web design tips
 

web design tipsTitles and Headlines: It's Not a Newspaper.

What's this? A whole article about titles and headlines? Well, yes. Titles are some of the most vital parts of your site, especially if it consists of a series of articles. Yet they're also some of the most ignored elements of all web pages, and more difficult than you'd think to do correctly. You have to realise that you're not writing headlines - it's more interactive than that.

Title Bar, History, Favorites and Searches.

Everything you do with your web titles should be geared towards these four places that the title can appear: that is, in a web browser's title bar, history pane, and favorites menu, and in search engine results. Never forget this. Sure, your titles might look just fine on your main page, next to a picture, but do they work out of context? It's even worth looking at the
titles in each of these places yourself (or doing a mockup of it), just to see.

Be Concise, but Explain Everything.

The thing those four places where titles can appear have in common is this: they're separated from the context of the rest of your page, and they're limited in space. Each one will cut off over-long titles and replace it with an ellipsis ('...') - not good if some important detail goes missing in the process.

What you need, then, is to be concise with your titles: ten words is, effectively, an absolute maximum. However, what you can't do is cut out words that tell the reader what to expect from the article, moving them into a sub-heading or a picture caption or something similar - this works in print, but on the web the reader won't always be able to see those things. The challenge, then, is to create a short headline that tells you what the article is about even if you can't see any other part of the page.

Useful Words First.

In browser favorites and history, there's usually only room for about three or four words, not for a whole title. That means that you'd do well to put the most useful words of the title first. Compare the following headlines:

Why Web Titles and Headlines are nothing like Newspaper Ones.
Titles and Headlines: It's Not a Newspaper.

What's the difference? Well, if you're looking at it in a browser history view, the first one would probably read 'Why Web Titles...', while the second would read as 'Titles and Headlines...'. In effect, it's useful to have the first three or four words of your title stand alone as a title themselves, while elaborating in the title's second half. A colon or dash is especially useful for this, which is why they're so much more popular in web headlines than they are in print.

Keywords.

When it comes to preparing titles for search engines, don't underestimate the importance of the keywords in your title. Search engines consider the title to be one of the most important parts of your page, not to mention that it's often the only part of your content that someone doing a search will see entirely intact before they click-through. You want your titles to be relevant to what your users are likely to be searching for.

What does that mean in practice? It doesn't mean that you should make your site's main keywords show up in every title, leading to string of titles all sharing the same two words: this is the hallmark of a site that is trying to do nothing more than game search engine rankings, and the search engines are wiser to it than you'd think. What you should do instead is simply describe clearly what the article is about as if you were searching for that specific article.

If you've written a way of doing something, don't be afraid to put 'how to' in the title (although not first: 'How to Write Better Titles' is bad, 'Titles: How to Write them Better' is good). If you've interviewed someone, put the word 'interview' up there. For product comparisons, don't shy away from the word 'comparison'. This approach will get you search engine visitors who really want to read your articles, and are more likely to stay and read more instead of feeling conned into visiting your site.

The Evils of PDFs

The Art of the Logo

The Importance of Validation

RSS Really Simple Syndication

Some Places to Go For More Information

 

Web Design
5 Simple Steps to Accepting Payments.
5 Ways to Avoid the 1998 Look.
6 Reasons Why You Need a Website.
7 Ways to Make Your Web Forms Better.
A Question of Scroll Bars.
Ads Under the Radar: Linking to Affiliates.
AJAX: Should You Believe the Hype?
All About Design: Principles and Elements.
An Introduction to Paint Shop Pro.
An Issue of Width: the Resolution Problem.
Avoiding the Nuts and Bolts: Content Management Software.
Beware the Stock Photographer: Picking Your Pictures.
Building a Budget Website.
Building Online Communities.
Clean Page Structure: Headings and Lists.
ColdFusion: Quicker Scripting, at a Price.
Column Designs with CSS.
Content is King.
CSS and the End of Tables.
Cut to the Chase: How to Make Your Website Load Faster.
Designing for Sales.
Designing for Search Engines.
Dreamweaver: The Professional Touch.
Encryption and Security with SSL.
Finding a Good HTML Editor.
Focus on the User: Task-Oriented Websites.
Fonts are More Important Than You Think.
Free Graphics Alternatives.
FrontPage: Easy Pages.
Hints All the Way.
Hiring Professionals: 5 Things to Look For.
How Databases Work.
How the Web Works.
How to Get Your Website Talked About on Blogs.
How to Install and Configure a Forum.
How to Make Visitors Add You to Their Favorites.
How to Run Ads Without Driving Visitors Crazy.
How to Set Up Your Hosting in 5 Minutes Flat.
IIS and ASP: Microsoft's Server.
Image Formats: GIF, JPEG, PNG and More.
It's a World Wide Web: Going International.
JSP: Java on Your Server.
LAMP: The Most Popular Server System Ever.
Making Friends and Influencing People: the Importance of Links.
Making Searches Simple.
Offering Free Downloads on Your Website.
Opening a Web Shop with E-Commerce Software.
tag - they have one extra tag before it. This is the doctype, and it must be present right at the top of your document for it to be valid HTML. There are only really
Perl: Cryptic Power.
Photoshop: a Graphic Designer's Dream.
Picking a Colour Scheme.
Printing and Sending: the Two Things Users Want to Do.
Putting Multimedia to Good Use.
Python and Ruby: the Newer Alternatives.
Registering a Domain Name.
Registering Your Users by Stealth.
RSS: Really Simple Syndication.
Setting Up a Mailing List.
Setting up a Test Server on Your Own Computer.
Some Places to Go For More Information.
Taking HTML Further. HTML might seem like a simple language for web documents, and to an extent, it is - that's what it was intended to be. If you know what
Taking HTML Further with Javascript. Once you've built your HTML pages, you might need them to do something a little more interactive on the client-side (that
Taking Your Website Mobile.
Text Ads: Unobtrusive Advertising.
The 5 Principles of Effective Navigation.
The Art of the Logo.
The Basics of Web Forms.
The Basics of Web Servers.
The Case Against Flash.
The Confusing World of Web Hosting: Making Your Decision.
The Evils of PDFs.
The Importance of Validation.
The Many Flavours of HTML.
The Smaller, the Better: Avoiding Graphical Overload.
The Top 10 Biggest Web Design Mistakes.
The Web Designer's Toolbox.
The Web is Not Paper.
There's More than One Web Browser.
Time for User Testing.
Titles and Headlines: It's Not a Newspaper.
Tracking Your Visitors.
Understanding Web Jargon.
Uploading Your Website with FTP.
Using Flash Sensibly.
Using Quizzes and Games to Get Traffic.
VBScript: Javascript Made Easy.
Websites and Weblogs: What's the Difference?
What Do You Want Your Website to Do?
What You See Isn't Always What You Get.
Which Database is Right for You?
Why Doing It Yourself is Best.
Why Java Will Drive Your Visitors Away.
Why Word is Bad for the Web.
Why You Should Put Your Content in a Weblog Format.
Why You Should Stick to Design Conventions.
Working With Templates.
Writing for the Web.
GoogleSense
Making Money with Articles
Webhosting
RSS
Reading RSS Feeds with an RSS Aggregator