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Inspiring
February 12, 2024
Answered

Confusion about titles and keywords

  • February 12, 2024
  • 7 replies
  • 3478 views

Hey, Recently I read an old article of Adobe about Keywords. But I want to confirm some of the things I read their as that post was very old and now Adobe may have new rules.
1. Is it correct that titles aren't searchable?
2. Is it correct that the first 10 keywords are most important keywords and the visibility of your assets depend on them?

Correct answer Jill_C

1. Titles are now searchable. Test it on a few of your assets.

2. keyword order matters. The first 10 are given more priority by the search algorithm. 

7 replies

Participant
November 9, 2025

Hi,

 

Yes, titles themselves are not directly searchable, but they still help with engagement and relevance. The first 10 keywords are definitely the most important because Adobe gives them higher weight in search results.

 

If you want to make this process easier, check out CyberStock.lol. It creates keywords and titles that actually sell using data from over 50 million real buyer searches, plus SEMrush and Google Trends.

 

You can try it with 20 free credits here: https://cyberstock.lol

 

Hope it helps.

 

Inspiring
February 13, 2024

One thing I also want to ask that will it help when I add keywords like 'nobody' when there are no humans in the image? I also read this in the same old article. 

daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 13, 2024

That would be a stretch. 🙂 I'd advise against. Yourre overthinking keywords.

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Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 12, 2024
quote

Hey, Recently I read an old article of Adobe about Keywords. But I want to confirm some of the things I read their as that post was very old and now Adobe may have new rules.
1. Is it correct that titles aren't searchable?
2. Is it correct that the first 10 keywords are most important keywords and the visibility of your assets depend on them?


By @DailyLifeImages

1) no, titles are searchable. that post you saw is quite old.

2) the keyword order is important. 

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Ars_Nova
Inspiring
February 12, 2024

According to Adobe, Titles do impact SEO page results and are searchable. However, they should sound natural and crafted with the buyer in mind. Adobe suggests using short titles, with around 70 characters out of the 200 available. In my experience, short titles (around 80-90 characters) and long titles (140-180 characters) perform equally well. The length might depend on what assets you're uploading and how much time you want to spend crafting a relevant and targeted title.

 

As for the keywords, Adobe mentions that keywords should be ordered by relevance and there's also a reordering tool on their upload page, so we can make an educated guess that the first 5-10 keywords on your list should be the most relevant and will have the most weight in SEO page results.

 

Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 12, 2024

The 70 characters recommendation is based on google, limiting title search to the first 70 characters. That is search outside of stock. 

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
Jill_C
Community Expert
Jill_CCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
February 12, 2024

1. Titles are now searchable. Test it on a few of your assets.

2. keyword order matters. The first 10 are given more priority by the search algorithm. 

Jill C., Forum Volunteer
daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 12, 2024

Let me go into more detail. I used to use ChatGPT so help me with keywording by inputting the following command:

 

Provide a paragraph of 20 to 30 individual keywords separated by commas. Do not repeat any keywords. Start the paragraph in lower case and do not end the list with a period after the last keyword. List the keywords, in order of relevance, based on the following image title: 

I would then copy and paste my title at the end of my command: Studio portrait of a regal looking Afghan Hound.

Which would result in the following list:

 

dog, Afghan Hound, regal, portrait, studio, canine, pedigree, purebred, elegant, long-haired, dignified, regal, show dog, animal, pet, beauty, luxurious coat, regal expression, breed, champion, graceful, majestic, aristocratic, formal pose, proud, elegant, Afghan hound portrait, canine beauty, purebred dog

 

As you can see, despite my instructions, ChatGPT didn't alway obey them and I would end up with a few duplicate keywords, along with some compound keywords not separated by commas. I would then enter: Remove all duplicate keywords.

 

I would then paste the results into my keyword list, adding and re-ordering when necessary any keywords from the list provided by Adobe's keyword suggestions. I'd separate compound keywords by inserting a comma where it seemed best to do so (I'd leave Afghan Hound as is, since someone searching for the same would probably enter this in the search field, but I'd separate regal expression with a comma and remove what would then become a duplicate keyword, regal). Finally, I would eliminate keywords that I felt weren't pertinent. 

 

I would then adjust my title accordingly: Studio portrait of a graceful and regal looking champion purebred show-winning Afghan Hound.

Obviously, this is a very slow process, but once you do it a couple hundred times, you start to get a feel for what keywords ChatGPT is going to come up with for a given subject and you begin to increase your own keyword vocabulary in your head. Eventually, you'll find you don't need to relay on ChatGPT as often to give you ideas.

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Inspiring
February 12, 2024

Matter of fact, I also use ChatGPT. Actually what I do, I give a brief description to chatgpt. Instead of long titles I give text like a 'sunset view' or 'dog on couch' and then after it gives keywords then I write titles.

daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 12, 2024

I believe it's been determined that titles are now searchable. When possible, repeat as many of the most importamt 10 words from your title into the keyword list. You won't always have enough 10 important words in your title to do so, but do as many as you can. In fact, I'll often adjust my title if I come up with a keyword that wasn't in my the title originally. At least that's my approach.

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Inspiring
February 12, 2024

Actually I first do keywords of the asset and then based on those keywords I write title.

daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 12, 2024

That words, too. 🙂

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