Breaking down the original title, I'd read it like:
- "Fun with...": just another on the pile of blog posts exploring some tech but not arriving at any interesting point
- "DuckDB": I've heard of it, not personally used it, there's a million and one DBs out there now so I'm not going to stop and look at everyone without a particular reason
- "curl": curl is boring, everyone knows curl (in the HN crowd at least)
- "and the Majestic Million": no recognition on first read, had to google it
So it's not surprising to me nobody initially clicked on what reads at first glance as "Boring blog about boring and boring", which is really a diservice to the post they actually wrote.
Even the author initially decided not to use "10% of the top million sites are dead" because it seemed "flashy, gimmicky, and potentially clickbait." Well yes, it is flashy, but it is certainly not clickbait. Why on earth do people hate on titles like that, when it accurately describes one of the central findings of the article.
I swear, one day someone is going to find a cure for cancer. They will publish something with the title "I have found a cure for cancer." And the first thing they will hear is some misanthrope complaining about their title being clickbait.
I believe those are (very) different things
> I resisted this title the first time around because it felt too catchy and clickbaity, so I had opted for the more academic title.
This title is not academic at all, I agree that people use clickbait title because they work but there is a middle ground between an arguably bad title and the clickbait title.
To go one step further, I am not even sure that "10% of the top million sites are dead" counts as clickbait, maybe the "dead" word is strong, but that's still just an actually good title in my book.
This article is written with the same "good" approach, the author didn't name it "Fun with Google Analytics", he instead added the actual quantitative value to hook the audience.
The author has this backwards, which was part of their initial problem. The title "I increased my traffic 13,000% by changing a title" is clear, descriptive, and informative.