Subscribe Via Web Feed Subscribe with Google Add to My Yahoo! Subscribe with Bloglines Add to netvibes Subscribe with Live.com

« YellowPages.com Launches YP411 Text Messaging Service | Main | The "Is Google Too Powerful" Question Raised Once Again »

Mar. 30, 2007 at 10:20am Eastern by Michael Gray

Top 12 Ways To Win Friends & Write Magnetic Headlines

As a consultant who specializes in social media, I've learned one of the most powerful tools in gaining readers is the title or headline of your stories. Crafting a title that grabs someone's eye, gets them to stop scanning and pay attention to your story rather than reading another one is a critical first step. Were you scanning your feed reader when you came across this article and saw something called a "Top 12" list? Did it make you pause, make you wonder if somebody made a typo? Isn't it supposed to be a "Top 10" list?

People have been doing top 10 lists for thousands of years, ever since someone named Moses walked down from the top of a mountain with a 10 top list of "thou shalts" people have used lists. It's a proven technique.

It's not just top 10 lists that we're used to. We've also gotten used to other numbers. For example, look at anniversaries. Disneyland celebrates its 50th anniversary; your parents celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary, and Ford Motor Company celebrates its 100th anniversary.

We've been conditioned into thinking that certain numbers are milestones and more important than others. If you don't think so, then ask yourself if celebrating your parents' 27th wedding anniversary is more or less important than their 25th? Also ask yourself which one would make you stop and wonder if you got an invitation.

Familiarity has a problem. It can also be easy to ignore. Another top 10 list. Another 25th anniversary. Shifting to a non-familiar number can catch the eye, attention and a reader.

What's true for numbers also works with clichés. For example, read the following three headlines and see if you can complete them:

  • A Stitch In Time Saves…
     
  • A Penny Saved Is A Penny…
     
  • An Apple A Day Keeps The…

As a marketer, you can take advantage of this situation by twisting the familiar into something new and unexpected. Look at how these clichés use a familiar start but then break the reading rhythm and stride into something different:

  • A Stitch In Time Saves Me From Blowing A Job Interview
     
  • A Penny Saved Is A Penny Spent On Beer Money
     
  • An Apple A Day Keeps The Microsoft Certified Engineers Away

Maybe those titles made you laugh. Maybe they made you scratch your head in bewilderment. As long as they made you do something other than skip over them, they did their job.

This concept can be applied to almost anything where people have been trained to expect a certain response. Everyone wants their computer to run faster, make more money at their job, or have a more user friendly website. Think of ways to use your titles to do that in unexpected ways like:

  • Tips for Making Your Computer Completely Unusable
     
  • How to Make Sure You're the Lowest Paid Person in Your Office
     
  • Proven Techniques That Ensure No One Ever Visits Your Website Twice

There is some level of danger to using this approach. If you've gotten someone's attention being humorous, entertaining or even slightly sensational, you're going to ultimately have to deliver on your promise. If you don't have good solid content backing up your title, you're going to have a very disappointed and possibly quite angry person on the other end of the screen. If you're trying to build regular customers, visitors or RSS subscribers, disappointing people with false hopes isn't the way to do it.

Contributing writer Michael Gray publishes an SEO Blog at Wolf-Howl.com and offers social media optimization and corporate blog consulting through his company AtlasWebService.com.

Like The Story? Vote For It On Yahoo Buzz!
Subscribe To Our Daily Search News Recap!
Your Email:
Send me the monthly search newsletter too! (Learn more about our newsletters and feeds)
Subscribe To Our Search Feed!
Subscribe Via Web FeedSubscribe with GoogleAdd to My Yahoo!Subscribe with BloglinesAdd to netvibes
Subscribe with Live.comSubscribe in NewsGator OnlineSubscribe in RojoAdd to My AOL
Share & Bookmark This Story!
By Michael Gray Permalink Jump To Comments See Related Stories In: SEO: Titles & Descriptions, Social Media Marketing



Reader Comments

I tried posting an item to Digg with a title of "Countdown List of Trademark Resources" -- it was a list of lists, the first consisting of 10 items, the next 9, etc. It got no attention at all.

I get the feeling that unless you have a network of people who are looking for your submissions, you really don't have a chance at getting many diggs.

I'm not sure I totally understood a Countdown List, Robert, until you explained it.

And trademark resources... focus on what it is that trademarks offer. I'd even go for a "10 Lists to Help Protect your Business Identity"

Search:

Search Marketing Expo

Save the date for:
SMX Local & Mobile - San Francisco, CA (July 24-25) See the agenda, and register now!
SMX Sao Paolo - Brazil - (Aug. 7-8)
SMX China - September 23 & 24
SMX Stockholm - September 23 & 24
SMX East - NYC - (Oct. 6-8) Registration is now open.
SMX London - November 4 & 5

Search Marketing Now

Learn more about search marketing through free online webcasts and webinars from our sister site Search Marketing Now.

Upcoming Webcasts:

Most Recent News Posts

About Search Engine Land

Stay Updated!

Get Our Search Newsletters:
Email:
Daily Monthly

Get Our Search Feed:
Subscribe Via Web FeedSubscribe with Google
Add to My Yahoo!Subscribe with Bloglines
Add to netvibesSubscribe with Live.com
Subscribe in NewsGator OnlineSubscribe in Rojo
Add to My AOL
More About Our Feeds & Newsletters

Add to Technorati Favorites

Track Us Socially:
Facebook: Our Search News App
Facebook: Search Engine Land Page
Facebook: Search Engine Land Group
Flickr: Search Engine Land
LinkedIn: Search Engine Land Group
Twitter: Search Engine Land Feed

Bragroll