How Does Bing Choose Post Titles For Search Results |
- Titles are most powerful when it comes to showing how a result is relevant to the user's query. Hence, the titles are optimized for relevance
- It optimizes snippets as well, since they're the most important after titles, and help users decide whether they want to click-through or not
- Last, but not the least, Bing optimizes the display of URLs. Sometimes, URLs will help users gauge the authenticity of a website, or the possible relevance of a result. An Apple iPhone 6 review is much more convincing on www.smartphonereviews.com (just an example) than on www.abc-iloveiphone.com (again, just an example).
When optimizing titles, URLs, and snippets, Bing follows a complex set
of rules that involve combinations of multiple pieces of information.
Long titles might get truncated to fit in the available space. Bing may
also incorporate pieces of information in the title based on what it has
learned of searchers’ preferences. For example, Bing knows that users
like to see business names in titles, so the name of your business may
be moved to the front of the title tag.
Bing explains that in some cases they may use other pieces of
information from a web page such as OpenGraph annotations, or prominent
text extracted from the page. Bing may even use external data sources
such as anchor text.
How to make sure Bing picks up the right title?
It is not always easy to come up with the right title for your article.
And it's a shame really when Bing decides to override it with another
title of its own choosing. After all, you are human, and humans know
best, right? If you don't want your titles overridden by Bing, there is something you can do.
- Trying to keep your title relevant to user queries as best as you can. Avoid long titles with repetitive stop-words such as "and" "or" "is" "they" etc.
- Avoid using generic titles such as "Contact Us" or "About"
- If you embed OpenGraph, etc., make sure it is consistent with the title you want, and that all the fields are correct, for example that your site name is correct
- Is your site listed on online directories such as DMOZ? If so, then make sure your website entry is correct
- Don't block crawlers unless you absolutely have to
As always, the best way to look for problems is to become a user. Try
reference your URL from another source, and ensure that any meta data
associated with it is correct and matches the way you want it to be
represented.
That's it for today. We'll be back with more tips and tricks on optimizing your website for Bing. Until then stay tuned! :)
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