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Friday, September 17, 2021
Last month, we shared about our new system for generating titles for web page results. Thanks to your feedback, which has been much appreciated, we’ve further refined our titles system. Here’s more about what we’ve been doing and some additional guidance for creators.
As we said in our last post, our new system uses HTML title elements (sometimes called title tags) as the titles we show in search results for the vast majority of web page results. Based on your feedback, we made changes to our system which means that title elements are now used around 87% of the time, rather than around 80% before.
Why not use title elements 100% of the time? Since 2012, we’ve used text beyond title elements in cases where our systems determine the title element might not describe a page as well as it could. Some pages have empty titles. Some use the same titles on every page regardless of the page’s actual content. Some pages have no title elements at all.
Our new system is designed to address even more situations where going beyond the title element might be helpful. Here are some examples of things it detects and adjusts for, which are based on real issues we see across the trillions of pages we list.
A half-empty title often occurs when large sites use templates to craft titles for their web pages, and something is missing. The template might put a summary of the page first in the title, followed by the site name. In half-empty titles, the summary is often missing, which produces titles like this:
| Site Name
Our system is designed to detect half-empty titles and adjust by looking at information in header elements or other large and prominent text on the page. This can produce a title in line with what the site itself likely intended to happen, like this:
Product Name | Site Name
Obsolete titles often happen when the same page is used year-after-year for recurring information but the title element didn’t get updated to reflect the latest date. Consider a title element like this:
2020 admissions criteria – University of Awesome
In this example, the title is for a page about getting admitted to a university. The page has a large, visible headline that says “2021 admissions criteria” but for some reason, the title element wasn’t updated to the current date. Our system detects this inconsistency and uses the right date from the headline in the title to say this:
2021 admissions criteria – University of Awesome
Sometimes titles aren’t accurately reflecting what a page is about. For example, the page could have dynamic content with a title element like:
Giant stuffed animals, teddy bears, polar bears – Site Name
It’s reasonable that people would expect to find these named products appearing on the page. But this is a static title for a page with content that dynamically changes. Sometimes these products might appear, but sometimes they don’t.
Our system tries to understand if the title isn’t accurately showing what a page is about. If so, it might modify the title so that the use better knows what to expect, like this:
Stuffed animals – Site Name
Boilerplate titles are fairly easy to detect. We see the same title on all or nearly all the pages within a site. Micro-boilerplate titles are where we see boilerplate title elements within a subset of pages within a site. Our system detects and helps with these cases, just as we do with boilerplate title elements overall.
Consider an online discussion forum about television shows. It might have areas for different shows, and then for each show, it may have areas for threads for individual seasons. The micro-boilerplate title elements appear on the season pages. The titles omit the season numbers, so it’s not clear which page is for what season. That produces duplicate titles like this:
My so-called amazing TV show My so-called amazing TV show My so-called amazing TV show
My so-called amazing TV show
Our system can detect the season number used in large, prominent headline text and insert those in the title, so the titles are more helpful:
Season 1 – My so-called amazing TV show Season 2 – My so-called amazing TV show Season 3 – My so-called amazing TV show
Season 1 – My so-called amazing TV show
Season 2 – My so-called amazing TV show
Season 3 – My so-called amazing TV show
Our main advice to site owners about titles remains generally the same as on our help page about the topic. Focus on creating great HTML title elements. Those are by far what we use the most.
Beyond this, consider the examples in this post to understand if you might have similar patterns that could cause our systems to look beyond your title elements. The changes we’ve made are largely designed to help compensate for issues that creators might not realize their titles are having. Making changes may help ensure your title element is again used. That’s really our preference, as well.
No system for producing titles will be perfect. Using title elements 100% of the time has issues, as illustrated above. But we also know our title system isn’t perfect either. Your feedback has been immensely helpful to improve our system. We welcome further feedback in our forum, including existing threads on this topic in English and Japanese.
Posted by Danny Sullivan, public liaison for Google Search
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