Tag: surplus

The user wants a concise SEO English title for an article based on the provided content. The content consists of two news snippets: 1. “Too Good To Go takes a bite out of Tauranga’s food waste” – NZ Herald 2. “Too Good to Go ramps up efforts to ‘clean up’ NZ’s food waste problem” – The Post Both articles are about the app “Too Good To Go” addressing food waste in New Zealand, specifically mentioning Tauranga and broader NZ efforts. As a content writer, I need to create a concise, SEO-friendly title in English, title case (first letter of major words capitalized), without quotation marks, and only the title—no extra text. Key elements for SEO: – Include the brand name: “Too Good To Go” (note: the exact branding uses capital T, G, T, G—though sometimes written as “Too Good to Go”, but the first snippet uses “Too Good To Go” with all major words capped; I’ll follow the first source’s styling for consistency). – Focus on the action: reducing food waste in New Zealand. – Location: New Zealand (or Tauranga, but since the second article is broader NZ, using NZ is more inclusive for SEO). – Avoid fluff; keep it concise. Possible title options: – “Too Good To Go Tackles Food Waste Across New Zealand” – “Too Good To Go Expands Efforts to Reduce NZ Food Waste” – “Too Good To Go Bites Into NZ’s Food Waste Problem” I need it to be concise and SEO-optimized. Including “New Zealand” or “NZ” helps with local search. “Tackles”, “Takes a bite out of”, “Ramps up efforts” are all action-oriented. The most balanced and concise title that covers both snippets would be something like: “Too Good To Go Takes a Bite Out of New Zealand’s Food Waste” But let’s check: – “Too Good To Go” – brand (as per first source) – “Takes a Bite Out Of” – direct from first headline, which is catchy and SEO-friendly (includes verb and metaphor) – “New Zealand’s Food Waste” – generalizes from Tauranga to NZ, covering the second article’s broader scope. Alternative: “Too Good To Go Ramps Up Efforts to Clean Up NZ Food Waste” – but “ramps up” is less common in SEO than “tackles” or “

April 26, 2026

The user wants a concise SEO English title for an article based on the provided content. The content consists of two news snippets: 1. “Too Good To Go takes a bite out of Tauranga’s food waste” – NZ Herald 2. “Too Good to Go ramps up efforts to ‘clean up’ NZ’s food waste problem” – The Post Both articles are about the app “Too Good To Go” addressing food waste in New Zealand, specifically mentioning Tauranga and broader NZ efforts. As a content writer, I need to create a concise, SEO-friendly title in English, title case (first letter of major words capitalized), without quotation marks, and only the title—no extra text. Key elements for SEO: – Include the brand name: “Too Good To Go” (note: the exact branding uses capital T, G, T, G—though sometimes written as “Too Good to Go”, but the first snippet uses “Too Good To Go” with all major words capped; I’ll follow the first source’s styling for consistency). – Focus on the action: reducing food waste in New Zealand. – Location: New Zealand (or Tauranga, but since the second article is broader NZ, using NZ is more inclusive for SEO). – Avoid fluff; keep it concise. Possible title options: – “Too Good To Go Tackles Food Waste Across New Zealand” – “Too Good To Go Expands Efforts to Reduce NZ Food Waste” – “Too Good To Go Bites Into NZ’s Food Waste Problem” I need it to be concise and SEO-optimized. Including “New Zealand” or “NZ” helps with local search. “Tackles”, “Takes a bite out of”, “Ramps up efforts” are all action-oriented. The most balanced and concise title that covers both snippets would be something like: “Too Good To Go Takes a Bite Out of New Zealand’s Food Waste” But let’s check: – “Too Good To Go” – brand (as per first source) – “Takes a Bite Out Of” – direct from first headline, which is catchy and SEO-friendly (includes verb and metaphor) – “New Zealand’s Food Waste” – generalizes from Tauranga to NZ, covering the second article’s broader scope. Alternative: “Too Good To Go Ramps Up Efforts to Clean Up NZ Food Waste” – but “ramps up” is less common in SEO than “tackles” or “