How to write the title and the first line of the announcement about the sale of the plot on Avito
The title and the first line decide whether your site will be given a chance to sell, and they're the first to explain to the person what the object is and why it's worth opening, and the strong headline doesn't scream or decorate, and it quickly communicates the merit of the site and gets into the buyer's motive.Introduction
Most land sales ads lose before they read the text, and the user flips through the results, sees similar prices, monotonous headlines, and makes a decision in seconds.
At this point, there are two elements at work: the title and the first line. Everything else has not yet been authorized to be read.
That is why entering an ad is not a trifle, but a point where an object either becomes noticeable or dissolves among dozens of similar options.
Why the headline is more important than it seems
The title does a number of things at once. It helps you quickly understand the type of object, gives you a first sense of ad quality, filters the audience, and answers the buyer's internal question: Is there anything interesting here for me?
If the title is general, the site dissolves into the mass, and if it's accurate, the person gets a quick signal: it's a water object, a species site, a glamping format, a house land, or an investment territory.
The biggest mistake of the seller is to write a headline that solves nothing.
The most common mistake is to use blank, neutral names like "land," "10-acre plot," "selling land," "land in a good place," and they say almost nothing.
The second mistake is the emotionality of advertising: "best offer," "unique plot," "perfect for everything," "urgently sell." It doesn't build trust.
The third mistake is overload: when you try to squeeze water, forest, mountains, investment, house, glamping and business into one line at the same time.
A strong headline is not a list of everything the site has, but an accurate hit to its main meaning.
What a good headline should do
A good headline should quickly indicate the type of object, show the main advantage and hook the right audience.
You don't have to try to please everyone, you have to signal to those who might actually like this site.
Why the first line is as important as the title
If the title is responsible for opening the ad, the first line is responsible for continuing to read, and the person has already logged in, but has not yet decided whether to spend time on the object.
The first line is to confirm that it's not in vain, and it's to build on the promise that the headline made: to reveal the power of the place, the use case, or the logic of the object.
The main principle: the title opens, the first line holds
There must be a link between these two elements. You can't make a headline about one and the first line about the other.
The title is a punch to a point. The first line is a validation of value. Together, they have to not just inform, but draw the person into the object.
How to Choose Meaning for a Title
Before you write a title, you need to answer one question: what should work the fastest in this object.
It can be water, a view, a glamping format, a family scenario, entry price, scale, strong location or investment sense.
You have to pick one main hook. Not five. Anything else can reinforce the text, but it doesn't blur the input.
Formulas of strong headlines
Through the type of object and the main advantage: the area near the water in a quiet natural location.
Through the use scenario: a plot for the house and rest near the river.
Through format and rarity: a species site in a quiet location.
Through investment sense: land in the area of growth of tourist demand.
The main rule is that the title should remain clear and lively.
What should the first lines be?
The first line should confirm the value, help to present the site and set the direction of reading.
The bad first line looks like an empty opening phrase: “a great plot is for sale”, “a plot of land is offered for sale”, “the plot is located in a picturesque place”.
A good first line quickly answers one of the questions: why is this place worth the attention, who is it for, what is its power, what can be done here.
How the headline and the first line change for different audiences
For a family buyer, they should be calm and specific.
For the investor, it is more businesslike, with an emphasis on location, rarity, growth and logic of entry.
For glamping, with a product, atmosphere and placement scenario.
For the developer - with a sense of scale and territorial logic.
The same site for different types of buyers can enter the market through different formulations.
How to check if the title is working
There are three questions.
Do you know in a second what kind of place this is?
Is there a reason to open the ad?
Does it count who the object is for or what its strength is?
If the answer is no to two questions, the title is weak.
Practical conclusion
The title and the first line are the first filter for selling a piece of land on Avito, and they decide whether a person sees the meaning of the property before they read the full ad.
A strong headline quickly shows the type of site and its main merit: a strong first line immediately confirms the value and draws into reading.
The key message of the sixth lecture is that if you can't write a strong ad entry, everything else works half way.
Questions and answers
Do I need to put the area in the title?
Sometimes, yes, if it reinforces the meaning of the object, but the square itself rarely sells the opening of the ad.
Can you use words like “best,” “unique,” “perfect”?
Usually not. It often weakens trust.
Should I write in the title “under glamping” or “under the recreation center”?
Yes, if that's really the main scenario of the object.
Which is more important: the title or the first line?
They work like a bunch. The title leads the person, the first line decides if they're going to read any further.
Can I make multiple title versions for one site?
It's one of the strongest testing practices.
