Post by MimJannat99 on Nov 14, 2023 5:29:32 GMT
From an SEO point of view, long-form content is interesting. Longer content means more chance to rank for many different keywords. But Google indicates that the number of words is not a ranking factor. And more words does not automatically mean that a blog post is of better quality… There are also suspicions that a combination of short and long content can sometimes work well for SEO (see for example this article , which ironically is a long read). The length of your content should not be leading. It depends on the reader's search and what he or she really needs.
If you can meet that in 300 words, that's fine too. For more tips in this area, read this interesting article by Heather Lloyd-Martin , which also cites more studies. The content length should depend on the user query and what photo editor your reader needs to see. — Heather Lloyd Martin 2. The length of the title Creating strong titles is an art . You want a title that piques the curiosity of potential readers, but you also want to ensure that the search engines (especially Google, of course) score your blog post highly.
SEMrush researched the impact of title length on article performance. And quite surprisingly, articles with long headlines (more than 14 words) get 2x more traffic, 2x more shares and 5x more backlinks than articles with shorter titles. The conclusion of SEMrush A longer title provides more insight into the content of the article (and therefore the value for the reader). As a result, it attracts more readers, who then share it more. Research SEMrush: The length of the title affects the performance of an article. Longer titles, seriously.
If you can meet that in 300 words, that's fine too. For more tips in this area, read this interesting article by Heather Lloyd-Martin , which also cites more studies. The content length should depend on the user query and what photo editor your reader needs to see. — Heather Lloyd Martin 2. The length of the title Creating strong titles is an art . You want a title that piques the curiosity of potential readers, but you also want to ensure that the search engines (especially Google, of course) score your blog post highly.
SEMrush researched the impact of title length on article performance. And quite surprisingly, articles with long headlines (more than 14 words) get 2x more traffic, 2x more shares and 5x more backlinks than articles with shorter titles. The conclusion of SEMrush A longer title provides more insight into the content of the article (and therefore the value for the reader). As a result, it attracts more readers, who then share it more. Research SEMrush: The length of the title affects the performance of an article. Longer titles, seriously.