Please, No More "Ultimate Guides": 10 Headlines That Don't Blow Chunks
Headline writing is tricky. Tricky, but absurdly important. Write the wrong headline and your incredible piece could be destined for mediocrity, gathering dust on the far corners of the internet (it is a well documented and accepted fact that the internet is not round and thus has corners. Just ask Al Gore.)
"On the average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy. When you have written your headline, you have spent eighty cents out of your dollar." -David Ogilvy
Ultimate: Last; furthest or farthest; ending a process or series. Maximum, decisive, conclusive. Final, total. The best, greatest or most extreme of its kind.
Pretty good word, right? But at this point in guide-making history, "Ultimate" has suffered the same fate as "Special".
When everything is special, nothing is. Millenials, let your brain run rampant on that one for a little bit.
The nice thing about the English language is that there are so many different ways to say the same thing. You can say "ultimate" without being the 5,000th ultimate guide on the web. Together, we're about the callously wield the power of the thesaurus to create some far more compelling headlines for your "ultimate" guide:
1. "Supreme" Guide. Who WOULDN'T be compelled to read "The Supreme Guide to Knitting: A Yarn Warrior's Battle Guide?"
2. "Essential" Guide. Don't leave home without the "Essential Guide to Pitching a Tent", or somehow, you're going to wind up on fire. "Essential" creates urgency in and of itself; it begs the question, "How will I survive without the essentials?"
3. "Really Quite Good" Guide. Okay, so it' s bit tongue-in-cheek. But just try to tell me you wouldn't be enticed to click on "A Really Quite Good Guide to Firing Bad Employees?" If you've got a brand with a humorous persona, you can definitely make this work.
4. "Unrivaled Guide". Damn, that's a bold claim - even more than ultimate. Not only is your guide to sweeping your chimney good, it's so good that the competition doesn't even have a chance. You can also substitute in "Peerless", "Matchless" or "Unsurpassed" if you're feeling a bit wild.
5. "A Champion's Guide". You don't even need to use champion, but why not stroke the reader's ego by making them feel like a winner just for reading your guide? Nobody wants to be a loser, or read the "Loser's Guide to Steam Cleaning the Wine Out of Your Dress Pants". Choose a word with an ego-stroking connotation.
6. "The Healthy Man's Guide". Why not choose a word that immediately describes the benefit of the guide someone is about to read? For example, "The Productive Woman's Guide to Saving Yahoo!" or "The Handsome Man's Guide to Matching Socks and Ties"?
7. "No-Bulls&#! Guide". Got an audience that's suffering from "fluff" fatigue? In an industry where a bunch of razor-thin pieces are big on bravado and tiny on usefulness? How about letting your audience know you're not about to waste their time with a headline that screams "Everyone else is lying to you!" If this one sounds familiar, it's because I just used it a few days ago.
8. "Complete Guide." Sure, it's not as flashy as "Ultimate", but readers still know they're about to get everything they need in the same place. For example, "The Complete Guide to Hiding a Body" leaves nothing to question. And hey, I used this one, too!
9. "Uncensored Guide." Borrowing a page from the movie industry, why not subtly introduce sexual connotations into the mix? Sure, we all know there's no nudity in "Gigli", but I'm willing to bet that an "Uncensored" version would sell like hot cakes. "Uncensored" hints that there is something worth being censored. Where other guides are prudes, yours is going to let it all hang out. Rock on, man.
10. "Last Guide to ______ You'll Ever Need." Sure, it's a bit wordy (and eliminates all hope of doing a follow-up piece), but this right here is the King Banana when it comes to putting readers at ease. You could waste time reading several different pieces, but not when the "Last Guide to Ballpoint Pens You'll Ever Need" is out there. Those other guides are for suckers.
There you have it. In less than 10 minutes, I came up with 10 mind-blowing, pants-fillingly-good headlines that will definitely (probably) get clicked on.
Take some time to be creative. After all, your audience is watching.
Read the full article here: Please, No More "Ultimate Guides": 10 Headlines That Don't Blow Chunks.
What are types of "ultimate guides" headlines variations would you use?
ScribeForHire
ScribeForHire
Steve Browne, online business strategies, tips, guidance, and resources
SteveBrowneDirect
Learn how I built a 14k email list and monetized it.