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Why your headline is killing your article

Date Published: 24th February 2008
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Author: Tony Hetherington RSS Views: N/A PRINT ASK ABOUT THIS ARTICLE
Copyright (c) 2008 Tony Hetherington

What's the most important part of an article? The headline of course! Without a great headline the rest just wont be read. It's as brutal as that. Whether you're writing a blog, web page, email or business report without a good headline the rest will not be read. Follow these golden rules to improve your headline and make sure you get the readers your writing deserves!

Busy people keep their lives manageable by deciding almost instantly whether something is worth their time. It's the headline's job to entice them, engage them and capture their attention so that they ignore all other distractions to read to find out more. It's frightening, but this process takes just a second or two and it's brutal. An email appears, a web page loads, a magazine page is flipped open and in a second or two the readers has made an instant judgment - to read or move on.


The headline is your first and sometimes only chance. Their eye will scan the headline and an instant decision will be made. Does it interest them, intrigue them or amuse them or can it be ignored? There's no second chance. No appeal. Just one chance. There is no going back and the rest of your article, brilliant, amusing and informative though it may be will never be read.

If you succeed then you need to back up your killer headline with a brilliant introduction, superb main copy and persuasive summary and a call to action that they can respond to. For now, our focus is on the headline as that must be good for the others to be read at all.

If you want to turn your mundane headlines into miracles that grab your reader's attention follow these simple rules.


1. It must be clear - The headline is not the place to be confusing or circumspect. It has to be clear what the headline is saying and what the rest of the article is about.

2. It must be relevant - The headline must be relevant to the introduction and the rest of the article otherwise you will lose the reader as soon as they see any discrepancy.

3. It must be targeted - The headline must be targeted at the audience you want to reach. Targeting your readers is key in this online world. Focus on them and they will respond.

4. Keep it tight - keep your words short and punchy to get the message across quickly and efficiently. Keep your headline short and to the point.

5. It must be exciting - Don't bore your reader - excite them, amuse them, make them curious...


Types of headline The final rule leads onto the next important point - don't limit yourself to just one type of headline. Traditional choices for headlines such as "How to..." or "10 ways to" are great why not try one of the others and try an emotional headline, prediction headline or command headline.

Make yor headlines come alive! You should try and think of words and phrases that excite your reader. Use what I call hot words as well as your keywords. Hot words are those words that are very strong in your particular field or market. For example if writing about a food or drink topic then words like taste, taster, flavour, serve or "on a plate" can be used with effect. Don't try and use them all as too many create a headline that is more likely to make your readers groan then nod with approval.

Finally, test your headline Look at your headline again and test it. Does it read out loud well? Can any of the words be improved? Does it produce a feeling in them or make them think that you have empathy and feel the same way? Would it make you want to read more? The chances are good that you may have two or three variations of the same headline. Try them out and go with the one that is the best.


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Tags: email, job, headlines, intrigue, miracles, judgment, second chance, distractions, discrepancy
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