If your keywords are at the beginning of the list, your page is more likely to be clicked.
Use titles correctly
Headings are great for structuring your content and helping readers understand what it’s about. They also help describe the layout of your page and focus search engines.
WordPress converts the titles you put in your content into their ivory coast mobile database own HTML tags <h1>, <h2>, <h3>etc.. This makes it important to consider which types of titles to use and in what order. Getting it wrong can make your content more difficult to understand.
While most themes for WordPress get the basics right, it’s worth making sure your template sets the post title as <h1>a tag and that you’re not <h1>using tags anywhere else in your page or post content. Your post content should “flow” naturally; for example, big, important headings should use <h2>tags, subsections should use <h3>tags, and then subsequent new sections should use <h2>.
The block editor has a document outline feature that gives you an overview of the heading structure
Optimize your meta description
We don't recommend using automatic descriptions Some themes and plugins try to automatically generate descriptions by taking the first sentence or so of a post. This is a clever shortcut, but it rarely produces good descriptions. The first sentence of a post is usually introductory information and doesn't make for a great summary or enticing advertisement! The only well-written descriptions are hand-written, and if you want to automatically generate meta descriptions, you're better off doing nothing and letting search engines choose and control the snippet.