101 Landing Page Optimization Tips
101 Landing Page Optimization Tips
Optimization Tips
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The Fundamentals
Sticking to the fundamentals can take you from having a terrible landing page to having
one that people find hard to poke holes in. Apply them vigorously and at all times, then
enhance your campaigns by digging into the other areas we discuss later on.
No one likes a babbler, and we only put up with it for the most part because itʼs our
friend thatʼs chewing on our ear.
When dealing with online prospects, you need to get right to the point with no
muss and no fuss.
The astute among you will recognize that in providing an analogy prior to my point,
I am essentially countering my own argument to a degree. But on closer
examination, what this shows is that sometimes you have to provide some
editorial or instructional introduction to your subject.
If this is the case, like Roxette, just make sure the juicy bits stand out significantly.
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Conversely, if itʼs just a big page of small type with no visible purpose, you
wouldnʼt even break your stride.
Make the headline clear, easily noticeable, and in a relevant position on the page.
The most obvious choice for social media buzz creation is Twitter. This micro-
blogging platform has become the social sharing tool du jour and can help to
spread your message quickly and in an exponential fashion if what you are doing
is tweetworthy.
The key to it's success lies in the fact that it's not 100% altruistic. Sharing content
on Digg or Reddit can help establish you as an authority if you have a long term
goal to become recognized in the community. However, sharing via Twitter adds
the content into your own personal timeline which extends your online persona by
showing content that represents your personality and beliefs.
It's reminiscent of the psychology surrounding ones CD, vinyl or book collection,
where you gain pleasure from the reaction of others to your taste.
6. User Segmentation
If you have multiple user types, create a landing page for each segment and drive
traffic via separate sources. This will enable you to measure your most effective
market segmentation. If your landing page has extended logic or geo-targeting
capabilities you may be able to create a single page with changing content based
on visitor. If this is the case, ensure your tracking can handle these complexities.
Not only was it tempting, but it didn't have any competing information.
As you create your landing page, step back from time to time, look at it from a
distance and see how many things are vying for your attention.
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color or look you up on Google maps, they can go to your website in their own
time. Each navigation option you provide dilutes their attention.
An exception to this rule would be a page designed to provide a high level of detail
(such as a Book page on Amazon), but this is usually best utilized as the deep-
linked “product detail” page on the target website and not on a landing page.
Your primary messaging and call to action must be above the fold (the bottom of
the screen for the average browser resolution of your target market).
To present the counter argument (for completeness), a product detail page such
as an Amazon book page, is very well suited to a long page.
There are many things that have reduced the need to focus so much on the fold, 3
of them are:
• Amazon - with some of the most important information (user reviews) 2-5
screens down the page people have developed an understanding that not all
of the gold is buried close to the surface.
• MySpace - when millions of today's youth started creating their own web
pages using MySpace, they inherently started to learn and value this long
form approach.
• The Wheel Mouse - providing a big helping hand along the way was the
introduction of an improved interaction mechanism. The scroll wheel on the
PC mouse essentially removed the need to use scrollbars. Thankfully Apple
have since conceded to this superior interaction method and included it on
their mice too.
If you are obligated to produce a long landing page (perhaps as one of the
standard long-form lead capture sites), try to repeat your core message and/or
CTA at comfortable intervals throughout. This helps to reinforce your purpose.
Note also that different people react to different content, so they may be 2/3 of the
way through before they believe what you are saying. If there is a button right
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there, you may find them more likely to convert when this matches their time of
emotional connection to your message.
11. Congruence
Congruence refers to ensuring that every element on your landing page refers to
or supports your core value proposition. Look over your design and copy, if itʼs not
directly supporting your goals ditch it or re-write/re-design it.
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Trust & Security
With the proliferation of spam, pyramid and get-rich-quick schemes, and other bad-news-
bears operations, becoming a leader with regard to trust can give your pages an instant
leg up. The key to success here is to care. Donʼt pay lip service to this area as itʼs more
important to people than you may think.
18. Popups/pop-unders
Do you really need advice about this? Ok, here goes. If you use them, you should
hang your head in shame and go wait in line for when your entire customer base
leaves you for a company with more integrity. Sure, you may notice a slight
improvement in conversion in the short term, but if youʼre attracting the types of
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customer that click on popups either because they are suckers or simply to get the
ad out of the way, then they will exhibit the same ADD and bad judgement when
they get through to your site.
You may be in a position where you just want to present higher numbers at the
weekly meeting a few times to fulfill your contract, but if you are an entrepreneur,
stay away. Just remember, if it makes your stomach feel even a little uneasy, it
probably doesnʼt make good business sense. And NEVER EVER use those
javascript dialogs that ask whether you really want to leave the page.
“Are you sure you want to leave this page?” Press OK to leave, and Cancel to
stay. Or is it OK to stay and Cancel to leave?
“How about now?”
20. Endorsements
If you have affiliations with famous people, use endorsements to build credibility.
Iʼm pretty sure that Proactiv isnʼt some miracle cure for acne, but Iʼm willing to
suspend that doubt purely because the celebrities promoting it are placing their
credibility on the line.
23. Testimonials.
Testimonials work to create trust on your landing pages. But donʼt use false or
made up ones.
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If you make up over enthusiastic statements by caricatures of stereotypical
personas, and position them with images grabbed from stock photo sites you will
most likely look unauthentic.
Wait for that great personal story that could be the tipping point in making people
believe in your landing page message, something that shows you have affected
someoneʼs life.
If you donʼt have one yet, increase the feedback mechanisms on your website to
allow your customers to provide the information you need.
If you find that less testimonials work better, you could then try using only 1, but
test each testimonial in turn to see which people respond best to.
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Following on from the last point, if you oversell yourself in the living room, you may
very well attract your guest into the bedroom, only to find she leaves at the sight of
the real thing.
27. Privacy
Provide links to a privacy statement and or terms and conditions to quell fears of
email abuse. A good technique is to write “Weʼll never sell your email address”
beside and email form field.
28. Co-branding
Affiliates drive traffic to your business, often to a landing page. To enhance the Ad
Message Momentum using a co-branded landing page can improve your
conversion rate.
To clarify, what this does is to provide the customer with some confident that their
path isn't being broken. A lot of affiliates will be offering a discount coupon
(something they have arranged with you), so they are garnering traffic based on
their ability to sell this discount. When someone clicks from their site over to your
product landing page they need to know that that offer hasn't been "digitally
disregarded".
• Include the affiliates logo on the landing page alongside your own,
showing that you have an established relationship.
• Repeat the offer specific to that affiliate, showing that clicking through to
your landing page didn't cause the promise to be forgotten.
This is how providing co-branding opportunities with partners and affiliates can
create a greater sense of trust and confidence.
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Landing Page SEO
For short term marketing campaigns, SEO isnʼt a factor, but for longer terms projects,
especially lead-generation or ebook sales, itʼs a critical aspect of your business model.
29. Your Website Has More Landing Pages Than You Think
Whether you think you've ever created a landing page before, you need to
recognize that landing pages are not just standalone campaign-based entities.
As the search economy grows, every deep-linked product detail page on your site
is essentially a landing page.
With this in mind, take a look over your site and re-apply the tips in this eBook to
those pages to help improve your conversions and revenue from your long tail of
content.
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variety of colors”, which could be changed to “Your number 1 source for purple cell
phones”, which latches onto a core keyword phrase.
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Before Creating a Landing Page you should KNOW:
For architects or designers and developers responsible for creating a landing page, the
following information should be known to facilitate the creation of a page that addresses
real needs. A marketing or campaign manager should be providing this type of information.
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Before Designing a Landing Page you should DO:
Preparation is always nice but not always practical. Here are a few tips that can ease your
planning process and ensure you start heading down a path of recursive good behavior.
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Before you push the “Go Live” Button
Itʼs tempting to be impatient and “get it out the door” as soon as you can, but it pays to
take a few deep breaths and do some final checks and balances before you publish your
landing pages.
49. QA
Some companies have this built into their process, others are too small and rely
on the owner/creator to do everything. Even in large companies, small marketing
campaigns often get the short end of the stick and donʼt have a dedicated person
for quality assurance. To be viewed as professional you cannot afford to have any
typos or errors on your landing pages. With such a short time to convince a visitor
that you have something of value, even minor slip ups can cost you a sale. Make
sure it looks good in all major web browsers - sadly this still needs to include IE 6
most of the time. Fortunately, most landing pages are relatively simple, but donʼt
forget to check.
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At Campaign End
Diligent attention to the success or failure of your campaigns will help you learn and grow
as an internet marketer. Try to study what youʼve done after itʼs finished.
50. Postmortem
After each landing page campaign, hold a postmortem session to collectively
analyze and agree on what worked and what didnʼt. This can then be fed back into
your best practices lists.
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Testing, Testing, Testing
Many a marketing department relies solely on gut instinct and personal opinion. Be
prepared to throw that out the window and start achieving real insight into what works and
what doesnʼt.
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59. Multivariate testing (MVT)
A|Bʼs big brother is a much more complicated affair that requires a modicum of
business intelligence and mathematical skill. Generally you would engage a 3rd
party company to handle this level of testing. It involves testing for changes in
multiple variables at one time with a focus on scientific interpretation of results.
Not all elements that can be tested were created equally; changing the button
color and primary message copy could have a greater effect than the choice of
background color or photography choice. MVT allows you to see with more
accuracy which changes are creating the most beneficial conversion
improvements. For more detailed information, Iʼd recommend a book by Tim Ash -
“Landing Page Optimization” that does a great - albeit very technical - job of
explaining the purpose and use of multivariate testing.
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Corporate Tips
How to get ahead as an internet marketer.
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Forms on Landing Pages
Nothing strikes fear into the heart of a web visitor more than the dreaded form. Follow
these simple landing page form tips to reduce your bounce rate.
64. Whitespace.
Donʼt crowd your form, make it inviting, clean and simple by surrounding it with a
decent margin of clear space.
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Optimizing your Landing Page Call to Action (CTA)
If your visitors donʼt know what to do, then you are up shit creek without a paddle, a boat
or any moist towelettes. Your Call to Action, or CTA is the primary action item for any
visitor to your landing page. Examples of a CTA are: purchasing a product, subscribing to
a newsletter, calling you on the phone, downloading an ebook or whitepaper, watching a
demo or requesting information.
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do download a product brochure. This keeps them in your realm of influence (as
opposed to leaving to do research elsewhere) and builds confidence. Ensure that
the safety net CTA doesnʼt compete in size and visual dominance - often a simple
text link is adequate, beneath the main big action button. If you are asking
someone to purchase online, offering a phone number for phone orders may make
a potential customer more likely to convert if thatʼs their preferred contact method.
75. Continuity
Try to carry your primary call to action throughout the entire acquisition and
conversional experience, from banner or AdWords ad, through your landing page
and on to the final destination page (if there is one).
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What NOT to do - things that can Piss off Your
Customers
Weʼve all had horrible online experiences. Follow these tips to avoid re-creating them.
85. Assumptions
Donʼt make assumptions about your visitors knowledge. Put yourself in their shoes
and anticipate their questions. Then make sure you answer their core questions
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on the page. This will help prevent people going elsewhere to find their answers
and potentially finding a better offer.
86. Opt-out
If someone is registering with you for a newsletter or ongoing communication,
make it clear that they will be able to easily opt-out at any time. Saying this up
front is often the tipping point between someone saying “ok, sure” and “no way”.
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Reporting, Metrics & Analytics for Landing Pages
Marketing campaigns without metrics and reporting and like a runaway train. Yes, they
make you more accountable, but if youʼre good at what you do - or at least desire to
become better, accountability can make you a rock star. Here are some tips to get you
started:
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92. Customer Feedback
If you are gathering consumer feedback via a landing page, collating this serves 2
purposes. Firstly, it gives you great presentation materials for internal meetings.
Secondly, you can start to use them on your next campaign as testimonials to
boost credibility and trust. Just remember to ask permission before quoting
somebody publicly.
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When to Use a Landing Page
You probably donʼt have the time, money or resources to use a landing page for every little
brain fart or campaign initiative that you come up with, so here are our recommendations
for when they are a relevant option.
100. When your Marketing Manager or CEO has one of his/her “brainwaves”.
Weʼve all been there. Some creative type (I canʼt be too harsh here as Iʼm one
myself) comes up with a great idea that must be dealt with immediately. The
simplest way to do this is in a disconnected landing page that can break code
conventions, brand guidelines and can be efficiently measured to provide instant
feedback on itʼs ridiculousness. Or maybe perhaps itʼll work like a charm in which
case youʼre going to be re-designing the whole site according to the new direction.
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And Finally...
101. Overconfidence
If you ever catch yourself doing the DQ (Dairy Queen) “Nailed It!” high-pitched
voice, just remember there is another percentage point waiting right around the
corner to be squeezed out of your potential customers.
Optimize on...
Wrapping Things Up
Weʼve gone through 101 tips for optimizing your landing pages, so what now? It would be
hard to remember all of this advice, and different tips will be relevant at different times. My
recommendation would be to print this out and mark the ones that appeal to you or feel
relevant to your workflow and process. Or cut up the doc digitally to produce your own
greatest hits of landing page optimization tips.
Then use the advice you find useful as a checklist to keep you on track as you build your
future campaigns.
I hope you found this of value and welcome your feedback and insight at
landingpagetips@unbounce.com.
Cheers
The Unbounce Team
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