The title, meta description and H1 are the first thing a reader sees in search, and the easiest thing to leave as an afterthought. Nadia reads them against the page and the intent behind the query, flags what is missing, weak, overlong or off the mark, and drafts clearer options.
For writers and editors who want metadata that reflects the page honestly, without guessing at character limits or chasing keywords.
Metadata is usually written last, in a hurry, by whoever is closest to the publish button. The result is titles that repeat the brand, descriptions that restate the H1 and pages that undersell what they actually offer. Nadia treats the SERP-facing layer as part of the writing.
↘ title says nothing, description repeats itTitle: Home | Blog | Our Company Name Ltd
Description: Welcome to our blog where we write about lots of things in our industry.
Title: How to choose a content workflow (a practical guide)
Description: A plain walkthrough of how to plan, brief, review and approve content, with the questions to ask before you commit.
Nadia checks the title, description and H1 the way a careful editor would: against what the page is for and what the reader was looking for, then proposes drafts you can accept, edit or reject.
NADIA → Nadia rewrites the title and description to match what readers are actually searching for, without overpromising.
She moves the value to the front so the page leads with what it offers, not who published it.
Nadia turns a restated H1 into a description that tells the reader what they will get from the page.
When the metadata promises one thing and the page delivers another, she flags the mismatch for a human to resolve.
She reviews titles and descriptions at scale and surfaces the weakest first, so a metadata pass starts where it counts.
Nadia drafts carefully and surfaces claims that need sign-off, rather than writing a promise the page cannot back up.
A title is a promise to a reader. Nadia proposes and checks, but she is built to stop at the draft. Nothing she writes is published or pushed to a CMS without a person approving it first.
Add Nadia to your workflow and every page reaches review with metadata that reflects it honestly and reads well in search.