How to Create Perfect Headlines for Social Media Posts
Your headline is the first — and maybe last — impression you make on your audience.
Although headlines sometimes take a back seat when it comes to writing social media posts, they really should be top-of-mind in yourcontent creation process.
A badly-written headline — or H1 tag — can drive readers away in droves and render all of your hard work useless. That’s why it’s important spend some time crafting one that will engage your users enough so that they’ll be more apt to read your article.
David Ogilvy, the original “Mad Man” and founder ofOgilvy & Mather, famously said:
“On the average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy. When you have written your headline, you have spent eighty cents out of your dollar.”
If your headline doesn’t sell your story, it’s likely that your social media posts will go unread. A good headline increases your odds of getting eyeballs on what you’ve written, which is why writing headlines is a crucial skill.
H1 headings are important for SEO
Your headline encapsulates the topic of your article. It’s where most people look when they’re trying to figure out what your post is about. Search engines are all about surfacing content that people are looking for, and they use the H1 tag in order determine whether your post should be part of the search results they offer for your topic. If you’re trying to optimize for a specific keyword or phrase, it should be included in your headline (preferably at the beginning). Search engines give the most weight to headlines, so your ranking improves when they are honed correctly.
So what makes a good headline?
1. Make them short and sweet
The optimal length of a headline is 6 words — we live in a world where people have short attention spans, so less is more.
Google will display up to 66 characters of a title tag, cropping to complete words
2. Include “you” and “your”
This makes your headline more effective since it speaks to your readers’ concerns and seems more like a real conversation
3. Experiment with negative wording
Negatives tap into our insecurities
Words such as “no”, “without”, and “stop” can create more sharing
4. Use interesting adjectives
Words like “fun”, “effortless”, “unique”, “incredible”, “essential”, “strange”, “painstaking”, and “absolute” engage readers than more mundane language
5. Use numbers
People want to improve their efficiency, and seeing numbered lists that include easy steps meets this need
Make sure to use digits instead of words to increase sharing — i.e. “5″ instead of “five”
Still stuck? Here’s a list of 74 headlines that work.
Check out this list of clever headlines from the team at Twelveskip. Choose a formula and fill in the blanks with the keywords and phrases for your topic. Voila!