AI Article Title Tool (Maximize Google Search Clicks)


Article Subject

To use the tool simply put your Article Subject into the input above and hit submit. It will take roughly 10 seconds to get a response from Open.AI. Occasionally it will time out if it does just hit submit again.

Getting a title that is both short, (for Google you want 60 characters or less), truthful, and “click bait”, is hard. This prompt first creates 10, “truthful” titles and then optimizes them for click thru (clickbait).

Having a truthful title of 60 characters or less that draws more clicks than others is optimizing your title for Google.

Final Editing Of Your New Title

GPT is not great at counting characters so I suggest you use, https://wordcounter.net/, to do your final editing and make sure of the character count.  Just cut and paste a title there to see the count and then edit it.

If you would like to use this prompt for yourself on ChatGPT here it is.

AI Title Creator Prompt For Use With ChatGPT

Please execute these instructions step by step

1) Acting as a {ARTICLE_SUBJECT} expert, write 10 sets of 60 characters or less titles using a friendly and helpful tone, with the goal of creating titles that will be clicked on Google for the subject {ARTICLE_SUBJECT}. Print theses as a list

2) After creating the titles, take on the persona of an expert in Google Organic Traffic Marketing and Title Optimization, and review the titles. Start a new list called rewritten titles. Rewrite the titles to have a higher probability of being clicked if they appear for related search terms. Summarize why the new titles are better.

Examples of 60 Character or Less Titles: “He Was Fooled How AI Hallucinations Almost Fooled My Doctor”

Use Markdown Format

 {ARTICLE_SUBJECT} = “Put in You Article Subject”

For more information about ChatGPT Prompts you can use  Ultimate List of ChatGPT Blogging Prompts please take a look at this post.

For more AI Blogging tools please click here.

Chris

Chris Chenault trained as a physicist at NMSU and did his doctoral work in biophysics at Emory. After studying medicine but deciding not to pursue an MD at Emory medical school Chris started a successful online business. In the past 10 years Chris's interests and studies have been focused on AI as applied to search engines, and LLM models. He has spent more than a thousand hours studying ChatGPT, GPT 3.5, and GPT4. He is currently working on a research paper on AI hallucinations and reducing their effects in large language models.

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