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The Blog Title + Meta Description Generator produces paired title and meta description copy for any keyword or topic — ready to paste directly into your CMS. Getting both right together ensures your SERP snippet is compelling and consistent.

How to use it

2

Enter your keyword or topic

Type in the keyword or topic you’re targeting for the article.
3

Generate titles and metas

Click Generate titles and metas to see several paired title and meta description options.
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Paste into your CMS

Choose the pair that best fits your article’s angle and copy both fields directly into your CMS or SEOPilot draft.

Why the title and meta matter together

In a Google search result, your title and meta description appear as a unit. The title is the clickable blue headline — it needs to signal relevance and earn attention in a fraction of a second. The meta description is the supporting text directly below it — it has more room to explain, persuade, and prompt the click. When they’re written together, the title can create curiosity or state a clear benefit, and the meta can reinforce that promise with a bit more detail and a nudge toward clicking. Writing them separately often leads to mismatched tone or repeated information. Generating them as a pair avoids that.

Meta description best practices

A strong meta description follows a short set of rules:
  • Length: Keep it between 130–160 characters. Shorter risks leaving space on the table; longer risks getting cut off mid-sentence.
  • Keyword placement: Include your target keyword naturally — not stuffed. Google bolds matching words in the snippet, which helps your result stand out.
  • Ending: Close with a clear call to action or a value statement that gives the reader a reason to click — “Learn how”, “See the full breakdown”, or a specific outcome they’ll get.
  • Accuracy: Don’t repeat the title verbatim. Use the meta to add something the title didn’t already say.
Google may rewrite your meta description if it doesn’t closely match the content of the page. Make sure your meta accurately reflects what the article covers — don’t over-promise a benefit the article doesn’t deliver.