Ever notice how some search results grab your attention while others feel like white noise? That little preview text under the page title matters more than you’d think.
A meta description is the snippet of text search engines show beneath your page title in results. It’s usually around 150-160 characters, and honestly, it can make or break whether someone clicks through to your blog or scrolls right past.
Here’s the thing: your meta description doesn’t directly affect where you rank in search results. Google’s said this multiple times. But what it does affect is whether people actually click on your result once they find it. Higher click-through rate signals to search engines that your content is relevant, which can indirectly help your rankings over time.
Prerequisites
Before we dive in, you’ll need:
- Access to your Badass Network blog dashboard
- At least one published post or page to work with
- Basic understanding of how to edit posts
What Makes a Good Meta Description
Think of your meta description as a mini-advertisement for your content. You’ve got roughly 155-160 characters to convince someone that your page has what they’re looking for.
Most people write meta descriptions that sound like robot instructions: “This page contains information about how to create meta descriptions for better SEO performance.” Yawn.
Better approach: write like you’re texting a friend about what’s on the page. “Can’t get people to click your search results? Your meta descriptions probably suck. Here’s how to fix them in 5 minutes.”
Length matters. Google truncates descriptions around 155-160 characters on desktop, sometimes shorter on mobile. If yours runs longer, you’ll see those dreaded ellipses (…) cutting off your carefully crafted pitch mid-sentence.
Include your target keyword, but don’t force it. If you’re writing about “gluten-free baking,” work that phrase in naturally. Search engines bold keywords that match the searcher’s query, which makes your result stand out.
Answer the searcher’s intent. Someone searching “how to write meta descriptions” wants a how-to guide. Someone searching “meta description character limit” wants a quick fact. Match your description to what they’re actually looking for.
Writing Meta Descriptions That Get Clicks
Start by figuring out what your page actually delivers. No fluff—what’s the core benefit someone gets from reading?
Use active voice and action words. “Learn how to…” works, but “Discover,” “Find out,” “Get started with,” or “Master” can feel more dynamic. Mix it up depending on your content and audience.
Here’s what we usually do:
Lead with the benefit or answer
Add specificity
Create curiosity (but don’t be clickbaity)
Address the reader directly
Examples That Work
- “Your blog posts aren’t getting clicks? Your meta descriptions might be the problem. Here’s how to write ones that actually convert.”
- “Meta descriptions take 2 minutes to write but can double your click-through rate. We’ll show you the formula we use for every post.”
- “Most bloggers ignore meta descriptions. Big mistake. Here’s why they matter and how to optimize them in your WordPress dashboard.”
Examples That Don’t
- “This article provides comprehensive information about meta descriptions and their role in search engine optimization strategies.”
- “Meta descriptions are an important element of on-page SEO that should not be overlooked by content creators.”
- “Learn everything you need to know about writing effective meta descriptions for improved search visibility.”
Adding Meta Descriptions in Your Badass Network Blog
Okay, here’s where we actually do this in WordPress.
Most Badass Network blogs have an SEO plugin set up that lets you add meta descriptions directly in your post editor. You’ll see it below your main content area, usually in a box labeled something like “SEO Settings” or “Yoast SEO.”
To add a meta description:
Open the post or page you want to edit
Scroll down below your content editor
Look for the SEO section
Find the “Meta Description” field
Type your description
Save or update your post
The character counter’s helpful—it shows you when you’re getting close to that 155-160 limit. Some SEO plugins show a preview of how your result will look in Google, which is honestly pretty useful for catching typos or awkward phrasing.
Should You Write Meta Descriptions for Every Page?
Short answer: yes, for anything you care about ranking.
Long answer: it depends on your goals and how much time you have.
Definitely write them for:
- Homepage
- Important service or product pages
- Your best blog posts
- Anything you’re actively trying to rank
You can probably skip them for:
- Tag archive pages
- Author archives
- Really old posts you’ve abandoned
If you don’t write one, Google generates its own by pulling text from your page. Sometimes it does an okay job. Sometimes it grabs a weird sentence fragment that makes no sense out of context.
Common Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
Mistake 1: Writing the same meta description for every post.
Sounds obvious, but you’d be surprised. If all your meta descriptions say “Welcome to My Blog – Read Our Latest Posts,” you’re wasting a huge opportunity to differentiate your content.
Mistake 2: Keyword stuffing.
“Meta description meta description click-through rate meta description SEO meta description tips” reads like spam. Google ignores it, and humans won’t click it.
Use your keyword once, maybe twice if it flows naturally. That’s it.
Mistake 3: Being too vague.
“Read this post to learn more about meta descriptions.” More about what? What will I learn specifically? Give me a reason to click.
Mistake 4: Making promises your content doesn’t keep.
If your meta description says “Complete guide with 50+ examples” and your post has 3 examples and 400 words, people will bounce immediately. That hurts you more than having no meta description at all.
Mistake 5: Forgetting mobile.
Most searches happen on phones now. Your description might look fine on desktop but get cut off on mobile. Keep your most important info in the first 120 characters to be safe.
What About Click-Through Rate?
Your click-through rate (CTR) is the percentage of people who see your result in search and actually click on it. If 100 people see your result and 5 click, that’s a 5% CTR.
Average CTR varies by position:
- Position 1: 30-40% (sometimes higher for branded searches)
- Position 2: 15-20%
- Position 3: 10-15%
- Position 4-10: 5-10%
- Page 2+: Less than 2%
Yeah, ranking matters. But you can dramatically improve your CTR at any position with better meta descriptions.
Most people find CTR between 2-5% for blog posts is normal. Anything above 5% is pretty good. Above 10%? You’re doing something right.
Don’t obsess over CTR for every single page—focus on the ones that matter most or the ones with lots of impressions but terrible click rates.
Testing and Improving Your Descriptions
You can’t just write a meta description and forget about it. Well, you can, but you shouldn’t.
Check your Search Console every month or so. Look for pages with:
- High impressions but low clicks
- Declining CTR over time
- Pages that rank well (top 5) but don’t get clicks
Those are your opportunities.
Try rewriting the meta description with:
- A different angle (benefit instead of feature, or vice versa)
- More specific details
- A question that hooks curiosity
- Numbers or concrete promises
Give it a few weeks, then check again. Did CTR improve? If so, keep that approach. If not, try something else.
Tips That Actually Work
Write like a human. Seriously, this is the most important thing. If your meta description sounds like it came from a corporate press release, rewrite it.
Use power words strategically. Words like “proven,” “essential,” “ultimate,” “simple,” or “surprising” can increase clicks when used appropriately. Don’t overdo it—one per description max.
Match the search intent. Someone searching “what is a meta description” wants a definition. Someone searching “how to write meta descriptions” wants instructions. Someone searching “meta description examples” wants… examples. Your meta description should reflect what the searcher expects to find.
Front-load your value. Put the most compelling part at the beginning in case the description gets truncated. “Here’s how to double your click-through rate in 5 minutes” is stronger than “In this post, we’ll explore several strategies that can potentially improve your click-through rate, including…”
Update old posts. You don’t have to do this all at once, but when you revisit old content, check the meta description. Your writing’s probably improved since you first published it—your meta descriptions should improve too.
What Google Sometimes Does Instead
Fair warning: Google doesn’t always use your meta description, even if you write one.
If Google thinks a different part of your page better matches what someone searched for, it’ll pull that text instead. You’ll see this happen more often for long-tail searches or really specific queries.
Quick Reference
Here’s the formula we use most often:
[Benefit or Answer] + [How/Why/What] + [Credibility or Specificity]
Examples:
- “Meta descriptions boost clicks when done right. Here’s the exact formula we use for every post.”
- “Can’t figure out why people aren’t clicking your search results? Your meta descriptions probably need work—here’s how to fix them.”
- “Most bloggers skip meta descriptions. That’s a mistake. Here’s why they matter and how to write them in 2 minutes.”
Keep it under 155 characters, include your keyword naturally, and sound like a real person wrote it.
What You’ve Done
You now know how to write meta descriptions that actually improve your click-through rate. You understand the character limits, the common mistakes to avoid, and how to test whether your descriptions are working.
Next step: go through your 5-10 most important posts and write or rewrite their meta descriptions. Then check Search Console in a month to see if your CTR improved.
If you want to dive deeper into SEO, check out our guides on writing SEO-friendly blog titles and using keywords effectively.
Need Help?
If you’re having trouble finding the SEO settings in your dashboard or your meta descriptions aren’t saving correctly, reach out to us:
- Contact Badass Network support
- Include your blog URL
- Let us know what you’ve tried so far
We’re here to help you make your blog succeed.