Lesson 10
Title Tags: How to Write Them Properly
What you’ll learn
By the end of this lesson, you’ll know:
What a title tag is and where it appears
What makes a title tag effective
How to write titles that are clear, accurate, and useful
What a title tag is
The title tag is the page title shown in search results and browser tabs.
It helps:
- Search engines understand the page topic
- Users decide whether to click
- Set expectations before someone visits the page
It’s one of the most important on-page elements you can control.
What a good title tag does
A good title tag:
- Clearly describes what the page is about
- Matches the page’s main topic
- Is written for humans first
It should answer the question:
“What will I get if I click this page?”
How to structure a title tag
Most effective title tags include:
- The primary topic of the page
- Optional context or qualifier
- Brand name (when appropriate)
For example:
How to Write Effective Title Tags | Warren Groom
You don’t need to follow a rigid formula — clarity matters more than format.
Length and wording (practical guidance)
There’s no perfect character count, but as a rule:
- Keep titles concise
- Avoid unnecessary filler
- Put the most important words first
If a title feels long or awkward when read out loud, it probably is.
What to avoid
Common mistakes include:
- Stuffing keywords into the title
- Writing titles that don’t match the page content
- Repeating the same title across multiple pages
- Using vague titles like “Home” or “Services”
A title tag should be specific to that page, not generic.
A useful mindset
Think of the title tag as:
A short promise you must keep on the page itself.
If the page doesn’t deliver on the title, search engines — and users — will lose trust.