SEO TOOL

SERP Preview

Preview how your page appears in Google search results. Optimize title tags, meta descriptions, and URLs for maximum click-through rates.

58/60 characters
132/160 characters

Desktop Preview

toolypet.comtools › finance › compound

Compound Interest Calculator - Free Online Tool | Toolypet

Calculate compound interest with precision. Visualize exponential growth across different compounding frequencies and time horizons.

Mobile Preview

toolypet.com/tools/finance/compound

Compound Interest Calculator - Free Online Tool | Toolypet

Calculate compound interest with precision. Visualize exponential growth across different compounding frequencies and...

Crafting the Perfect Search Result Snippet

Anatomy of a Search Result

A Google search result has three visible elements: the title link (blue, clickable, ~580px or 60 characters on desktop), the URL/breadcrumb (green, shows your site structure), and the meta description(gray, ~920px or 155–160 characters). Google may rewrite your title or description if it thinks the page content better matches the query — this happens on approximately 61% of results according to a 2023 study by Zyppy.

CTR by Position: The Click Curve

Position 1 on Google captures approximately 27.6% of clicks, position 2 gets 15.8%, and position 3 gets 11.0%. By position 10, CTR drops to 2.4%. However, a compelling title and description can break this pattern. A position 3 result with an engaging snippet can outperform a bland position 1 result. Eye-tracking studies show users scan titles in 1.2 seconds on average before deciding to click or scroll.

Title Tag Best Practices

Place your primary keyword within the first 30 characters — that is where 80% of eye fixation occurs. Use a pipe (|) or dash (–) to separate the page topic from your brand name. Avoid ALL CAPS (reads as shouting). Include numbers when relevant (“7 Best...” titles get 36% more clicks). Add the current year for time-sensitive content (“Best Running Shoes 2024” outperforms undated titles by 15–20% CTR).

Meta Description Optimization

Your meta description is a 155-character advertisement. Start with a verb (“Learn,” “Discover,” “Calculate”), include your target keyword (Google bolds matching terms), and end with a call to action. Google uses the meta description in about 37% of cases — the rest of the time it generates its own snippet from page content. Having no meta description means Google always chooses for you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does Google change my title tag?

Google rewrites titles when it believes the original is too long, too short, keyword-stuffed, or does not match the user's search query well. Common triggers: excessive boilerplate (repeating your brand on every page), title too generic (“Home”), or mismatched content. To reduce rewrites, keep titles under 60 characters, make them unique per page, and accurately describe the page content.

How do mobile and desktop SERP snippets differ?

Mobile titles display about 55–60 characters (similar to desktop), but descriptions are shorter at around 120 characters. Mobile results also show more visual elements: favicons appear next to every result, and featured snippets are more prominent. With 60%+ of searches now on mobile, optimizing for the shorter mobile display is critical.

Does meta description affect rankings?

Google confirmed that meta descriptions are not a ranking factor. However, a compelling description increases CTR, and user engagement signals (high CTR, low bounce rate) can indirectly improve rankings over time. Think of the meta description as marketing copy, not an SEO lever.