Free tool
Title Tag & Meta Description Generator
Turn a short page brief into a SERP-ready title and meta description in seconds. Then ship the full article in Grenseo.
- 1. Describe the page: topic, audience, and what makes it different
- 2. Optionally add one primary keyword
- 3. Generate, copy, paste into your CMS—then open Grenseo for the full draft
How it works
- You describe the page: who it’s for, the job-to-be-done, and what’s unique (data, framework, experience).
- Optional: add one primary keyword if you want the phrase represented naturally.
- The tool proposes a title tag and meta description sized for typical SERP display—with copy you can paste into your CMS.
- Next step: open Grenseo to generate the full article from your URL so the long-form content delivers on the snippet.
Example inputs (copy/paste)
Example 1 — happy path (clear offer)
Landing page for a time-tracking app for agencies: unlimited projects, client approvals, and weekly PDF reports for stakeholders. Audience: 5–50 person creative agencies.
Keyword: agency time tracking
Expect a benefit-led title, meta with proof + light CTA.
Example 2 — edge case (thin input)
We sell shoes.
Too vague: add audience, category, and differentiator (materials, fit, use case) or results will sound generic.
What the result means
The title should telegraph the page topic and intent; the meta description should answer “why click” in one breath. Character counts are hints—measure against your real snippets once the page is indexed.
Limitations
- Suggestions are drafts—you remain responsible for factual claims and compliance (YMYL, pricing, medical, legal).
- No search volume, SERP feature, or competitor analysis is included here.
- AI can misread niche jargon; sanity-check wording with a subject-matter expert before publishing.
Generate the full article (not just the snippet)
Snippets win the click; the article wins the ranking. Grenseo builds long-form, on-brand content from your URL—aligned with the title and meta you ship.
FAQ
Should I put my brand name in every title tag?
Often yes for recognition—usually at the end unless the homepage or brand query warrants leading with the brand. Avoid wasting the limited space on boilerplate.
One page, one primary intent?
Generally yes. If the title promises a comparison but the page is a signup form, expect high bounce and weak rankings. Align snippet, H1, and first screen with the same promise.
Related tools
Brainstorm angles with our blog post outline generator, pair with the AI keyword generator for ideas, then draft the page with Grenseo.
Your articles,
engineered for discovery.
Structure and ship content that reads beautifully for humans and performs in LLM workflows—without losing your voice.
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