So here’s the deal, I used to be awful at writing blog post headlines.
I’d spend hours crafting this amazing piece of content, then slap on some boring title like “Tips for Better Email Marketing” or “How to Write Good Content.” And surprise, surprise… no one clicked.
It wasn’t until I started messing around with AI tools that I finally figured out how much a headline can make or break your entire post. These days? I treat headline writing like a science, with a little help from the robots.
Let me walk you through exactly how I use AI tools to optimize blog post headlines and how you can too.
The Time I Realized My Headlines Were the Problem
I remember this one blog I wrote — it was a monster. Over 2,000 words, well-researched, super helpful. I published it under the title “How to Increase Online Sales.” Crickets. I thought maybe the topic was off, or the content wasn’t strong enough.
A week later, I changed the title to:
“7 Proven Strategies I Used to Boost My Online Sales by 146% (Without Spending on Ads)”
The traffic tripled in 24 hours.
Same post. Just a better headline. That’s when I realized: people judge your content by the headline first. If it doesn’t spark curiosity or feel relevant, they won’t even bother.
How I Use AI Tools to Fix My Headline Game?
So here’s my process now — and trust me, it’s way less painful than trying to brainstorm 20 different headlines from scratch.
1. Start With a Rough Draft
First, I write a headline like I normally would. Something basic like “Email Marketing Tips for Beginners.” It’s a placeholder — just to get the post moving.
2. Plug It Into a Headline Analyzer
I usually run it through CoSchedule’s Headline Analyzer or Sharethrough. These tools break down your headline’s structure, emotional words, word balance, and even skimmability. It’s nerdy, but so helpful.
Sometimes I learn that I’m using too many generic words or not enough emotional power words like “easy,” “instant,” “proven,” etc.
3. Ask ChatGPT or Jasper for Variations
Now here’s where AI tools shine. I’ll open ChatGPT and say:
“Give me 10 blog title variations for a post about beginner email marketing tips. Make them compelling, click-worthy, and include numbers or emotional triggers.”
Boom. In seconds, I’ve got a mix of ideas like:
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“9 Email Marketing Mistakes Beginners Make (and How to Avoid Them)”
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“The Beginner’s Guide to Email Marketing That Actually Gets Results”
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“How I Grew My Email List by 500 Subscribers With One Simple Strategy”
Sometimes I’ll ask for variations in different tones — casual, authoritative, funny, etc. It helps me match the headline to the blog’s voice.
4. Use Surfer SEO to Check Keyword Fit
If I’m targeting a specific keyword (which I usually am), I’ll plug the headline options into SurferSEO’s Content Planner. That way, I make sure the headline still aligns with what people are actually searching for.
Because here’s the thing — a catchy headline is useless if no one’s Googling those words.
A Few Tips I Learned the Hard Way
Oh man, I’ve made every headline mistake in the book. Here are some things I wish someone told me earlier:
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Don’t force clickbait. You want curiosity, not deceit. If your title promises “One Weird Trick,” your post better deliver something actually weird — or helpful, at least.
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Numbers still work. I resisted listicles at first, but oddly specific numbers (like “17 Ways to Fix Your Blog Bounce Rate”) get more clicks. It just works.
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Power words matter. AI tools often suggest adding emotional triggers like “effortless,” “proven,” “secret,” “essential.” Turns out those words get attention for a reason.
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Test, test, test. Sometimes I’ll A/B test headlines in my newsletter or social posts to see which gets more engagement before locking in a final title.
Final Thoughts
Look, you don’t need to be a copywriting genius to write great blog headlines. You just need a system. And AI tools make that system way easier.
Whether you’re using ChatGPT to generate ideas, headline analyzers to fine-tune the emotional impact, or Surfer to make sure your keyword game is tight — the tools are out there. And they work.
Headlines aren’t just the cherry on top. They’re the front door to your content. And with a little help from AI, you can make sure yours actually get opened.








