The picture (like any other, but this one especially) is chosen to match the text announcement. You shouldn't use a lead paragraph or any text fragment as an announcement. For search engines, this is a signal of duplicate content. The most important thing in an announcement is the unspoken, the enticing, and even the grotesque: Contents of the article Let's take a longread as an example.
For example, "How to write a slogan to attract clients: criteria, cases, singapore consumer email list techniques ." Its content: For the author, content is the structure of the article, and often the plan for writing it. For the reader, it is the opportunity to IMMEDIATELY see what awaits him WITHOUT scanning the subheadings in the text. Nothing new has been invented here: the same books are longreads in form.
Agree, a book without a title is somehow strange... We often first of all look at the content to find out what awaits us as we read! I was a bit disingenuous about "nothing new". "Texterra" made it so that now the content of the article is always with the reader: I think that this element should be on any site with long articles, although the same Wikipedia uses it regardless of the volume of material.
Does it accurately convey the essence of the article?
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