The snippet under your title
A meta description is the short summary (under ~155 characters) that can appear beneath a page’s title in search results. It doesn’t directly affect ranking, but a clear, compelling one improves click-through rate.
Why it matters. A strong meta description with your keyword and a reason to click earns more visitors from the same ranking. It’s free real estate that many businesses leave blank or duplicate across pages.
A meta description is a short HTML summary, ideally about 120 to 155 characters, that can appear beneath a page’s title in search results. It is not a direct Google ranking factor, but a clear, relevant description improves click-through rate by previewing the page, and search engines may rewrite it when it doesn’t match the searcher’s query.
A family dentist in Winter Park has a service page titled “Same-Day Crowns in Winter Park, FL.” Their meta description reads: “Need a crown fast? Our Winter Park dentist places same-day ceramic crowns , no second visit, no temporary. Call to book this week.” That’s about 140 characters, names the location, states the benefit, and ends with a clear next step. When it appears in Google for “same-day crown near me,” the searcher already knows the practice does exactly what they want before they click, which lifts click-through over a generic “Welcome to our dental office” line.
Why it matters: a meta description is your free ad copy in the search results. It isn’t a direct ranking factor, but it shapes click-through rate (CTR), and pages that earn more clicks for a query tend to hold or improve their position over time. The practical move is to write a tight, query-relevant summary so searchers self-select before they click.
How it’s measured and where it goes wrong: aim for roughly 120 to 155 characters so the text doesn’t get truncated on desktop (mobile cuts shorter, near 120). Google rewrites the snippet it shows most of the time when your text doesn’t match the actual query, so write for the searcher, not the algorithm. The most common Central Florida small-business mistakes are leaving the field blank so the CMS auto-generates junk, pasting one description across every page, and stuffing keywords instead of writing a real sentence. Every page needs its own description tied to that page’s intent.
How it connects to local SEO and AEO: include the city or neighborhood you serve (Orlando, Kissimmee, Lake Nona) plus the specific service so your snippet matches “near me” and “in [city]” searches. For answer-engine optimization, a clear factual one-sentence summary gives AI assistants a clean line to understand and quote, so the same discipline that wins clicks in Google also helps you get surfaced in AI answers.
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