Title Examples
The following are examples of poorly constructed titles that do not follow the ODP editorial guidelines. Examples include reasons why they are poor, and are followed by examples of correctly constructed titles.
Note: there may be some categories in the ODP that have special guidelines for site titles in order to make those specific categories more intuitive for users. These examples exist only to help understand the directory's general editorial guidelines.
Bad Title:
- This is a company's web site. The title field should contain only the company's name.
- The title contains descriptive information. Titles should not contain descriptive information about the site (or in this case, the company). Descriptive information goes in the description field.
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- The title should never be the URL. The URL goes in the URL field
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- Title is not the title of the site. It's complete marketing hype.
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- This title is padded with a meaningless string of keywords. This is
keyword spam, and is strictly forbidden.
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- Incorrect capitalization in the title.
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- Incorrect capitalization in the title.
- Site title use "&" not "and" - while the guidelines for descriptions
advise not to use the "&" in descriptions, using "&" is OK only if it
appears this way on the site. If "and" is used on the site, don't replace
it with "&".
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- Company name in all caps. This is not an acronym.
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- Inappropriate use of emphatic punctuation (the exclamation points).
- Use of all caps for a non-acronym.
- Title is not how it appears on the site.
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- Acronym only used as title. While the category in which this site is
listed may make the acronym's meaning obvious, it's more intuitive for
the general user if you include the full form of the name followed by the
acronym in ( ).
Good Title:
Bad Title:
- This isn't the title of the site.
- The actual title is "Welcome to Simon Trpin's Web Page" which isn't
good either.
Good Title:
- Note the change in description. Since the name was used in the title, it would be repetitive to include it in the description.
Bad Title:
- Site is for an organization. "Welcome to" is superfluous information.
- The second part of the title is descriptive information. Again, descriptive
information belongs in the description field, not the title.
Good Title:
Note: Remember that if phrases like "Welcome to" or "Website" are an integral component of the title's official name of the title, don't remove them. It's very important to use common sense when applying this guideline.
- "Welcome to the Doll House" is the name of the movie, so it would be incorrect to remove "Welcome to" from the title.