Effective Blog Post Sculpting with HTML Headings
When it comes to reader engagement, crafting an attention-grabbing headline is not the only thing you should consider. You might even write a great introductory paragraph that will make your readers click the little “read more” link on your blog, but the hard part is drawing their eyes down the page, and keeping them hooked until the final message.
Great content is essential, but it only goes so far. What your readers are looking for is a summary of the main points, in an easy-to-find-and-follow format. Just like reading a magazine, readers want to be able to skim your content and still pick up the essential points.
For this purpose, we have HTML heading tags such as H1, H2, H3, H4, and so on and so fourth. While H1 and/or H2 will be used for your catchy post titles (check out the guide on SEO-friendly headlines), H3 and H4 should be used throughout your post to draw the reader down the page and summarize portions of your content. Either tag has a slightly different purpose, and we’ll discuss how to use them in your posts.
When to include H3 tags
So when should you include these tags? There are a few instances when you might use an H3 tag in your content. The first is when you shift in the focus of your blog post – like moving from the introduction to the first main point. In addition, you should use h3 tags in the following situations:
- When changing the main subject of your post (examples to definitions);
- When separating quoted sources;
- When separating unrelated information (such as in showcase posts).
H3 tags are slightly smaller than H2 tags, and will provide an obvious contrast to the surrounding content. In addition, search engines will treat them on differently than the H1 or H2 tags, making your pages more relevant.
When to use H4 tags
The even smaller h4 tag should be used within related content areas to divide content even further. You could use H4 tags when:
- Pointing out a particular situation;
- Separating source from content;
- Asserting calls-to-action (“download now”);
- Asking for feedback;
- Separating your feed and other auto-content from the post.
H4 tags are fantastic for organizing information within different areas of you posts, such as when you present a download with specifics or a showcase with a similar layout per entry. In addition, h4 tags carry the same SEO effects as h3 tags, incurring a different kind of indexing by bots.
Conclusion
By using sub-headings in your posts, you can help the reader distinguish the main ideas in your content more easily, and improve the layout of your content overall. Sub-headings are especially essential for longer posts, such as pillar articles or reviews. Consider them not only for their SEO value, but also for their blog post sculpting usefulness.
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I use your AMAZING theme, Simple Balance, and when I had someone play around my site for SEO purposes they had me use H3 for headings – do you think they should be changed to H2?
On your home page I see you’re using H2 for post titles and H1 for the logo and its keywords, which is OK.
That’s not OK when it comes to single post pages. If the ones that edited the theme, considered that for a single post page, the logo is more relevant to the content than the post’s title, well, I doubt their judgment.
My SEO opinion when it comes to Simple Balance has been expressed mostly through the form the theme was released in.
Using H3 and H4 inside the article as subheading, that’s a good thing.
Great work here Alex! Post sculpting is among my checklists when it comes to publishing a new post. Also, I would like to add that focusing on post readability is important to as we have to aide our readers into digesting our content
Liane, that’s why we have subheadings, lists, paragraphs, to use them and through them guide our readers throughout our articles. And thank you!
I use the one-theme for wordpress for my blog, so H2 usually becomes too large for subheading. I tend to use a lot of h tags, mostly for SEO effect, in my blog posts. This is a good tip to archive more attention while increase your SEO efforts.
Thanks for the tips. I need to start using H3 and H4 tags throughout my post.
Thanks for the post. I using H2 and H1 tags in my blog
Just like reading a magazine, readers want to be able to skim your content and still pick up the essential points.