💡 Title Generator Tool

Generate compelling headlines and titles for your content that drive engagement, clicks, and better SEO rankings.

🎯 Title Types Explained

📖 General Guides

Examples: "Ultimate Guide to...", "Everything You Need to Know"

Best for: Comprehensive articles, educational content

High authority, great for SEO and establishing expertise

🛠️ How-To Articles

Examples: "How to...", "Step-by-Step Guide"

Best for: Tutorials, instructional content

High search volume, matches user intent perfectly

📝 Listicles

Examples: "10 Ways to...", "7 Best Tips"

Best for: Social media, easy-to-scan content

High engagement, perfect for social sharing

❓ Questions

Examples: "What is...?", "Why Does...?"

Best for: FAQ content, voice search optimization

Great for featured snippets and voice search

🔥 Emotional/Clickbait

Examples: "Shocking Truth About...", "Secret That..."

Best for: Social media, viral content

High click-through rates, use responsibly

⚖️ Comparisons

Examples: "X vs Y", "Best Options Compared"

Best for: Product reviews, decision-making content

High commercial intent, great for conversions

📊 Title Scoring System

90+
Excellent

Highly engaging, optimized for clicks

80+
Good

Strong performance expected

70+
Average

Decent, room for improvement

<70
Needs Work

Consider major revisions

What Affects Your Score:

Score Boosters:
  • Numbers (5, 10, 15 ways)
  • Power words (ultimate, secret, proven)
  • Emotional triggers
  • Clear benefit statements
  • Current year references
Score Reducers:
  • Generic, boring language
  • Too long (>60 characters)
  • No clear benefit
  • Passive voice
  • Overused phrases

✍️ Title Writing Best Practices

📏 Length Guidelines

  • SEO (Google): 50-60 characters maximum
  • Facebook: 25 words or less
  • Twitter: Under 100 characters
  • Email subject: 30-50 characters
  • YouTube: 60-70 characters

🎯 Keyword Placement

  • Front-load keywords: Place important keywords early
  • Natural integration: Don\'t force keywords
  • Brand placement: Add brand at the end if needed
  • Avoid keyword stuffing: One primary keyword focus
  • Use variations: Include synonyms and related terms