By now, we’ve established one important truth about Writing Great Headlines.
People don’t click because you wrote a headline. They click because your headline promises something valuable to them.
The question is: What makes one headline feel valuable while another gets ignored?
Surprisingly, the answer isn’t one magic word or one perfect formula. Great headlines are built from a handful of components that work together.
Think of building a house. A beautiful home isn’t created by a single expensive brick. It’s the way the foundation, walls, roof, windows, and doors fit together.
Headlines work the same way. Let’s examine each building block.
Building Block #1 – Clarity
If people don’t understand your headline, nothing else matters. This is the most overlooked rule in copywriting.
Many freelancers try to sound knowledgeable. Instead, they accidentally become difficult to understand.
Consider these examples.
Example A
Delivering Transformational Digital Experiences
What does that actually mean?
Compare it with:
Websites That Help Small Businesses Get More Customers
The second headline immediately tells the reader:
- What you do
- Who you help
- Why it matters
There’s no guessing. Whenever possible, choose clarity over cleverness.
A Simple Test
After writing a headline, ask yourself:
Could someone outside my industry understand this in five seconds?
If the answer is “probably not,” simplify it. Your goal isn’t to impress other freelancers. Your goal is to communicate with potential clients.
Building Block #2 – Relevance
Imagine seeing these two headlines.
Master Advanced Java Programming
and
How Freelancers Can Win Their First Five Clients
If you’re trying to build a freelance business, the second headline instantly feels relevant.
Not because it’s better written. Because it’s about you. Relevance begins with understanding your audience.
Before writing a headline, ask:
- Who am I speaking to?
- What are they struggling with today?
- What are they hoping to achieve?
- What would make them stop scrolling?
The more specific your audience, the easier it becomes to write compelling headlines.
Building Block #3 – A Clear Benefit
Let’s play a quick game. Which headline would you click?
Option 1
Project Management Software
Option 2
Manage Every Client Project Without Missing a Deadline
The second headline communicates the outcome. That’s the difference between a feature and a benefit.
Freelancers often talk about:
- Experience
- Skills
- Certifications
- Technologies
- Tools
Clients think differently.
They care about:
- Faster delivery
- Better quality
- Less stress
- More sales
- Fewer mistakes
- Predictable outcomes
Whenever you write a headline, ask:
What changes for the client after working with me?
Write about that.
Building Block #4 – Specificity
Specific headlines are easier to trust. Compare these.
Improve Your Freelancing Career
versus
Seven Changes That Helped Me Double My Freelance Income in Twelve Months
Even if you don’t know whether the claim is true, the second headline feels more credible because it’s precise.
Specificity can come from:
- Numbers
- Timeframes
- Industries
- Locations
- Job roles
- Results
- Processes
For example:
Instead of
Better LinkedIn Posts
try
How I Write LinkedIn Posts in 20 Minutes That Generate Client Conversations
Notice how much more tangible that feels.
Building Block #5 – Curiosity
Earlier, we discussed curiosity from a psychological perspective. Now let’s see how it fits into a headline.
Curiosity shouldn’t replace clarity. It should complement it.
For example:
Why Most Freelance Portfolios Fail
Immediately raises a question. Why?
Now compare it with:
Portfolio Tips
One creates curiosity. The other simply labels a topic.
The best curiosity headlines leave one question unanswered, not ten.
Building Block #6 – Credibility
The internet has made readers skeptical. People have seen too many exaggerated claims. That’s why believable headlines often outperform sensational ones.
Compare these.
Become a Millionaire Freelancer Overnight!
versus
Five Practical Changes That Helped Me Earn Better Freelance Clients
One sounds like advertising. The other sounds like experience. Credibility comes from being realistic.
Sometimes saying “improve” is stronger than saying “transform.”
Building Block #7 – Simplicity
Albert Einstein reportedly said:
“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.”
Whether or not he actually said those exact words, the principle is valuable.
Complicated headlines require effort. Simple headlines invite reading.
Instead of writing:
Leveraging Artificial Intelligence to Optimize Freelance Client Acquisition
try
How AI Can Help You Find Better Freelance Clients
Same idea. Much easier to understand.
Building Block #8 – Emotion
People remember how something makes them feel. Not every headline needs excitement. Sometimes, reassurance is far more powerful. Consider these examples.
Fear:
Five Proposal Mistakes That Cost Freelancers Clients
Hope:
How to Build a Freelance Business You Can Depend On
Relief:
Stop Chasing Clients. Build a Portfolio That Works for You.
Confidence:
A Beginner’s Guide to Freelancing Without Feeling Overwhelmed
Each headline appeals to a different emotion. Understanding your audience helps you choose the right one.
Putting It All Together
Let’s analyze the following headline.
How Freelancers Can Build a Portfolio That Wins Better Clients
Why does it work?
| Component | Present? | Why it Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Clarity | ✔ | You immediately know the topic. |
| Audience | ✔ | It speaks directly to freelancers. |
| Benefit | ✔ | Better clients. |
| Simplicity | ✔ | Easy to understand. |
| Credibility | ✔ | Makes a realistic promise. |
| Curiosity | Moderate | Readers want to know how. |
| Emotion | Moderate | Appeals to ambition and confidence. |
Notice something interesting. There’s nothing magical here. No sensational words. No clickbait.
Just several solid principles working together.
The AboutFreelancing Headline Check
Whenever I write a headline, I mentally run through this checklist. I encourage you to do the same.
Before publishing, ask:
- ✅ Is it clear? Can someone understand it immediately?
- ✅ Is it relevant? Does it speak to the audience I want?
- ✅ Is there an obvious benefit? Will the reader gain something?
- ✅ Is it specific? Could I make it more precise?
- ✅ Is it believable? Would I trust this if someone else wrote it?
- ✅ Is it simple? Can I remove unnecessary words?
- ✅ Does it make me curious? Does it naturally encourage me to continue reading?
If you answer “Yes” to most of these questions, you’re already ahead of many headlines published online.
Let’s Improve Some Headlines Together
Here are a few examples.
Example 1
Before: Freelance Web Developer
After: Helping Small Businesses Build Websites That Turn Visitors into Customers
Example 2
Before: Graphic Design Services
After: Brand Designs That Help Your Business Get Remembered
Example 3
Before: SEO Expert
After: SEO Strategies That Help Local Businesses Get Found on Google
Example 4
Before: Virtual Assistant
After: Giving Busy Business Owners More Time to Focus on Growth
Example 5
Before: Content Writer
After: Content That Builds Trust Before Your Sales Conversation Begins
Do you notice the pattern?
We’re no longer introducing ourselves. We’re introducing the value we create. That’s a subtle shift, but it changes how clients perceive your work.
Your Turn
Open your LinkedIn headline, website homepage, or portfolio.
Take the current headline and ask yourself:
Is it about me? Or is it about the client?
Now rewrite it using the eight building blocks we discussed. Don’t worry about making it perfect.
Aim to make it clearer, more relevant, and more valuable than it was yesterday.
You’ll be surprised how much difference a few carefully chosen words can make.
Key Takeaways
A great headline isn’t created by chance. It’s built. The strongest headlines usually combine:
Clarity, Relevance, Benefits, Specificity, Curiosity, Credibility, Simplicity, Emotion
You don’t need every building block in every headline. But the more of them you combine naturally, the stronger your headline becomes.
Wait, one last thought to mention…
Before we move on, I want to leave you with one thought. Many freelancers spend years improving their skills.
Very few spend even one afternoon improving how they communicate those skills.
Learning to write better headlines won’t make you a better developer, designer, writer, marketer, or consultant.
It will make it easier for the right people to discover how good you already are.
And sometimes, that’s all the advantage you need.
Next up in Part 4: Proven Headline Frameworks Every Freelancer Should Know.
If you have any questions, reach out to me on LinkedIn
