Home Page Title Is Wrong In Google Search Results
Blurb by Shaun Anderson (Hobo) -Home Page Title Is Wrong In Google Search Results?
I often get asked “why is my page title not showing the correct title keywords in Google (and in sometimes Yahoo) search results pages?”
I thought I would list some of the more obvious reasons and just point those interested here:
Reasons Google Shows Wrong Page Title In SERPS & How To Fix
- If you’re totally new to this, Google will look in your page <title></title> tags in the HEAD for your page title information, to display as the link to your page in search results (SERPS)
- If you’ve made changes recently to optimise your page title for search engines, it might very well be just that Google doesn’t know yet, because it’s not visited your page since you made the change. So give it time. Check the Google CACHE link under your listing in search engines to see which page Google is “supposedly” using for your page (it’s usually accurate).
- If this is clearly not the case, it might be because it is using Open Directory Project (ODP) data (the DMOZ directory) to replace your title with your directory listing data – that is, it’s using the link on that directory to replace your title because it thinks its more relevant to a specific query. If this is a possibility, add <meta name=”robots” content=”noodp” /> and <meta name=”robots” content=”noydir” /> – for the same issue in Yahoo – to your home page and once Google visits the page again, the problem should be resolved See – NOODP & also NOYDIR.
- If you are not in DMOZ or the Yahoo directory, it may well be your title element <title>My Title</title> is malformed in someway – I’ve shown before how search engines can choose to use a Header ‘tag’ as a Page title, or ignore the page title completely if you’re a spammer in the making
– so ensure your Page Title is properly marked up and starts with <title> and ends with </title> and is in the HEAD of your document – and there is only one :p - Another reason is you may be confusing Google in some way from getting to the correct page title, and/or from displaying it in results, using directives in your meta tags or Robots.txt. When Google knows about the page because other pages it CAN read link to your page with descriptive keywords, it might very well use these links on third party pages to determine what that page title should be if it decides to include the URI in it’s listings, and you CERTAINLY don’t want that. For questions about Robots.txt I go to Sebastian. No doubt he’ll tell me if I have worded that correctly.
Obviously having an intelligent, well formed page title, that is relevant to the page, and not duplicated on other pages of your site, is just about the most important single thing you can do to ‘seo’ a page on your site.
You can still it seems fit a maximum of 70 characters in it as the test pages below seem to confirm…
http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&q=site%3Awww.hobo-web.co.uk%2Fhow manycharacters%2F
(and 157 characters seems to max out the meta description in one or two keyword searches too in that example. That little test also shows you what happens if Google ignores your page title too).
PS – This is another part of my social media & syndication / status update test….using Google Docs to publish to my WordPress blog.
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Google and Bing are all also known to change titles using the anchor text on external links purely because that text is more relevant to the search query.
Rich Skrenta pointed out well on his blog. A Google search for Rich Skrenta gives the title “Skrenta, Rich” but a search for skrentablog gives the correct title “Skrentablog”. I’ve been noticing this happening more frequently over the last 6 months or so.
Although I’ve done limited testing in this area, Google seems to change page titles for brand searches quite often too. Whether this is because of the anchor text of inbound links or something else, I’m not quite positive.
For example, if you do a search for “pushon”, Google changes the page title.
But if you search for “pushon online marketing” the title within the tags are shown.
This is very interesting. I really had no idea that this sort of thing was happening. Although I’ve seen something similar to this, I think it was more of an indexing issue (the date, to be more precise…).
Thanks for the info!
I actually seem to have the opposite issue in that the page title is ok but I have no idea where Google is taking the meta description from despite me using all-in-one seo and actually providing the meta.
I have a situation where my homepage actually ranks for a three word term ahead of a page that has actually got all these words in it’s title, url, h1 tag. Is it possible for you to actually over-optimise?