For clients who crave “clickable” titles, the clever colon is one way to instantly insert interest and intrigue into your blog posts (not to mention exciting alliteration!). By using a two part title, you can actually do a lot of work to immediately get readers on your side and engaged in your post. It’s also perfect if you’re a blog content writer who suffers from indecision. Can’t choose between two different title ideas? Throw ’em both up and reel in those clicks! While this “two heads are better than one” approach is a good place to start, you can eventually “work” the subtitle to several different, and satisfying, effects.
Cause and Effect
If you tend to write a lot of technical posts, the ability to describe a cause-effect relationship succinctly is key. A title that clearly lays out both the cause and effect of a common occurrence, problem, or industry trend can quickly communicate to readers that the purpose of your post is informative, and that your position is well informed.
Statement vs. Question
Using a subtitle is also a great way to give your readers the fundamental question guiding your title right off the bat. You can either position the question first or last, depending on your intended impact. For example, the two titles below are fairly similar in content, but the focus shifts depending on whether or not the question or the statement comes first:
- Google Panda and Authorship: Will the SEO Game Ever be The Same?
- Is Google Panda Influencing Authorship? How The SEO Game Stands to Change
Some folks still hesitate with this format, thinking it comes across as clunky or perhaps too on-the-nose. But honestly, when you scan headlines all day, a straightforward two-part setup might just be the only thing that grabs your tired, coffee-fueled attention. There’s something about having a main point and then a brief payoff or twist—that extra line just plants the hook a little deeper. Audiences get context; you get to flex a little creativity. It’s a win-win, unless you get wildly carried away with ellipses and question marks (please, go easy).
It’s funny, too, how the right subtitle can secretly steer readers’ reactions. All those little cues—like the difference between “Is This The End of SEO?” versus “SEO Strategies: What Still Matters in 2025”—give off totally distinct vibes and set the tone for what’s coming. The year drop is a trick as old as blogging itself, but it still works for making things feel urgent and immediate, if a little transparent. If you’re feeling stuck, try writing both halves separately and mashing them together—sometimes the friction makes everything click into place.
The How-To Title
“How-to” titles are excellent for SEO purposes and ideally very useful for readers searching for information. On their own however, they’re pretty boring, and most marketing agencies and clients tend to want something with a little more “oomph.” Use a subtitle to relay the plain jane practical purpose of your how-to article, but lead off with an eye-catching, clickable phrase to elevate your title beyond the norm. Remember to make sure that the two halves of your title connect to one another as well as your overall topic, otherwise your reader will be left scratching their head instead of clicking to read more:
- Going the Distance: How Training for a Half Marathon Made Me a Better Content Writer
- “Do No Harm”: How To Vet Healthcare Writers and Get Great Content
Perfect Press Release
Subtitles are standard practice for press release writers, but all blog content writers can stand to take a page from their book. Use action oriented words coupled with the strongest keywords from the press release to create a logical subtitle that accurately forecasts the content of the press release, while still urging readers to read on in order to glean all the exciting details.
Working a two part title can take some getting used to, but playing around with subtitles can lead you to unexpected connections and a better piece of content overall.
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