Blog Title Generator
Tell us your blog topic and audience. We generate 10 catchy, SEO-optimized title variations.
A great article with a weak title gets ignored. The headline is the one line that decides whether someone clicks from search results, a newsletter, or social. The Blog Title Generator gives you ten distinct angles on your topic so you're not staring at a blank cursor trying to outsmart yourself on title #1.
How to use it
- Enter your blog topic. Be specific. "How freelancers should price retainer contracts" produces sharper titles than just "pricing."
- Name your target audience. "Beginner home cooks" and "professional chefs" deserve completely different framing for the same recipe topic. The audience field tells the generator which assumptions and vocabulary to use.
- Choose a tone that matches your blog's voice — practical, bold, friendly, or authoritative.
- Generate, then scan all ten and shortlist two or three. Often the best final title is a blend of two suggestions.
When to use it
- Beating writer's block before you draft, so the title shapes the article's focus.
- A/B testing subject angles for the same post across email and social.
- Refreshing old posts that underperform in search — a new title plus updated content can revive a page.
- Pitching guest posts where editors judge you on the headline first.
Tips for better results
- Include a number or specific outcome in your topic input. Topics framed as "5 mistakes" or "how to cut X in half" pull through into stronger, more concrete titles.
- Front-load the keyword. If you want this post to rank, pick a title where your main search term sits near the start. Then run that page through the SEO Meta Generator so your title tag and meta description reinforce it.
- Read titles out loud. The one that sounds natural when spoken usually reads best in a feed.
- Match the promise to the content. A title that overpromises spikes clicks but tanks your bounce rate and hurts rankings over time.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Choosing clickbait you can't deliver. "This one trick changed everything" sets an expectation the article must meet, or readers leave fast.
- Making every title a question. Variety beats a wall of identical formats; mix questions, lists, and direct statements.
- Ignoring length. Titles over roughly 60 characters get truncated in Google results. Keep your strongest words early.
For a deeper look at headline psychology and click-through rates, the guide on writing meta descriptions that get clicks covers the same instincts that make titles work. And once your post is live, repurpose the headline into social hooks with the Tweet Generator.
Treat the ten outputs as raw material, not final answers. The generator gets you to a strong shortlist in seconds; your judgment about your own readers turns one of them into the right title.
Frequently asked questions
Are the blog titles really SEO-friendly?⌄
They're written to read naturally while leaving room for your keyword near the front. For best ranking, edit your chosen title so your main search term appears early, then verify the length stays under about 60 characters.
Why does it ask for my target audience?⌄
The same topic needs different framing for beginners versus experts. Specifying the audience makes the titles use the right vocabulary, assumptions, and pain points.
Can I use these titles commercially?⌄
Yes. Use them for client work, your own blog, or guest posts. They're starting points you should tailor to your brand voice.
How many titles do I get?⌄
Ten variations per run, spanning different angles like lists, how-tos, and questions so you can compare formats side by side.
What if none of the titles fit?⌄
Make your topic input more specific or add a number or outcome, then regenerate. Vague topics produce generic titles, so detail in equals quality out.