By Karon Thackston © 2012, All Rights Reserved
In all the years since Google became a player in the search engine optimization arena, we have seen countless changes. Some have been minor algo tweaks while others caused a major upheaval. Still, one thing remained constant: we controlled our title tags. But no longer.
The recent occurrences have been multiplying, but Google’s intrusion into our title tags began over a year ago. Quietly, they started substituting “more relevant” titles for the ones website owners provided. Why? Google’s Webmaster Tools Help center explains the reasons your title tag might be overruled.
Make sure that each page on your site has a useful and descriptive page title (contained within the title tags. If a title tag is missing, or if the same title tag is used for many different pages, Google may use other text we find on the page.
In addition, Google employee John Mueller gave this advice in a post on one of Google’s blogs:
In general, when we run across titles that appear to be sub-optimal, we may choose to rewrite them in the search results. This could happen when the titles are particularly short, shared across large parts of your site or appear to be mostly a collection of keywords. One thing you can do to help prevent this is to make sure that your titles and descriptions are relevant, unique and compelling, without being “stuffed” with too much boilerplate text across your site.
In other words, you run the risk of having your title tag changed if your tag is:
- too short
- used on several other pages of your site
- mostly filled with keywords
- not unique or compelling
These are things I’ve been preaching for years simply because they make the most sense for your site visitors. You’ll never see me voting in favor of SEO copywriting practices that don’t also offer something useful to the people who come to your web pages. This is no exception.
Case in Point
I can’t say I agree with Google’s replacement tags. I’ve seen cases in the past where they removed a perfectly good title tag (in my opinion) only to replace it with the company name. How is that more relevant?
More recently, I came across this example.
The SERPs showed a title tag of simply “Gatlinburg Cabins.” When I clicked to the web page, the actual title tag revealed “Gatlinburg TN Cabins | Cabin Rentals Gatlinburg TN | Gatlinburg Cabins.” Considering the Smoky Mountains (USA) span two states how is it more relevant to remove the references to Tennessee? As I said, I question Google’s replacements.
Ah… but I Digress…
Back to our topic.
The title tag is the first exposure searchers get to your site. When that space is simply filled with keywords, it offers little enticement for people to click to your page. With the other extreme (using only the company name or a single keyphrase), you get almost the same result. Balance is necessary.
You absolutely want keywords in your title tag and you should also have your company name. Those appease the Google monster. But, in addition, want something that sets you apart from all the other competition on the search engine results page (SERP). A short statement, an adjective, a mini-USP… something that will wake surfers up, catch their attention and make them think, Hmm… Let me see what this is all about.
After all, which would be more appealing to you if you were booking a honeymoon?
Romantic Honeymoon Cabins in Gatlinburg | Jacuzzi Packages Available
or
Gatlinburg Cabins | Pigeon Forge Cabins | Smoky Mountain Cabins
My point exactly.
Don’t follow the crowd. Take time to perfect your title-writing skills. When you do, Google will be less likely to chop your titles in favor of a “more relevant” version created by a robot.
Check out my quick, Kindle ebook available on Amazon called “SEO Copywriting Flow: Creating a Steady Stream of Rankings & Conversions” for more info on setting up a profitable flow of traffic.
I never know that, Karon. They rewrite by machine or human? If buy machine, how they going to know which is best or good?
It’s an automated process so you can imagine that it doesn’t turn out very well some times.
Google rewrote our title tag and we’ve since rewritten it on our end to reflect content suggestion guidelines. (e.g. no keyword stuffing, less than 45 characters, etc). Any idea how we can get Google to take off their title tag and use ours?
Thanks.
Hi. Google rewrites title tags on the fly and inserts them into the search results. They do not have the ability to change your title tag on your site. If you go to the page in question and look in your HTML code where the title tag is located, you will see it is the same thing you wrote. (BTW, no more than 45 characters is not best practice for title tags.) Google will change any title tag they do not feel is relevant to the search. My book on SEO Flow will help you understand what’s what and build better title and description tags, if you’re interested.