's in the video. You may want to do some rough testing, though, and PPC or content advertising platforms can be helpful with that - if one title/content style resonates for the searcher audience, and another with content advertising (e.g. Outbrain, Zemanta, Taboola, etc), that's a good sign you want to do separate pieces for each audience.
This is great, I actually recently saw this in an article we posted.
Our company does marketing for student housing and I recently released a "Top 5 Digital Marketing Tips for Student Housing" (that was the keyword-rich SEO title) that we posted to website and then promoted on social. The first post on Twitter included the title text, a link, and an image, but it didn't get much traction.
A few days later, I tested the same article on Twitter, but included details about the content. The second post said Faster websites, local rankings, and how to get good reviews | Top 5 Tips for Student Housing with a link and an image. This social post saw a 550% increase in impressions (from 81 to 450) and a 700% increase in engagement (from 2 to 14) compared to the first post.
The next week, I posted the same article with the second headline again and still saw over twice as many impressions and five times as much engagement as the first post.
Thanks for the post Rand! Thought I'd share how we've seen this work too.
Excellent Rand,
You describe exactly what Google thinks while people search for keyword like Viking jewelry, Wikipedia always comes in the results (ranking 1 to 3) without having attractive Title. Can we say Wikipedia's results are the best example of Content Marketing ?
Wikipedia is a bit of an odd case - they're not really doing content marketing because their organizational goals aren't to attract people with content and then sell them something else, but rather to make the content itself the product and rely on donations.
Hey Rand,
One thing that came to my mind while you were talking about the three pages. And correct me if I'm wrong. These would be three separate pages right? The example you demonstrated showed three different websites serving different intents, but when it comes to one website having all the three types. I'm curious to see if Google will be able to rank them properly after the doorway pages algorithm takes effect. Do you think that it could be be an issue?
Love the t-shirt! Nice presentation too :-)
Great video - as others here have pointed out their spelling of Jewellery is the British spelling. I've had fun with this when I worked on a jewellery website here in the UK. Most of the searches come in on the British spelling, especially for their bespoke offering, this tended to be an older audience, however much of the younger audience use the US spelling of Jewelry. I worked these spellings into various content pieces which definitely helped.
Loved this WBF, the major concern and the major problem with most of SEOs is that they don't think with an audience perspective but with a search engine perspective. Its time to create attractive headlines or titles along with your keyword (of course!) to engage people and search engine at the very same time.
Great video Rand. I really like the presentation of something I've been thinking for a while: that click-bait may not serve your or the searcher's purpose. I do like the idea of relegating more click-baity (that's a word, right?) titles to content at the top of your funnel (ToFu Content as you once called it).
Interlinking follow up...well I look forward to that...I think most of my industry does it wrong...me included! thanks
Great video! But I'm wondering why you can't just create a title tag that is SEO focused and a headline that will work for social media? The headline and title tag don't need to be the same. And you can manually change the headline when you post -- even if the sharing tool you're using automatically pulls the title tag copy.
wow rand. another nice WBF. i would definably try and check this how it help me for my project.
This video is really useful for me. I will implement on my website. Thanks.
This video is awesome! It really breaks down how you should go about not only titles and headings but content. I loved that you stated what type of landing page is right for a click-bait piece.
People just want to sell sell sell and force their product or service down your throat, making you want to vomit not buy. This is a great rule of thumb to use and just including a simple call to action can do so much for you.
Very helpful and excellent idea...
Thanks Rand, great timing for this WBF as I'm preparing to do some title rewriting so thought I'd look for recent trends and found this post.
Besides commercial intent, what other type of searching intent are there that are worth knowing from a marketers point of view? I guess, research? price comparison? which are the most important ones?
Thank you :)
Lots of food for thought. I personally hate click-bait and feel it's a very cheap way of trying to get clicks and visits.
Appreciate it for next amazing whiteboard. Appreciate it for useful information, distinct presentation. It' really helps lots. seo article writing services
For the Italian audiece, here is the full Italian transcription of this Whiteboard Friday https://www.ideawebitalia.it/seo/6993/
What do you think about having a different headline for social media and search engine for the same content using some WordPress plugin.
Awesome WBF from Rand :) thanks for sharing...This is great advice and methodology for running across microsites where the focus can be placed on individual pages and pieces of content. What would be interesting is how you would translate this to a large, dynamic, template driven website with a multimillion number of pages and how this methodology could be applied.
:)
Great video. I googled "how to write seo headlines descriptions" after I realized I lost all my headlines and descriptions from my pages and posts and came across your video. I just installed Yoast in WP after deciding to switch from AIO. My site is new and I know I had to improve my text anyway.
I appreciate the really focused information, very well organized and great use of the board. Seeing the breakdown on the board is less distracting than some of the videos using ppts. I felt I had a productive ten minutes after watching the vid. And good for you on rolling with the feedback re jewellery. I lived in the UK for a while and assumed they were covering both bases as well.
Does anyone know if there is a way to download this in MP3 format? Would to catch up on these by sticking them on a USB stick, and listening to them in the car. Cheers.
Come on, Rand! The whole English speaking world does not spell every word just like the USA.
Aluminum vs Aluminium is the classic. It's even pronounced differently. Just ask a Canadian.
Jewelry vs Jewellry is also one of those cases. Our Viking friends are trying to rank worldwide.
So, we Aussies, and the Brits,talk funny and spell funny, too!
As always Rand, great job. You're both brilliant and entertaining.
Same t-shirt as my dad.
Drained away, respect has.
Your Dad good taste has.
Does it mean title tag loosing importance ?
No - just means that we need to think about the multiple ways people come to our sites/pages and serve the right intent with the right title/headline/content.
Thanks for sharing this process as always informative and useful.
I like that you have highlighted how unlikely it is to score a perfect click bait/relevant/sales piece. I spent way too long trying to achieve that non existent sweet spot.
Also, while this was a great piece it did not specifically talk about:
Headline Writing and Title Tag SEO in a Clickbait World
Perhaps there's a clue in that? Or am I looking too deep?
Thanks Rand for a sharing with us wonderful informative video...You have included each and every point..Thanks.. Keep sharing with us new strategy.
This is a great piece man. Social and Search are almost two different animals and you've highlighted it perfectly here. I reckon what you finished with here is what I'll take away most i.e. use the social-type content as the entry to the funnel which can lead potential customers to the search or informational-type content and then the conversion page. Nice 1.
great video thumbnail for that topic, I usually use OG for Facebook titles, wich are completly different to the page title. Many people allways use the same title and tweet them (!) - i think that couldn't work well. But for CTR in SERPs, I take a look at them, when I rank and test some changes. But first the site needs to rank. A lot titles in SERPs here still look that way: Keyword | Keyword | Keyword - Brand/City - you can get a lot benefits and increasing CTR by writing a great title. It's pretty easy to write an SEO title like that, it's a lot hader to write a title in this clickbait-world. Hope your video would help, but first I watch the solar eclipse here (berlin)...
I take advantage of the OG tags also, Andreas. If you have that unicorn content that lives in the intersection of all three goals, I think this is a great way to go. But the key takeaway for me on this video is to really commit to the purpose behind a content piece, rather than try and kill 2-3 birds with one stone. If we mask a blog post that is highly instructional with a click-bait title, the user will be disappointed.
Like I wrote - I first commented, than I watched the eclipse and now I came back to watch the video :)
Nonetheless I think you are right, of course we need "unicorn content" wich covers all goals, otherwise we get in trouble. We allways need value... Now I will watch ...
Another grate Whiteboard friday tutorial for making title tag optimization. Thanks Rand
Hi Rand Fishkin,
If I am not wrong, Your conclusion is that now Google drop to give the importance to meta title and now increase to give the importance to header tags.
I don't think his intent was to present title tag and headline as more or less important ranking factors for SE. Rather, to help people writing one title and headline to serve different goals, when possible. When not, there are advices how to structure site in order to accomplish those goals.
The reason he mentioned both, title tag and headline, is most likely because both should serve the same intent.
At least, i understand this WBF that way.
Yes! That's exactly what I was trying to say - thanks Stelian. Title tags are still immensely important for SEO, but the title/headline of a piece should be serving the right audience (which, for many websites, isn't just search).
Thanks Mr. Rand Fishkin and Mr. Stelian Mezin for understanding my query and answering me.
Hi Rand,
One thing that I learned from this WBF is to: Proof Read and Brainstorm My Titles!
One wrong spelling, mistake or misinterpretation of the message that I want to send can change the focus of my visitors soooo easily.
I should not focus on the "targeted platform" first (SERP of SM) but on the target audience.
Cornel
Hi Rand,
If we disregard the difference in locale and the UK/US spelling issue....
You say you don't recommend the "classic SEO" misspelling technique. Why is this? Surely a genuine misspleling still has the same "User Intent" and therefore you are actually providing the content that someone is looking for. so you could argue that it is a good thing to do. No?
Are there better techniques to deal with misspellings
Perhaps this is slightly off topic...sorry
Google corrects spelling mistakes, so results for misspellings don't usually get displayed. I would use correct spellings and grammar as much as possible - for people who care about such things simple mistakes are incredibly annoying. People who don't care or know any better simply won't notice.
Thanks - yes - that's exactly what I'd have said.
Awww, Rand... I've got to admid that I was almost a little disappointed when I realised that you were not going to givegivgive us the Holy Grail for combining all of this into designing ONE title. ;p ;)
Please DO expand upon the interlinkage part some time soon! :)
I can definitely do something on interlinking in the future, but long story short - interlink when it's useful to users, and when you feel relatively confident people will actually follow those links. Internal linking purely for SEO is mostly useless these days (with some small exceptions to help with accessing/indexing very large, deep sites).
Great Tips in a short sentence Rand, Thank You and look forward for your article on Interlinking in the future. :-)
Timely topic for me as I'm talking about this very thing with my clients this coming week.
I get the 3 pieces you are talking about and love that strategy. In the world of blog posts that go to a subscriber list, site pages, and social posts... of the three pieces you would create with links back and forth per your whiteboard, which piece would you make a blog, a site page, and or a social (ie: for people in the WordPress or HubSpot world). I'm thinking you could do this two ways. If the info is evergreen, it could be a site page, the conversion page could be a blog post, and the click-bait is a social message. You could also have the info page as a blog page, the conversion is a landing page that doesn't go to your subscription, and click-bait as a social message.
I know you get a ton of comments, so my gratitude in advance if you have a chance to respond with your opinion.
I don't think it's a hard and fast rule - your system sounds totally reasonable in some cases, but I think the "where to put it" and "what kind of content/platform to use" questions need to consider a broad range of inputs about type of site, focus of content, audience, marketing goals, etc. Probably not a one-size-fits-all kind of thing.
I'm thinking of starting up a new blog/website project and one thing that came to mind while watching this WBF is to begin by creating content for the end of the funnel.
If you have your end of the funnel conversion driven content created, then you can integrate it seamlessly into your future pages and posts. When you begin to create more "social-driven" content you can have that linked to your more conversion oriented pages. This will help you to focus your linking strategy internally by having the list of URLs that you really want to eventually rank integrated into your sites overall content strategy.
That t-shirt man. I want one.
Thanks for next amazing whiteboard. Thank you for useful informations, clear presentation. It' really helps a lot.
Great Post! You are right. I think like you
Excellent Rand! Very helpful
Hi Rand Fishkin. Thanks for the post and your great efforts for MOZ.
Rand Hello!
Interesting Whiteboard Friday as always ...
The click-bait is in decline, in my opinion. Many pages and punish these publications, most are sometimes considered misleading.
Ideally, put a keyword in the title, to attract the customer's attention without mislead you. This keyword helps us in our position, and also the header has to be entirely logical and well understood, since this will be the one displayed in the results of Google.
We hope your next Whiteboard Friday.
Here clicky clicky...
Great video, Rand! I'm going to share this w/ my G+ circles.
What an strategy Rand ! Thanks a lot for this informative video. Good one of Whiteboard friday (y). BTW Your presentation is really awesome. Love your presentation. ;)
My favorite way to brainstorm a great headline is to go after terms with high "commercial intent"...
This list features 273 ideas.
Google's advertisers are paying up to $70.00 a click for these searches - that tells me a lot.