About Blog Title Generator
Blog Title Generator produces keyword-rich, click-worthy titles that rank in Google and earn the click. Enter the topic, target keyword, and audience, and it returns multiple title variants you can A/B test as H1s or social-share headlines.
Who this tool is for
- SEO content writers needing 10 title options per article for split testing
- Bloggers stuck on naming a post after writing the body
- Editorial teams keeping a consistent voice across hundreds of posts
- Newsletter writers picking subject lines that double as web headlines
- Agency copywriters producing title shortlists for client approval
Real use cases
- Generate 15 titles for an article targeting "best email marketing software 2026"
- Test listicle vs how-to vs question titles to see which gets higher CTR in Search Console
- Rewrite an underperforming post's title after a quarterly content audit
- Create paired Twitter/LinkedIn variations of the same title for organic distribution
- Brainstorm controversial / contrarian angles for a thought-leadership piece
How to use Blog Title Generator
- Enter the primary keyword exactly — the model places it at the front when possible (best for CTR)
- Describe the angle: how-to / listicle / case study / comparison / opinion piece
- Specify the audience and pain point so the title speaks to a real reader
- Generate 10–15 variants, then ask: "give me 5 more with a number, 5 with a question, 5 with a year"
- Test the top 3 in your CMS or with a tool like Sparktoro / CoSchedule headline analyzer
Tips for better results
- Keep titles under 60 characters (around 580 pixels) so Google doesn't truncate them in SERPs
- Numbers in titles outperform descriptive titles in CTR by 15–20% — use "7 ways" not "ways" when it fits
- Add the current year to evergreen topics (e.g. "best CRM software in 2026") — it signals freshness and lifts CTR
- Avoid clickbait that doesn't deliver — high CTR with high bounce rate hurts long-term rankings worse than a boring title
Frequently asked questions
Will these titles rank in Google?
Ranking depends on content quality, backlinks, and intent match — the title alone doesn't rank. But a strong, keyword-aligned title gives you the CTR boost that compounds into ranking gains.
How is the SEO title different from the H1?
You can use the same text for both, but you don't have to. The SEO title (title tag) appears in Google's SERP; the H1 appears on the page. Many sites use a punchier H1 and a more keyword-stuffed title tag.
Should I use power words like "ultimate" or "amazing"?
Sparingly. Power words still lift CTR in low-competition niches but feel spammy in B2B / SaaS / news. Test with your audience — don't cargo-cult headline-formula advice from 2015.