Title Mode
You bring the titles, we'll bring the content
Title mode works perfectly when you already know the title of the article you want to write. Simply drop your title into the single or batch generators, and Byword will take care of the article from there.
Define: Title
Your title is what'll appear in the final article as an H1 (heading 1). It's perhaps the single most prominent signal, to both search engines and searchers themselves, of what your page is all about. Make sure that it maps nicely onto the sort of searches that you want your content to rank for (or just use keyword mode if you're not sure).
When should you use title mode?
Title mode is ideal in a few different scenarios:
If you already have your title(s) written out, then you may as well use title mode!
If you'd like to force Byword down a certain path. For example, if you're writing a glossary entry on the term interest rates in the context of finance, then a title like Interest Rates: Finance Explained will work well. It teaches Byword that it's supposed to writing an explanatory/glossary-like article, rather than something about current interest rates, or a history of interest rates et cetera.
When should you not use title mode?
If you don't know what title you want to use, then you may be better off using keyword mode (where Byword will write the title for you).
This is often particularly true when you're working at scale, perhaps with hundreds of keywords that you downloaded from an ahrefs/Semrush report. In this case, keyword mode could save you a lot of time by writing the titles for you.
If you want even more control than title mode affords, then it's worth checking out title + subheadings mode. This lets you control the subheadings that Byword uses too.
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