Your customers’ brains are guarded against “sellers”. Direct response copywriting helps you get past the bouncers in their brains and tap into their emotional triggers.
Today, we’ll be talking about the power of copywriting.
Every sale you make online is driven, at least in part, by direct response copywriting. Either your copy is a trained assassin, sneaking past defenses and cutting to the heart of your customer’s psychological triggers, or it’s a lumbering drunk ready to be rejected at the door.
In this article, we’ll show you what makes bad copy fail and teach you how to write copy that sells.
Would you rather watch a webinar than read an article? Click here to watch the Bouncers In Your Brain Webinar!
But first, a story…
The Power of Compelling Copy
Betabrand started with one product and what most would consider a weak value proposition. They offered a pair of corduroy pants on which the wales were positioned horizontally rather than vertically.

That’s it.
You can see from the picture that the pants are pretty stylish, but is horizontal whales really enough to build a business on?
Instead of just sitting back and hoping customers would say “yes”, Betabrand used copywriting to create a tongue-in-cheek branding campaign to that turned their product into an humorous conversation piece.
Betaband described their “Cordarounds” as follows:
Friction-Free: Unlike vertical courduroy, which produces friction that can heat your crotch to uncomfortable, potentially catastrophic levels, Cordaround’s horizontal vales mesh evenly, lowering the average wearer’s crotch heat index (CHI) reading by up to 22%.
The company even went as far as to create diagrams, demonstrating the “data” behind their crotch heat lowering pants.

And of course, the data on this revolutionary pants technology was presented by the Betabrand Supercomputer, a “sentient machine with aspirations of overthrowing the human race.”
All of this, of course, is complete bullcrap.
BUT
It’s humurous.
It’s interesting.
And it’s just believable enough to make think, “Wait, is this real?”
As Betabrand’s CEO Chris Lindland said, “If you create something with a hook, you can experience dramatic results.”
In this case, unique branding, driven by irreverant, humurous copywriting, propelled the company to 432% growth over 3 years. They have since expanded to numerous products, each designed to be conversation starters, like the “Bike To Work Pants” or the “Pinstripe Executive Hoodie”.
They’ve created something really successful, and I would argue it’s more because of how they’ve used the copy to brand themselves than the fairly unremarkable products themselves.
On that note, let’s look at how you can utilize compelling copy within your own business.
What Is Direct-Response Copywriting?
Direct-response copywriting is writing designed to elicit an immediate, emotional response from the reader. It’s purpose is to compel a “direct response” – what we would refer to as a conversion.
Unlike informative or educational copy, direct-response copy has only one purpose in mind: optimize the reader’s emotional state and then close the sale.
This usually looks like arousing an emotional response to a problem the reader is facing.
For example:
If you are attempting to sell skills assessment software to a business, you might be tempted to focus on how advanced the software is or how many unique features it has versus your competitors. As a business owner, this type of stuff is what you think about the most, and it’s easy to assume your customers will see things the way you see them.
In reality, your customers don’t care about your product. They care about solving their own problems and achieving their own goals. In this example, they care about finding talented people who will accelerate their company’s growth. They are scared of wasting time and money only to make a bad hire and lose more time and money.
When writing the copy, your job is to tap into that frustration, pain, and fear. You want to talk about how much money companies waste on bad hires. You wan’t to discuss how challenging it is to know whether a candidate will perform for you based on past experience. You want to tap into that fear and then offer your product as a solution.
With your assessment software, businesses can ensure they hire the right people. They can assess a candidate’s personality for team compatibility and assess the candidate’s skills for job competence. They can know EXACTLY what they are getting when they make a new hire and skip the nasty surprises that come from unexpected revelations.
Now you aren’t selling a product. You are selling a solution and you’ve painted a picture of life with that solution all of your prospect’s mind.
The Bouncers In Your Brain
So the question has to be asked, why not simply say things to people in a straightforward manner? Why shouldn’t we just lay everything out on the table and trust consumers to make a rational decision based on available data?
Ignoring the fact that your business might not actually be the best choice, let’s assume it is the best choice. Let’s assume that you have the best product on the market.
Why do we need to go out of our way to try to tap into a customer’s psyche?
The answer is that the psyche is already in play, whether you try to tap into it or not! Your customers’ brains already have “bouncers” standing guard at the entrance. If you want to have a chance, you have to first get past these bouncers.
Roy H. Williams, founder of the wizard academy introduced them to me. Let’s meet them.

The first thing we see here is Brocca’s Area. This is the part of the brain that is responsible for taking words, translating them into their meaning via the verbs, and then casting that meaning onto the visual/spacial sketchpad that is in our brain. Brocca’s area allows us to visualize taking some future action, which is a prerequisite for us to actually take that action in reality.
Next we have Wernicke’s Area. This part of the brain has access to our memories, and it’s primary job is take nouns that we hear and connect them to the relevant memories. So for example, if we hear or read the word “car”, Wenicke’s area connects that word to our memories of cars, helping us give meaning to the word.
These two areas are the gatekeepers for our Motor Cortex, the area of the brain that initiates physical action. We don’t want messages we hear to be automatically turned into action, so Brocca’s area and Wernicke’s area serve as bouncers to filter what messages get through to the motor cortex.
Getting Past Brocca’s Area
Brocca’s area evolved to help us prioritize what we process versus what we can ignore. This area keeps a sort of cache of familiar things that no longer need to be processed, like the sound of wind blowing, the computer humming in the background, or the driving route you take from work to home every day. It helps free our brain to focus on things that need to be consciously processed or monitored.
In order to register our message in Brocca’s area, we need to present something that is not familiar – something that is:
- Unexpected
- Unbelievable
- Or just plain wrong
Our goal when it comes to Brocca is to “wake it up” so to speak. When we hit Brocca with something unexpected, it has to focus in and send the message down to Wernicke in order to find out what it means.

As you can see in the example above, the page that breaks away from “business as usual” has as significantly higher conversion rate than the page that looks like what you’d expect to see on every website you’ve ever been to.
In perhaps the most extreme example of this, Ling Valentine sells over £35 million worth of car leases each year through what any good CRO expert would tell you is an absolute disaster of a website.

As you can see in the right-hand image, there is a method to the LingsCars madness. Everything Ling does is designed to grab attention in a market where differentiation is a challenge. Whether it’s the insane website, the outlandish speaking outfit, or the missile launcher with her branding on it, Ling’s marketing is all about waking up Brocca’s area and commanding attention in an industry where you’d rarely look twice.
So how can you apply this to your own business?
One of the best way’s to utilize this strategy is on a page’s headline, since the headline’s sole purpose is to compel people to start reading. Say something unexpected or unbelievable. You can even same something that is objectively wrong – something the reader KNOWS is objectively wrong – and then follow it up with an illustration that turns it into a symbolic point.
The main takeaway here is that we need to present people with something unfamiliar in order to grab their attention.
Infiltrating Wernicke’s Area
So if our goal is to shock Brocca awake, why doesn’t marketing simply consist of doing the most shocking things we can imagine?
The answer is that Brocca is only the brain’s first bouncer. There’s more to the story.
Once we’ve grabbed Brocca’s attention by presenting something unexpected, our message is sent along to Wernicke’s area. Wernicke has an entirely different set of criteria for what’s noteworthy and what is simply novelty.
In order to get past Wernicke, our message needs to incorporate at least one of the following:
- Relevance
- Emotion
- Storytelling
Remember that Wernicke’s area is attached to our memories, so in order get past this bouncer in the brain, our copy needs to connect to the reader’s memories in a meaningful way.
For example:
One business that offered help for addicts and their families started their copy with an appeal to a better future, calling themselves “A Place of New Beginnings.”
But vague references to a better future aren’t nearly as powerful as speaking directly to painful, existing memories. Those memories are real, they are emotional, and they drive behavior. That’s why changing the copy to “Addiction Torments Addicts and Their Loved Ones” increased conversions by 184%.

When people who feel tormented by their addiction (or who have seen the negative effects of their addiction on loved ones) read this copy, it resonates with them. They can relate. It’s relevant to their lives, and it’s tapping into a place of pain and problems that need to be solved.
Your copy should do the same thing.
Let’s learn how.
How To Write Persuasive Copy
Writing persuasive, direct-response copy is more science than art. Here at Conversion Sciences, we follow a step-by-step process:
- Understand Your Audience
- Solve Their Problems
- Show The Damned Offer
- Keep Your Promises
- Get Geographical
Each of these steps enhances our ability to evade the brain’s bouncers and provoke a response.
1. Understand Your Audience
Who are you speaking to?
This is the first and probably the most important step. If we don’t understand who we are speaking to, we can’t talk about what is important to them. We can’t be relevant. Alternatively, if we have a thorough understanding of our audience, we can bumble our way through the rest of the steps, and we’ll probably still manage to get through to a few of them.
A consumer can typically be classified in one of four ways.

You will likely have consumers in all four of these categories visiting your site, however, you might be able to determine that most of the traffic coming from a given marketing channel is in one quadrant and optimize accordingly.
Here at Conversion Sciences, we like to primarily focus on another, simpler classification system: Transactional vs. Relational
Transactional buyers #1 fear in life is spending a dollar more than they have to. These are the coupon hunters and deal finders. They aren’t necessarily looking for the cheapest option, but they are absolutely looking for the best deal. They are going to visit 10 websites and 4 physical stores before making the purchase.
They get a big dopamine rush from saving money on purchases, and they will actually convert at a higher rate if you give them obstacles like coupon codes. They see themselves as the experts and shopping is part of the fun.
You can appeal to these buyers in your copy by focusing on the savings.

Relational buyers #1 fear is choosing the wrong thing. They are not looking for the best price, and they are happy to pay a premium if it ensures they get what they’re looking for. These buyers want an expert to help them make the right decision, and they see shopping as the part of the expense.
You can appeal to these buyers in your copy by focusing more on the quality:

Once you have identified and learned everything you can about your audience, it’s time to solve their problems.
2. Solve Their Problems
In many cases, it’s easy to identify the problems your customers face because your product was designed explicitly to solve them. But what happens when your product isn’t really a solution? What happens when your product is a pair of pants, like in our original Betabrand example?
There are two strategies we can take here:
- Dig deeper and find the need
- Create the need
Continuing with our Betabrand example, when we are talking about $100+ pants, we aren’t talking about an audience with legitimate problems or a product designed to solve legitimate problems.
They’re just pants.
But why do people pick a particularly pair of pants to purchase? When you are able and willing to spend $100 on a pair of pants, what are the deeper needs that influence your decision making?
Once we start digging, there’s a lot we can find:
- Some people will pay a premium on fashion to emulate others and be accepted
- Some people will pay a premium on fashion to differentiate themselves from others
- Some people will pay a premium to get higher quality materials that are more comfortable
- Some people will pay a premium simply because they think something looks cool and they can afford it
Solving the problem is as simple as speaking to this core purpose driving the reader’s behavior.
Alternatively, what some people do (and what Betabrand is doing for their cordarounds) is go out and create a need. In other words, they convince the customer that he or she is experiencing a problem that needs to be solved.
The most humorous examples of this come from the infomercial industry, where the characters are fundamentally incapable of performing the most basic activities:
https://youtu.be/3eMCURWpNAg?t=8s
Does anyone really struggle THAT much with cracking eggs? Probably not, but the visualization of failed crack attempts can resonate with the most extreme memeories a person has and make them feel like, “Meh, it might be worth it to shell out a few bucks for this product.”
Betabrand uses a more subtle example in it’s own marketing:

Do normal corduroys really make a dude’s gonads feel like “the fiery eyes of Satan”? Obviously not. BUT if a guy reading this has noticed feeling hot in his corduroy pants in the past, this “fake” need will jump out at him and potentially influence his decision making.
3. Show The Damned Offer
On the more straightforward end of things, it’s important to actually show your audience your offer. It should be VERY clear what is being sold and every benefit should be clearly demonstrated, via the copy and page images.
Are you selling roofing paint that reflects sunlight and maintains a cool temperature. Show it in action!

Images like these are a thousand times more beneficial than stock images or other generic page elements. Stock photos can actually sabotage your conversion rate in a hurry.
Make sure you are clearly showing your offer to readers.
4. Keep Your Promises
Your sales process isn’t a single moment of decision. It’s a funnel.
Your visitors clicked on something to arrive at your landing page and when they click on your Call to Action (CTA) they will see a followup page of some sort. It’s VERY important that you deliver on your promises and meet customer expectations at each stage of this journey.
Don’t be like Zumba and follow-up an advertisement with a completely unrelated webpage.

Make sure that the landing page for every click meets the expectation of the person who clicked through to it.
5. Get Geographical
Our final step might not apply to every business, but if it’s relevant for your business, you can see major results.
Geographic segmentation and personalization offers a massive opportunity for increased conversions. The business pictured below was able to increase conversions by 27% simply by allowing users to select which region they were in.

This is just one of many, many examples of businesses using geographic segmentation to optimize their conversion rates.
When a reader sees their local area mentioned in the pitch, it scores major relevance points in Wernicke’s area.
How To Get Great Copywriting For Your Website
If you have read this far, it means you probably aren’t a copywriter by profession. You are looking to utilize the power of direct response copywriting, either by writing it yourself or hiring a copywriter.
If you aren’t bringing in a CRO agency to improve your site’s conversions, we typically recommend you do the following:
- Hire a great copywriter
- Measure their work
The reality is that copywriting is a very specific skillset, and while you can certainly improve your site’s copy just by following the principles in this article, you are going to get much better results when you hire a freelance copywriter with a proven portfolio.
That said, you should never simply be paying someone to write something for you and then calling it a day.
Working with a copywriter is a great opportunity for AB testing. Instead of simply throwing up something new and hoping it works… test, test, test!
Create several different variations of your landing pages and run a statistically sound series of split tests to identify actual winners and improve your overall conversion rate.
Webinar And Followup Q&A
After my webinar on this topic, there were some questions asked.
Good questions.
Probing questions.
Important questions.
We just didn’t have time (e.g. Brian went on and on and on).
With the help of our host, SiteTuners, I’ve been able to collect these questions and have provided thoughtful answers to them for you.
If you didn’t get to attend the Webinar — and I assume there was a very good reason you missed it – you can watch it via the form below. It’s absolutely worth an hour of your time!
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Watch the Recorded Webinar >>
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Let’s take a look at those questions!
Is there a place for Profanity in Copy?
Andres asked if there was any “data on the use of profanity in the conversion copy? See last example: heat reflection paint ‘kicks ass’. Is this an attractor or offender?”
Profanity can be a part of your voice. Gary Vaynerchuck famously uses profanity in his videos and presentations. It’s part of his “no BS” approach. I used some profanity in my presentation, including the caption that with “kicks ass,” another with “get laid” and my term “Business Porn.” However, I’m not typically profane in my writing.
When I use it, it can have impact. But I don’t have to be profane to have impact.
Roy H. Williams says,
“If you’re not pissing someone off, then you’re not communicating.”
Good copywriters take chances, but they know if those chances are contributing to the bottom line. Good copywriters are measurable.
In fact, I think I’ll toss in a little profanity right now.
What if my company has a stick up its butt about professionalism?
Lainie asked, “Any recommendations for a nonprofit that demands professionalism and no hint of humor?”
Kyle wanted to know if I had any “suggestions for encouraging an employer to take chances with their copy.”
If “professionalism” means “business speak” then there is little hope for them, at least online. Many a copywriter suffers from PESD (Post Editorial Stress Disorder). They create a body of copy that has Broca-busters, metaphors, similes and double entendre. Then the executives review the copy, editing out all color and controversy.
The result is what I call Styrofoam copy. Lifeless. Tasteless. Brittle.
No wonder it’s so hard to find good copywriters. They’ve all been broken down by PESD.
Data may be your only hope. We didn’t hand the headline “Are you tired of lying?” to our addiction center client. We proposed it as part of a test. Once they saw the upside, they had to make a decision: stay safe or take the extra business.
Offer to test more daring copy. But don’t test anything that won’t be accepted, no matter how many donations it generates.
Copy is more than Words
Jerome ask, “Is there a time/place for elegant banners with no copy?”
On a page that is meant to make an impression these banners are appropriate. This is a branding and image approach. On a site designed to entice action, the elegant banners must extend the value proposition or they are taking up valuable space.
The question to ask is, “Am I designing for me or for my visitors?”

This looks cool, but doesn’t help someone who is on a mission to find a solution.
Sites that use parallax techniques are often designing for themselves. They win awards, but they don’t make it easy to find what I’m looking for.
Do Broca and Wernicke Get Old and Cranky
Lori asked an interesting question about the aging brain. “Does the aging brain perceive copy differently than the younger brain. In other words, does the brain change its perceptions?”
I wish I could answer this with the results of studies. The answer is, “Yes.” Older visitors respond differently than a younger crowd. But each audience is different.
Older visitors come with poorer eyesight. So, your copy design should take this into account.
Balancing SEO-targeted and Human-targeted Copy
Tabatha asked, “How do you balance SEO and these copywriting techniques?”
Landing pages are rarely targets of SEO. Landing pages more frequently serve ads, emails and affiliate links. There are exceptions.
On an ecommerce product page, however, the two intersect. Product pages are often landing pages and need good SEO copywriter.
Good SEO copywriting is also good human copywriting.
If there is a conflict because your SEO copywriter wants to stuff keywords into every headline and subhead, you should probably find a better search optimizer.
How is the Web Different?
Katy asked, “Does the same methodology about engaging copy needing to get past Broca apply to direct mail pieces also?”
Much of what I’ve learned about copy has been taken from direct response mail copywriters. But, the writing for the web is different. Web visitors are seekers and searchers. They have a specific agenda and need to know they are on the right path toward solving a problem.
If you want to learn how to apply direct response tactics to web headlines, I recommend the book Great Leads by Michael Masterson and John Forde.
Images of the Invisible
Cynthia is involved in continuing education and asked, “What kind of images do you use for services that all have the same value proposition but doesn’t just show happy business people?”
I recommend real people in place of stock photography. Your teachers. Your students. The human eye can tell the difference between a stock photo and a real photo.

Jan wondered if we “use client logos with permission.”
We do ask permission to use client logos. It’s in our master services agreement. You might ask your lawyer to add a paragraph to your agreements like this one:
CONVERSION SCIENCES may retain copies of all work products and retains the right to use the work products for CONVERSION SCIENCES’ promotional purposes, including, but not limited to, showing Projects to prospective Clients, using the work products in company “demos.” By entering into this Agreement, Client hereby consents to CONVERSION SCIENCES’ use of the Client logo and testimonials for promotional purposes, unless other arrangements have been outlined in the Statement(s) of Work.
Are You a Tease?
Jeffrey asked if I had any “thoughts about lightly teasing the reader?”
A tease is a bona fide Broca-buster. Tease away.
This is especially effective when you tell a story, but withhold the ending while you build your value proposition. Brains hate to be teased because it makes them pay attention.

Psych! This eBook is just a PDF.
Creating Book Alikes
Deanne asked about the tool I used for creating eBooks renderings in 3D.
The tool that allowed me to create all of these wonderful 3D images from nothing was BoxShot4.
And a question from the Brainiacs
Dawn piqued my interest by asking, “Where does cognitive dissonance play out in this?”
In all truth, I had to look “cognitive dissonance” up.
In psychology, cognitive dissonance is the mental stress or discomfort experienced by an individual who holds two or more contradictory beliefs, ideas, or values at the same time, or is confronted by new information that conflicts with existing beliefs, ideas, or values. – Wikipedia
When I am promised one thing in an ad, and then sent to a home page, I will experience cognitive dissonance.
If the one specification that I believe is important cannot be found on a product page, I will experience cognitive dissonance.
If I don’t like to read, but the only images on a page are business porn, I will experience cognitive dissonance.
Good copywriters know how to create a moment of cognitive dissonance and then unite the expected with the unexpected like the punch line to a joke. This creates cognitive sonance, I guess.
Tim Gets Some Extra Credit
One final note. In the Webinar, I failed to credit Tim Ash as the originator of the term “Big Fat Bouncers in your Brain” during an interview several years ago.
Thanks Tim.
Anatomy Of An Optimized Checkout Experience
Conversion OptimizationDo you know how much money you’re losing to shopping cart abandonment?

Do you know how much more money you could be earning with an optimized checkout experience?
The statistics don’t lie. The average shopping cart abandonment rate currently stands at nearly 70%. That means 7 out of 10 highly qualified leads – people who like your product enough to click “Add to cart” – are being lost during the checkout process for one reason or another.
There is no better place to stop your optimization efforts than the checkout process. Today, we’re going to cover the most common reasons customers abandon ship during checkout and review the anatomy of an optimized checkout experience with the help of this incredible infographic from our friends at SurePayroll.
Let’s look at some of the key takeaways for eCommerce store owners and optimizers. If your goal is create an optimized checkout experience, the follow points are a must read.
The Top 4 Reasons Customers Abandon Shopping Carts
There are a lot of reasons a given visitor might abandon your website during checkout. Using the data listed above, we can see some major themes about what most influences cart abandonment.
1. Extras Costs & Price Ambiguity
According to consumers, the #1 reason for cart abandonment BY FAR is hidden costs that don’t show up until they have begun the checkout process. In a similar vein, the 4th most cited reason was that consumers were unable to ascertain the total cost of the transaction before starting checkout.
What this tells us is that consumers want to know EXACTLY what to expect when they begin checkout and they absolutely do not want any new information thrown at them along the way.
In some niches, costs like taxes or shipping might be expected and acceptable, while in other niches, they will be considered new information. In all cases, however, extra fees and other costs that aren’t disclosed ahead of time will often result in cart abandonment.
2. Overly Complicated Checkout Process
As we see in the infographic, consumers hate complicated checkouts. They don’t want to create an account. They don’t want to fill in layers of unnecessary information. They don’t want to jump through 5 rounds of hoops.
They want to pay you money, get their stuff, and leave.
The longer and more complicated your checkout process is, the more primed buyers will cancel their transaction instead of paying you money.
3. Checkout Has Errors
If you can’t complete checkout… you can’t complete checkout.
Usability testing and eliminating errors should always be your #1 priority. It’s simple. There’s no guesswork or strategy involved. If you’ve been dragging your feet on this, you are literally throwing away money.
Eliminate checkout errors now.
4. Lack Of Trust In The Website Or Brand
Trust is a very important piece of ecommerce. Thanks to the Wild-West-like landscape of the internet’s opening decade, many consumers have a deeply ingrained level of mistrust towards any brand or website they haven’t already bought from.
While the landscape is much cleaner today, and consumers have many levels of protection in place, those feelings of mistrust tend to surface during the checkout process.
When it’s time to actually pay money, consumers want to be confident that they will get what they paid for. During this process, any signals that can cause skepticism will likely result in cart abandonment. Even just a lack of positive trust signals can be enough to cause abandonment.
It’s important to plant a continuous stream of encouragement, proof, and other trust signals within your checkout process.
How To Reduce Abandonment & Create An Optimized Checkout Experience
Now that we’ve discussed some of the primary reasons consumers abandon ship during checkout, let’s discuss how to reduce abandonment and create an optimized checkout experience for your customers.
1. Tell Users What To Expect Before Checkout
One of the best ways to reduce care abandonment is to tell users exactly what to expect before checkout and then avoid springing new information on them during the checkout process.
For some niches, this is as simple as including the full price on the landing page. For other niches, this can be more complicated.
The travel industry has gotten pretty good at this. In a situation where there are numerous fees in place, they will included all of costs in the price users see, and make a point of clarifying that rate covers all included costs:
If the cost will depend on a future variable, then you can either clarify that a future cost is still on the table – “Shipping cost not included” – or you can change your business model to eliminate variables for the user.
2. Simplify And Streamline The Checkout Process
The checkout process should feel simple and intuitive. Sometimes there are unnecessary steps or requirements that need to be eliminated, but at the same time, putting everything on one page isn’t always the answer.

In the example below, the two-step checkout on the left converted better than the one-step checkout on the right. This is likely due to the one-page checkout overwhelming the visitor with 15+ lines of data to enter, while the 2-part checkout broke things down into more manageable sections.
When it comes to optimizing your checkout experience, it’s very important that your are incorporating a proven A/B testing framework. Simpler is usually better, but the specifics of implementation can be tricky to predict.
Here are some great examples to pull from: 8 Ecommerce Testing Examples You Should Have Tried Already
3. Eliminate All Checkout Errors
As I mentioned before, this is really simple conceptually. Eliminate errors.
Remember that while things might be running smoothly on the Chrome browser in your desktop computer, when you change browsers and devices, errors can pop up, and there are a lot of different devices being used out there.
One of Conversion Sciences clients had a strange error that only appeared for Internet Explorer visitors. The spinning “thinking” icon appeared after the visitor selected their state. But instead of disappearing after updating checkout information, a new spinning icon was added. This happened every few seconds.
This checkout error only happened on Internet Explorer. Every few seconds, a spinning icon was added to the page.
An AB test revealed that this error was costing them $1,500,000 per year. Ouch.
Here’s an in-depth look at some of the shopping carts bugs that can popup in your code.
4. Build Trust Throughout The Checkout Process
It’s easy to forget that “conversion” isn’t the moment someone clicks “Buy Now” on your landing page.

It’s not a true conversion until the money has been transferred.
Accordingly, we need to view the checkout process as an extension of the landing page, and just like we want to establish and build trust on the landing page and the preceding funnel, we want to continue building trust during the checkout process itself.
There are many ways to do this, but one of my favorites can be seen below:
In this example from SamCart, the user is shown a phone number for immediate customer service, as well 4 customer testimonials with included pictures.
Instead of just hoping the user goes through with the purchase, SamCart is actively building trust on the checkout page by displaying other customers who were happy with their purchase and reminding the user that if they have any trouble, help is only a call away.
Conclusion
The checkout experience is one of the more complicated optimization puzzles you’ll tackle, which is why sound A/B testing is such an instrumental part of the process.
I hope today’s infographic has provided with you some insightful ideas for how you can optimize your website’s checkout process and increase revenue for your business.
20 Landing Page Best Practices to Kickstart Your Conversion Lift
Landing Page OptimizationIn today’s post, we’ll cover 20 proven landing page best practices, backed up by case studies, statistics, and data that will help you kickstart your conversion lift.
Listen. We both know that “best practices” don’t mean much.
… right?
If you aren’t A/B testing, you are leaving a ton of money on the table.
True.
BUT here’s the deal.
AB testing is a time-consuming method of conversion optimization. It’s effective, but if you can simply click “edit” and make an obvious improvement, start there.
This is why “best practices” can be very handy. They let you apply what others have learned and get quick wins when nothing is working. Plus, when you begin implementing a solid A/B testing framework, landing page best practices can give you some great ideas for your first round of hypotheses to consider testing.
Today, we’ll cover 20 proven landing page best practices complete with case studies, statistics, and data.
20 Landing Page Best Practices to Kickstart Your Conversions
Let’s begin.
1. Start with a great headline to boost conversions 41%
The headline is perhaps the most crucial element of your entire landing page. Why? Let’s ask David Ogilvy, famous advertising revolutionary, his thoughts on headlines:
If this has changed in the digital age, it has only gotten worse. Now, let me hammer it home with a case study…
BettingExpert is an online betting forum where tipsters can share their experience and tips. They ran an a/b test on their headlines with three variations: One with a question, one with a benefit, and one utilizing loss aversion.
Three similar headlines on this page delivered very different results.
As you can see, the benefit headline (which spoke directly to it’s target reader’s dreams and aspirations) boosted conversions by 41.14%.
2. Add credible and strong testimonials to boost trust 12X
Have you ever seen a testimonial like this:
You may even have used something like that in the past.
The thing is, testimonials and social proof work. Studies show nearly 70 percent of online consumers look at a review prior to making a purchase and reviews are 12-times more trusted than product descriptions and sales copy from manufacturers.
Frankly, most customers will write a poor review or testimonial, though they mean well.
So, use it. But, you’re probably better off asking your customers to share about their experience with you. Then crafting a strong testimonial that reflects what they said and get permission from your customer to publish it. Better yet, ask them for video testimonials.
Pro Tip: Use exact numbers in your testimonials if you can. This works due to a principle in psychology known as Ambiguity Aversion, which states that humans prefer known risks over unknown risks (i.e. we like to know what we’re getting into). Robbie Richards does this well on his blog.
A good testimonial example.
3. Action-oriented copy could increase click rates by 93%
If you’ve ever written a paper in high school, your English teacher probably told you to write in “active” voice, not “passive” voice. Why?
Because passive voice has a weak quality, is bland, and can be boring. Active language excites, energizes, and drives action. See what I did with the previous two sentences?
It turns out that your English teacher was right. Here’s why.
The company L’Axelle sells underarm sweat pads, and ran an A/B test on the product landing page. Their original page used passive headline attempting to integrate the benefit, “Feel fresh.” The second used direct language and strong verb “Put an end to sweat marks!” With language like this, the exclamation point is probably redundant.
Version A
Version A of landing page with passive call to action.
Version B
Version B of landing page with active call to action.
That simple change in copy lead to a 93% increase in clicks, for a total conversion rate of 38.3%.
4. Optimize your Landing Page: Use contrasting CTA colors to grow sales 35.81%
This seems so mundane and simple (and sometimes, it is). However, a simple change in the CTA button color can have surprisingly large effects on landing page conversion rates.
A major eCommerce site that sells hand-painted porcelain wanted to grow their business (who doesn’t?). They tested one super simple change: They made the “ADD TO CART” button green instead of blue. The result?
A 35.81% increase in sales (yes, sales, not just clicks).
Increasing the contrast of the call to action increased conversions.
Now, why did this work? Not because green is a particularly compelling color.
The blue didn’t stand out at all, whereas the green pops. Our focus, then, is not on particular colors being better for CTAs than others, but on ensuring a color contrast to draw the eye.
Wondering what color to use? Try picking the opposite color (from your brand’s or landing page’s main color) on this color wheel:
Designers use the color wheel to select complimentary and contrasting colors.
In other words, if your main color is yellow, try a blue or purple CTA. If your main color is green, try a purple or red CTA.
5. Command 31.03% more people to click with actionable CTA copy
You had to have seen this coming – if action-oriented copy in your headlines and body increase click-thru rates, of course they’d work in your call to action (CTA) copy as well. The CTA is usually located on the button or link on which the visitor must click.
But, don’t take my word for it. Let’s take a look at a case study:
WriteWork offers essays and writing guides for students. Their original checkout page CTA (shown below) simply said “Create My Account”. Who wants to create another account?
However, when they changed the text to say “Create Account & Get Started”, they saw a nice 31.03% increase in conversions. Not too shabby, eh?
New call to action copy delivered a significant conversion increase in this AB test.
6. Use faces, but not near a CTA (unless they’re a top industry influencer)
The human brain is drawn to faces, eyes in particular. We have a tendency to look at faces before anything else on a webpage. This can be a good thing… or it can hurt conversions.
When it comes to using faces on a landing page, they can add credibility and trust. However, they can also distract the reader from a message or call to action button.
To get around this, only use faces of people the user is bound to recognize and trust (such as an authority in your industry) near CTAs. For maximum effect, have them looking at, and potentially even pointing to, your CTA.
Of course, you still want to put pictures of you and your team to help build trust – just don’t place them near the call-to-action button.
In a case study, Medalia Art was able to boost clicks 95.4% by replacing the images of art on their home page to images of the artists.
The images of artists outperformed products in this AB test case study.
7. Format like a boss
Just as formatting makes your blog posts more engaging, so too does formatting make your landing pages easier to navigate and understand.
What do I mean by formatting?
Great formatting makes your landing page easier to skim–and you know most of your visitors are only going to skim–making the most important points immediately apparent.
Just as people prefer better-looking people, people prefer better-looking websites because they associate beauty with perceived trust and credibility.
Want an example? Basecamp redesigned their landing page and found a 14% increase in conversions.
Basecamp tested formatting in this landing page AB test.
Here’s one more example, for good measure: Swedish company Unionen saw a 15.8% click-through boost when they bullet-pointed their benefits:
Version A:
Version A: AB test version with a block of text with the main call to action.
Version B (15.9% Increase):
Version B: You don’t have to read Swedish to know that bulleted text and white space won.
8. Landing Page Best Practices: use spellchecker already
Having grammatical or spelling errors in your copy can seriously hurt conversion rates. It makes you appear unprofessional at best, and like a scam at worst.
Want a real-life example of how badly a small mistake can harm your business? Take a look at this case study from Practical Ecommerce on a website selling tights – correcting their spelling from “tihgts” to “tights” on their product category page shot conversions up 80%.
Bad spelling can destroy visitor trust.
In a world where tools like Grammarly and built-in spell checkers exist, there’s just no excuse not to have immaculate grammar and spelling. Take an extra ten minutes to read through your page to ensure no errors get though.
Pro Tip: I actually like to read my writing out loud at least once. This helps me catch any errors and get a better idea of the flow and overall sound of things.
9. Consider adding multiple CTAs
Multiple CTAs?! Are you crazy?
Before you scroll down and leave me a nasty comment, hear me out. I’m not talking about having a variety of buttons and forms leading to different places.
Rather, on longer pages, you should have multiple buttons and/or opt in forms that lead to the same outcome.
Having more than one chance for the customer to opt in allows them to scroll through and click at their own pace. If they don’t click your above-the-fold CTA, for example, they’ll have another chance in the middle or at the end of the article.
That said, too many buttons can cause your visitors to get decision fatigue, becoming tired of too many choices and leaving the page.
10. Ditch the sharing buttons (unless you only have one other option)
One of the 21 persuasion techniques for conversion optimization was something called the “Hobson’s +1 choice effect”. This effect essentially states that having over two choices can cause anxiety and negative feelings, but we also want to have the choice to choose.
As such, if you only have one option on your landing page (the CTA), adding a “Tweet this” button can help convert your potential customers, according to the choice effect. However, if you already have multiple offers, CTAs, or links in your offer, social buttons can add to the noise and reduce conversions.
In one case from Taloon.com, removing social sharing buttons from their product pages increased conversions by 11.9%.
Removing social sharing buttons increased conversion rate.
However, I’d like to point out two key elements here:
I’ve already said it, but I’ll say it again: you have to test these things to find out exactly what works for your product, audience, and business.
11. Highlight your guarantees to build trust
Purchasing is an emotional decision, which is then backed by logic. Therefore, once you’ve sold your target audience emotionally on your product or service, you must then provide them with logical reasons to actually get through the checkout page.
One way you can do that is to highlight your guarantees.
A money-back guarantee is an amazing way to get people to commit. It’s truly risk-free. If they don’t like it, they can get their money back.
Neil Patel increased sales of his course by 21% when he highlighted a 30-day money back guarantee.
It doesn’t have to be money back, either. Other guarantees you can try include:
Don’t be afraid to test different guarantees, just as you we talked about testing different offers. You may find a free trial–a $1 trial to avoid credit card complications–converts better than the money back guarantee.
Pro Tip: Another way to build trust is by adding an SSL certificate to your site. That’s the green lock that says “secure” next to it. This shows your visitors their information is safe.
12. Use the inverted pyramid method (keep the most important stuff at the top of the page)
The inverted pyramid is a writing style coined by journalists. It means keeping all of the key benefits and most important takeaways at the top of the page, then getting into the details as you get further down the page.
It looks like this:
The structure of the inverted funnel.
(Source)
So, your attention-grabbing claims and statistics should be used at the top of the page to get visitors engaged, then your body copy, as you go down the page, should build anticipation for your product, at which point you give your CTA.
Of course, not all landing pages will be long enough to use the inverted pyramid method, but for longer pages it works wonders. After all, only about half of all your visitors will ever even reach the bottom of your account – you need to entice them.
Percent of article content viewed.
Use the other best practices mentioned in this post, like formatting and imagery, to ensure you have the most important stuff first.
13. Add related imagery and videos for 80% more conversions
Images aren’t just for formatting. They can be used to convey your main benefits and to help users understand what your product or service is about.
One study by eyeviewdigital even found that using video on landing pages can increase conversions by 80%. Check out their case studies if you’re interested in learning more.
When it comes to images and video, however, there are two things to keep in mind:
If you’re in need of some images to add to your site, check out Unsplash. They have free high-res photos anyone can use. You can also use a tool like Canva to edit the images. For free.
14. Remove any extra links
You’ve probably heard this tip before. “Remove navigation links so your visitors have to make a decision.”
However, with only 16% of all landing pages following this practice, does it really work?
HubSpot tested it to find out. They created two landing pages: One with a navbar, social sharing links, and footer, and one without any of the three.
Test removing navigation on your landing page.
The results? Up to a 28% increase in conversions. They even tracked every change and put the results in a nice little chart:
In this case study, navigation hurt conversions on most pages or didn’t help at all.
In other words, it’s worth a shot to remove extra links. It may not always work, and it may not be worth losing the clicks to other parts of your website, but it had potential to increase sign-ups.
15. Keep your landing page consistent with your brand and ads
The first job of the landing page is to keep the promise made in an ad, email, social post or link. Any variation can cost you conversions.
Consistency is key to a great many things, from blogging to getting fit. It’s necessary to succeed, and people love seeing it.
Especially on landing pages.
I can think of no better example than Optimizely’s case study on their PPC ads. They ran two tests:
In the first one, the Headline was kept the same, regardless of the ad copy they used. In the second test, they matched the landing page headline to the ad copy.
Test A:
Test A: One landing page attempts to keep three different promises. Unsuccessfully.
Test B:
Test B: These landing pages keep the specific promises made in each add.
The results? A 39.1% increase in conversions.
Of course, the headline isn’t the only thing you should keep consistent. Also try to:
Keeping things consistent ensures people aren’t confused when navigating your site, and they know get what they expected to get when they click your ads.
16. Achieve a 214% increase in conversion rate by asking for more information
One of the landing page best practices you often hear is to reduce the number of form fields as much as possible. It’s true, a shorter landing page form reduces friction for the customer and has been shown to increase conversion rates. Particularly on a mobile device.
BUT (there’s always a catch, isn’t there?), asking for more information better qualifies your leads and, in many cases, shows them you’re actually capturing the information needed.
Let me give you an example.
Advanced Grass is an artificial grass solution. They were able to achieve a 214% increase in conversions by splitting up their lengthy opt-in form into two parts: contact information (like email address and phone number) and qualifying information.
Part 1:
Part 1 of the multi-step lead generation form.
Part 2:
Part 2 of the multi-step lead generation form.
By simply splitting their form into two parts, they are taking advantage of the psychological principle of commitment and consistency, well known in the marketing world thanks to Dr. Robert Cialdini’s book Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion.
Basically, Cialdini found that people are more likely to take additional steps towards something if they’ve already committed to the first step. In the case of advanced grass, they already committed to entering their contact info, so they’re more likely to enter the few extra details.
Additionally, asking for the right information builds trust. How could you give an accurate quote for your artificial grass if the company didn’t know how many square feet you need or what kind of project it is?
The bottom line? You may ask for more info, but split your form into two steps.
17. 10X clicks by testing different offers.
Sometimes in our landing pages, we’re focusing on entirely the wrong offer. Maybe people don’t want a ‘free trial’ or ‘free consultation’. What about a free eBook or a free tool, instead?
I didn’t pull those examples out of my you-know-where. WordStream actually increased conversions 10 times over by changing their offer from a “Free Trial” of their software to giving away a free tool they created: The Google AdWords Performance Grader.
WordStream found success by changing their offers.
Of course, creating your own tool requires time, capital, and finding a good developer, unless you happen to be one. Here are some other offers you can try:
The key is to offer something highly relevant to what your software does and that’s very valuable, meaning you didn’t slop it together in five minutes. Put some thought into it.
18. Boost engagement by 102% using scarcity
If you’ve been building landing pages for any amount of time, you’ve surely heard of using scarcity as a tactic to increase sign ups.
Using scarcity means limiting resources in order to get your visitors to take action right away.
For example, putting an expiration date on a coupon, limiting an offer to a certain number of customers, and announcing that you only have a few items left in stock are all versions of scarcity.
Going back to Cialdini, scarcity is one of his psychological principles of persuasion. People place more value on that which is limited.
Let’s look at a case study by KISSmetrics:
Hiten Shah decided to reduce the free trial period from 30 days to 14 days – and he found a 102% boost in engagement. In other words, twice as many people took action and used the free trial during the 14 days than the 30 days.
More people signed up during the 14-day free trial than the 30-day trial.
So, use scarcity on your own pages by including a countdown timer on your page or offering a limited number of products.
19. Pay attention to “the fold” to lift conversions 220%
You think I’m going to tell you to put your call-to-action above the fold, don’t you?
Well, you shouldn’t necessarily do that. This is one of the most common of landing page best practices.
Instead, pay attention to the fold. While there is research that supports above-the-fold CTA, there is research against it as well.
Most engagement happens right at or just below the fold. Let me explain…
Most engagement happens right at the fold or just below it.
As you can see in the chart above, people view the topmost area of the page the least, and view the area “just above the fold” the most (i.e. right where you begin to need to scroll).
Joanna Wiebe of Copy Hackers and Airstory had this to say:
So, where should you really place your opt-in form or CTA?
It depends on the complexity of your offer (and thus, the amount of information needed to explain it). This chart by KISSmetrics explains it perfectly:
Offer complexity affects the placement of your call to action on the page.
Let me give you a more direct example. Marketing Experiments tested one of their client’s CTA placements above- and below-the-fold. Below-the-fold actually resulted in 220% more conversions, likely due to the complexity of their product.
In this case, placing the call to action near the bottom of the page increased conversions.
(Source)
20. Don’t rely on these landing page best practices. Test.
All of the best practices on this list can (and probably have) been broken with exceptions at one point or another. Like I said in the very beginning of this post – best practices make a lot of assumptions. Use them, but don’t be afraid to go against them.
In the words of Mark Twain:
“When you find yourself on the side of the majority, it’s time to pause and reflect.”
I’ll leave you with one final case study to prove just how important it is to a/b test your landing pages. Convert Verve, who’s examples you saw in some of the practices above, ran a simple test on the checkout page of one of their clients – removing the green arrow pointing to their CTA button.
As it turns out, removing that green arrow actually reduced conversion rates by 12.29%. Who would have thought? Of course, if you followed along above, it makes sense – removing the arrow reduces the chance for the button to draw the eye.
Removing the arrow reduced conversion.
20 Landing Page Best Practices to Kickstart Your Conversion Lift: Conclusion
Landing page best practices are just that – best practices. We can take what’s worked for others and copy it for our own use, but ultimately, it comes down to trying different things.
As Mark Zuckerberg says, “Move fast and break things.” Follow expert advice to make your landing pages the best they can be, then start experimenting.
Now, what did I miss? There are surely more landing page tips & tricks out there I didn’t cover here. Drop me a comment and let me know.
And, if you found even one thing useful about this article, please take a moment to share it.
Why Contextual Marketing Is The Next Big Wave In Customer Conversion
Conversion Marketing StrategyQuick question.
Do you remember the 2002 blockbuster movie Minority Report starring Tom Cruise?
In the movie, Tom Cruise walks through a mall while escaping from the police where he is greeted personally by advertising billboards: “John Anderton! You could use a Guinness right now!”
In a later scene, another advertisement is even more target-specific: “How did those turtleneck sweaters you purchased work out for you?”
The movie Minority Report showed an extreme example of contextual marketing.
While the movie is set in 2054, we do not have wait to see the marriage of technology and media. Of course, the technologies shown are not possible right now, the essence of this scene is already possible.
What is the essence?
It is using the convergence of technology and media to provide a context when marketing to consumers.
Simply put, it is marketing the right thing, at the right time, to the right person.
This is the Holy Grail of Marketing. Contextual marketing.
Contextual marketing is a way of offering targeted advertising to the user based on user identity and content searched by them.
It is worthy mentioning that Google is what it is today because of Adwords and Adsense, which was one of the early platforms to offer highly targeting contextual advertising. The advertisements themselves are served by automated systems where the advertisement has direct correlation with the content being viewed on the browser.
Imagine that you’re browsing through a sports website for latest news on your favorite football club. Suddenly, you see an ad popup which displays club merchandise that you can buy. Wondering about a vacation in Europe? You might start seeing ads offering the cheapest flight tickets to France.
You may have recognized this happening already in your daily life. Contextual marketing is a big wave in marketing on which you can surf. Here’s how.
In this article, we will use the 5W1H approach, namely who, what, why, where, when and how.
As we said earlier, contextual marketing is marketing the right thing, at the right time, to the right person. First we shall focus on the why.
Then we will focus on finding the right people and where they are – the who and the where.
Then we will move on to finding the right message and the right time- the what and when.
Lastly, we will figure out how to deliver the message- the how.
What Is Contextual Marketing & Why Is It Important?
To see the difference between contextual marketing and traditional marketing, it’s important to understand how context causes this differentiation.
Can you guess what is the difference between their approach? Marketing before context is product-centric while contextual marketing is customer-centric
Contextual marketing is powerful.
Factors in contextual marketing and some real life examples
Before we dive into the nuts and bolts of contextual marketing, let us first understand what context is.
Definition of Context or Contextual quote by Helge Teno.
Context always changes, more so in this world of ever increased connectivity and change. With the proliferation of smartphones, the factors which define context has increased. Especially in the context of marketing.
What are these factors?
Factors that influence context. Source
The graphic above illustrates the wealth of data that can be harvested for contextual marketing. All of these elements are currently being used by big brands and corporations alike.
Take Amazon for instance.
Amazon has perfected the art of using the information it gathers about us to present information at just the moment we need it, and in a way that feels helpful but not obnoxious.
How do they do it?
A fun example of contextual marketing is the ad tweeted by Oreo during Super Bowl 2013. During the Super Bowl power outage in 2013, at 8:48pm, the company used Twitter to push out an ad which said, ‘You can still dunk in the dark.’ It was a smart, funny and an inexpensive move to link their brand to the awareness of the moment.
Instant contextual marketing from Oreos during a Superbowl blackout.
How To Implement Contextual Marketing
Implementing contextual marketing requires you to embrace and adopt a fascinating intersection of data, automation, mobile devices and social media. Let us discuss these elements in detail one by one.
Mobile and contextual marketing
While contextual marketing can be implemented in any platform, mobile deserves a special mention. The increased convergence of smartphones, apps and social media have led to the biggest explosion of data ever.
The most important factor in mobile contextual marketing is found in the name: Location.
According to a Pew Research Center survey, an overwhelming 74% of adult smartphone owners ages 18 and older say they use their phone to get directions or other information based on their current location. Over 50% of consumers are willing to share data to have a better shopping experience, according to a study by the e-tailing group.
Combine location with past history and user profile and there is much data to be mined, harvested and used for marketing.
Let us see some of the elements of contextual marketing in mobile
When you are searching
Google coined a term in 2015 called micro moments to capture the impact of mobile on our search behaviors. Micro-moments are moments when consumers use their mobile devices to decide where to go, what to do, and what to buy.
This nicely dovetails with the statistic that 68% of smartphone activity is conducted outside homes.
In the mornings, we are in a rush to get to office and would like to enjoy a coffee before the commute. In the evening, we are more likely to want to have snacks. This would trigger a search for ‘Coffee near me’ in the morning and ‘Snacks near me’ in the evening.
Based on these behavior-based contextual triggers, restaurants can cater to both the needs by customizing the suggestions for different times of the day for different people.
In 2016, Bona Hardwood Floor Cleaner, a 90 year old consumer packaged goods brand, used predictive mobile advertising based on beacon data to target shoppers who were due for a shopping trip, as indicated by their weekly store visit habits. Using this data from a number of users, the brand was able to send them offers just before they were predicted to visit the store.
The campaign achieved a ROI of 3.2x, with a 25.3% increase in post-engagement purchase intent and 55% increase in average brand awareness.
Wouldn’t you like to have such numbers in your campaign report?
Takeaways:
What are the advantages?
Where you are searching
As location changes, so does the context.
Most mobile apps have now a built in location feature. The key is to mobilise the ever changing location data to target (or not to target).
Take the example of Google Now.
Using data from search history and location, their app Google Now is a perfect example of targeted marketing. By recognizing repeated actions a user performs on the device like frequent locations, commutes, search queries and other information, Google Now is able to display more relevant information in the form of specialized cards.
These cards cover a multitude of information like traffic and transit times, restaurant reservations, location reminders, nearby attraction, public transit and much more.
Another example that comes to mind is the recent proliferation of apps designed for events.
Tribeca Film Festival, New York’s annual film festival leveraged beacons to keep festival attendees up to date about event happenings, ticket sales and promotions.
Deploying beacons around and inside the event venues, they were able to have a real time, data driven and targeted interaction with the people. App-holders who walked by bus shelters and out-of-home ads (equipped with beacons) with the app open on their device, received notifications alerting them that they could purchase tickets straight from the app.
On the other hand, beacons at the venue were used to push contextual notifications such as the ones asking attendees for their feedback on a particular film when they exited the screening. In addition to that, the film festival also used beacons to offer merchandise discounts by deploying them at the ticket counters.
Takeaways:
What are the advantages?
Who you are
All the automation and fancy software will not help you if you do not know your consumer. As explained earlier, people are willing to give you data if it helps improve their consumer experience. You get a wealth of data on your customers everyday, through your stores, newsletter signups, and loyalty cards.
Leverage this by first consolidating and using all the information into a user profile. This can be combined with mobile app data to offer more targeted experience.
Let’s say a consumer buys a pair of pants from your store. Based on their cart history and purchases, you can send an offer for shirts that will go well with the trousers via app push notification when they are in the vicinity of your store. Mobile apps can also be used for in store contextual marketing and personalization.
This also leverages the who, the when and the where, all of the elements of mobile contextual marketing.
The dark side of context
While we have been harping annoyingly on data, there is one major issue we haven’t addressed.
Privacy.
Several surveys have pointed out consumers’ willingness to share data for value. The key is providing value in return. People don’t mind sharing their data if it results in a better shopping experience.
While the current consumer climate favors your efforts for contextual marketing, it is critical to maintain a balance between privacy and relevance.
Conclusion
Now that we have gone through the elements of contextual marketing, let us round it up in the form of actionable takeaways:
And before we wind up this article, we would like to give you one last tip.
Constantly test your campaign.
Contextual marketing, while new in implementation and scope, is still marketing. And like all endeavours, it needs continuous improvement and learning. It is more of an iterative process that gets you closer and closer to your goal.
So keep learning, keep growing, be helpful but not annoying.
What has been your experience in contextual marketing? What has and has not worked for you? Share your thoughts so we can all learn from each other.
21 Fascinating Persuasion Techniques for Conversion Optimization
Persuasion ScienceDo you want your website to be more persuasive? The ability to persuade is a skill coveted by orators, writers and online marketers alike. This ability is based on an ancient–but non-obvious–understanding of human nature and it is a core component of all of our Conversion Optimization Services.
Selecting one or more of these persuasive techniques for your website puts you in control of your conversion rate.
Here are the 21 most fascinating and compelling persuasion techniques psychology has to offer.
With these techniques, conversion optimization will be in your control. Let’s dive right in.
#1: Leverage Reject-Then-Retreat
The reject-then-retreat technique is based on a phenomenon the contrast effect.
When someone declines to do task, they become more likely to say “Yes” to a smaller follow-up task. You might find the research behind it is fascinating, but let’s dive into how you can use it. A visitor to your site declines to purchase by leaving. Exit-intent technology allows us to detect this, and offer a “smaller follow-up task”.
You may be thinking about inflating your prices in the hopes of grabbing more people with this tactic. While you can do that, be sure to keep the price at least within the realm of reason – too high and this tactic will backfire.
The Tactic in Action
Behappy.me takes quotes and puts them onto posters, mugs, and more. They use an exit-intent popup to offer a discount to their customers trying to leave. They’ve also started testing something a little less in-your-face: a popup asking you to save your cart for later.


#2: Let Customers do the Work
The IKEA effect shows that people have a tendency to believe something is better if they had a part in creating it, even if it is measurably inferior.
For example, if you build a desk from scratch or paint a painting, you’ll be biased to think it’s better than it actually is.
IKEA asks customers to assemble the products they sell, and have enjoyed amazing success. Here’s how to use the IKEA effect for conversion optimization:
Let your visitors have a hand in creating the product you want them to buy.
If you’re selling a product, provide opportunities for people to customize their order.
Additionally, ask your visitors for feedback on how to make your product or service better. They will feel like they are participating and you’ll come away with ideas for improving things. If possible, let them know if their suggestion does make a difference.
Online service businesses have an advantage: their customers can start using their account immediately. Get the customer to use your service right away to engage this persuasive technique.
The Tactic in Action
Buffer and Canva both do a great job of this – as soon as you create an account, they encourage you to schedule a social media post or create a graphic immediately.

#3: Mimic Your Customers
According to psychology, mimicry is our tendency to mimic other people’s behavior, often subconsciously. When others mimic our behavior, we tend to like them more.
Mimicry is an excellent persuasion technique for face-to-face sales, but it can also be used to improve your conversion rate.
The Tactic in Action
Amazon lets you to sign into Facebook to see what kinds of products your friends have saved and purchased.
Amazon lets their visitors get the crowd involved.
Here’s another example, this time of using customer language: WebEx is a company that provides “VOIP and video conferencing” for long-distance online meetings.
But, they don’t say that on their homepage. Rather, they use the exacts words their customers use to describe them: “Connect with anyone, anywhere, any time.”
WebEx uses the language of their customers.
#4: Be Easy to Remember
When we use humor in our advertising, we are trying to be memorable. We inadvertently apply the availability heuristic. It states that people place importance on information they remember, simply because they’re able to remember it.
We also tend to place importance on new information, just because it’s fresh in our minds.
To capitalize on the availability heuristic:
This Tactic in Action
Where most sites simply drop SEO terms on the page, Shinesty.com uses them as an opportunity to be memorable.
Shinesty: Humor in marketing makes you memorable.
#5: Group Your Product With Others
The cheerleader effect plays on our subconscious belief that people are more attractive when they’re in a group.
How the heck does this apply to conversion optimization? Because, it also applies to products and services.
To utilize the cheerleader effect for persuasion:
The Tactic in Action
A great example of the cheerleader effect in action is EOfire’s partnership with Organifi, a green superfood powder. If you buy Organifi’s powder, you get EOfire’s Freedom Journal to go with it (the journal is meant to help you accomplish your no. 1 goal in 100 days).
Groups of anything can increase receptivity.
The combination makes a lot of sense (eat better and accomplish a goal of being healthier) and makes the overall package more attractive.
#6: Give People a Trivial Extra Choice
Hobson’s +1 choice effect found that people want the autonomy and freedom of having choices, but any more than two choices can cause anxiety and negative feelings.
What does this mean for conversion optimization?
Pro Tip: Make sure the choices are trivial, and preferably lead to the same outcome. For example, share on Facebook or Twitter? Checkout with a credit card or PayPal?
The Tactic in Action
The Wheel of Persuasion ran an a A/B split test on an energy company called Essent. They found that adding social sharing buttons to their landing page increased conversions in new visitors, but decreased conversions in return visitors.
Adding the option of social media sharing pushed the “don’t buy” decision back.
They believe it was because return visitors are more focused on the goal, so the sharing buttons distracted them rather than helped them make the choice. If you can, find a way to only display the extra options to new visitors.
#7: Use the Scarcity Effect
You’ve likely already heard of this technique, as it’s well-documented and known to be highly effective. Scarcity states that people place more value on limited resources.
We’ve already covered scarcity in-depth in another post, but I’ll give a few highlights here:
Pro Tip: If you’re going to use scarcity, stick to your word! People aren’t stupid, and they’ll find out (and take advantage) if you’re bluffing. Lying could ruin your rep, as well.
The Tactic in Action
Booking.com is an online hotel booking company. They use scarcity brilliantly by alerting visitors when availability is low or certain rooms are in high demand. They even further prod visitors to action by telling them they can always cancel later, a tactic called risk reversal.
Scarcity is a tactic that booking.com uses liberally.
#8: Incentivize – But Not Too Much
The Yerkes-Dodson law states that arousal increases performance, up until a certain point where it hurts performance. If the task is very simple, arousal can continue to improve performance, but it will likely plateau.
Here’s a chart to help you understand it:
Push the arousal, but not too much.
To use this persuasion technique on your website:
Pro Tip: To come up with bonuses to offer with product purchases, ask yourself: “What’s something that my customer could find extremely useful after using my product?” or “What are the next steps after they complete the purchase, or finish using the product?” Give them that!
The Tactic in Action
Neville is the creator of Kopywriting Kourse, an online course that teaches you how to write damn good copy. He uses incentives to draw people in and show the full value, but also doesn’t go overboard. Notice he also lists the monetary values:
Adding valuable bonuses increases arousal. To a point.
#9: Take a Page From Poker’s Book
Have you ever seen someone continue to gamble after they won in the hopes they’ll win again? That’s the Hot-Hand Fallacy: The belief that by succeeding at a random outcome makes you more likely to succeed again, despite the outcome being random.
How do you use this technique?
The Tactic in Action
Zennioptical’s You’ve Been Framed quiz has generated over 31,000 leads and over $1 million in revenue!
Giving visitors some small winning hands may keep them at the table.
#10: The PAS Formula
PAS stands for problem, agitation, solution. It works like this:
It all comes down to great copywriting. Let’s look at an example:
Are you suffering from no blog traffic? You’ve tried everything to get people to read your content. You’ve shared it on every social media platform. You’re wondering, “does my blog suck?” Well, it might suck. But, you’ll never know until you learn the effective promotion strategies to make that sucker visible. It all starts by watching our latest video.
Notice the bold text. It starts with the problem – no blog traffic. Then, it aggravates the problem – saying the blog might suck. Finally, it ends with a solution – learn effective promotion strategies by watching our latest video.
The Tactic in Action
Basecamp literally uses this exact tactic on one of their landing pages:
Basecamp uses the classic Problem-Agitation-Solution persuasion technique.
#11: Label Your Customers
You don’t want to put labels on people, right? Well actually, you might.
One study found that adults who were randomly labeled as “politically active” were 15% more likely to vote than those without labels. It likely has to do with the consistency bias. We want to appear consistent with how others view us.
This means that by labeling your customers as environmentalists, for example, they’ll be more likely to purchase your eco-friendly products.
You can do this using case studies, by tagging people on social media, and through your emails. Say things like, “Hey, I know you’re a puppy lover. I can tell by the photo you shared on Instagram. As a puppy lover, I think you’ll really like this.”
Even if they didn’t originally see themselves as having that label, they are likely to believe it if you can prove it’s backed by their actions.
The Tactic in Action
Apple, the titan they are, uses a whole slew of persuasion techniques. They label their customers as “high-tech”, “quality-focused” and “cutting edge”. It’s working well for them, don’t you think?
#12: Don’t Use Faces (Unless They’re Well-Known)
Facial distraction is a real thing. We have a tendency to look at and identify faces before anything else. The implications?
Faces can distract our visitors from the copy we worked so hard on.
That said, there are three ways to use faces on a landing page that may be beneficial:
Avoid stock photography of smiling, pretty people.
The Tactic in Action
Noah Kagan, creator of SumoMe, uses testimonials a lot. On the landing page for his headline optimizing tool, he uses a testimonial from entrepreneur Brian Harris to increase conversions.

Eye-tracking studies show the power of a gaze.
This eye-tracking study show how our eyes follow the gaze of another face. Source
#13: Stand for Something
A study on people who have a strong relationship with a single brand found that over 64% said it was because they had “shared values” with the company in question.
In other words, people like being associated with brands that share a common goal. This isn’t groundbreaking news, but it shouldn’t be taken lightly, either.
In order to capitalize on this, start showing your values through your company. Here’s how:
Of course, doing this kind of charitable work should be done out of a genuine desire to help, but doing good for the world brings dividends back to you.
The Tactic in Action
By December of 2016, eye-wear site Warby Parker claims to have donated one million pairs of glasses prescription glasses to those in need through its Buy One, Give One program. It seems to be working based on their growth.
Warby Parker matches your purchase with a donation.
#14: Disruption Through WOW
This particular idea is backed by the reciprocity principle. Basically, you disrupt your customers by providing them with an incredible experience.
Truly WOWing a customer is a foolproof way to earn their trust and return business.
In fact, a study done by psychologist Norbert Schawrz found that something as little as a dime can improve a person’s mood significantly. If 10 cents can have such a huge effect on us, imagine what a truly great experience can do!
Here’s what to do:
The Tactic in Action
Zappos, a shoe company known for their incredible focus on customer service, frequently surprises their customers with free overnight shipping. While it may not increase their initial conversions and costs them extra, it brings dividends in return customers who will come back to them for life.
#15: Don’t Be Ambiguous
According to Ambiguity Aversion, we prefer known risks over unknown risks.
In other words, if given a choice between a path where we know the exact outcomes and one where we don’t, we’ll usually pick the former.
To use this to your advantage:
The Tactic in Action
Any business that offers free shipping or flat-rate shipping is removing ambiguity. Sure, the customer may feel that they are getting a discount, but the elimination of the ambiguity of shipping is a powerful motivator.
Bombfell ships clothing to you to try and buy. Shipping is removed from the equation. They cover it both ways. They remove all ambiguity when they ask for your business.
Four sentences remove the ambiguity from the this offer.
#16: Be Cheesy
According to the Eaton-Rosen Phenomenon, people tend to remember and believe things that sound good, like rhymes or antimetaboles.
(In case you’re wondering, an antimetabole is a literary device in which you repeat a phrase in reverse order, like “If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.”)
So, yes – be cheesy! Come up with funny yet memorable lines using rhythmic poetic verses. It will make your copy, your brand, and your offer, more memorable (and more fun).
Remember: If it rhymes, conversion climbs!
The Tactic in Action
Animoto used a rhyme on their landing page:
This little rhyme tickles the brain.
#17: Use Generic Personality Descriptions to Draw People In
According to the Barnum Effect, people tend to believe that vague personality traits that apply to a lot of people actually fit to themselves.
For example, a generic personality test might tell you something like, “You have a great need for other people to like and admire you. You have a tendency to be critical of yourself. While you have some personality weaknesses, you are generally able to compensate for them.”
Nearly every person in the world fits these traits. But, people don’t pick up on the generality of them, and tend to agree with and fit themselves to them.
What does this mean for your landing pages?
“Do you hate losing money?”
“Do you want to spend your time wisely?”
“Do you want to be happy?”
“Perfect for people who are tech-savvy and entrepreneurial.”
The Tactic in Action
Buzzfeed continually uses the Barnum effect really well with all of their online quizzes.
Buzzfeed uses personality tests take advantage of the Barnum Effect.
#18: Show People How Your Product Makes Them Sexy
Sex & Signalling is the idea that everyone wants to be perceived as a great mate. They want to be perceived as being well off financially, smart, conscientious, physically fit, agreeable, etc.
Tell people how your product will improve their ability to attract a mate.
Of course, you don’t want to actually tell them you’ll help them find a “mate”. Instead, explain how your product’s benefit will make them smarter, wealthier, or more fit – They can connect the dots to being a better mate themselves.
Conduct research to find out what people associate your brand with.
Send out a survey to your email list, and simply talk to your customers to see what they feel your products do for them. If it’s not helping them be a better person in some way, you may want to change your image.
The Tactic in Action
Manpacks, an “essentials” delivery service, takes the sex & signalling effect literally with this landing page:
Manpacks signals that customers will be lucky in love.
#19: Go With the Status Quo
People fall prey to the Status Quo Bias, any change from “business as usual” is perceived as negative. The phrase, “Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM” means that the best choice is the safe choice. Every industry has it’s IBM.
So, make your business seem as though it’s a safe part of the status quo. You’re communicating that, “Everyone’s using it.” Tell people how many customers you have, if you’re a leader in your marketplace. You can do this by showcasing big names using your product, or by using language that shows you’re part of the status quo.
Additionally, make the purchase process as frictionless as possible. Pre-fill login information for them. If you can’t, allow them to log in using Facebook, Twitter, or Gmail.
If you are the status quo, you must know how to take someone’s money.
The Tactic in Action
Granify makes themselves look like the status quo with their counter.
#20: Catch Them in The Right Environment (Or Remind Them Of It)
The Context Effect states that cognition and memory are related to context. For example, work-related information is easier to access when you’re at work.
This persuasion technique gets visitors in the right state of mind and the right context to buy.
The Tactic in Action
Startup Weekend is a conference that helps people begin their startup journey in a few short days. On their landing page, they bold certain words like developers, coders, designers, and marketers. They talk a lot about business and startups to get you “in the mood”, so to speak.
Startup Weekend creates a context with their copy on this page.
#21: Apple’s Ancient Secret Weapon
Apple is a pretty successful company, right?
Their success lies in a persuasion technique that’s over 100 years old. What is this ancient technique?
They show the detailed manufacturing process behind their products.
This tactic persuades people of the quality of their products. Apple did this with their video about the new unibody MacBook.
Apple showed the process when it went to a unibody design.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GPcUSnKdK4
This works well if your customer is quality-centric. If they’re not, choose another persuasion technique from this list.
Conclusion
There are many persuasion techniques you can use for conversion optimization. Some of them are more effective than others. Some will work for you and others will not.
When it comes to finding which is which working with a top notch Conversion Optimization Agency like Conversion Sciences and doing extensive A/B testing is key.
Keep trying things and you’ll eventually find the optimum combination of images, text, and calls-to-action. Always be trying new things.
What persuasion techniques would you add to this list? Leave me a comment and let me know!
Direct Response Copywriting: Get Past The Bouncers In Your Customers’ Brains
Persuasion ScienceYour customers’ brains are guarded against “sellers”. Direct response copywriting helps you get past the bouncers in their brains and tap into their emotional triggers.
Today, we’ll be talking about the power of copywriting.
Every sale you make online is driven, at least in part, by direct response copywriting. Either your copy is a trained assassin, sneaking past defenses and cutting to the heart of your customer’s psychological triggers, or it’s a lumbering drunk ready to be rejected at the door.
In this article, we’ll show you what makes bad copy fail and teach you how to write copy that sells.
Would you rather watch a webinar than read an article? Click here to watch the Bouncers In Your Brain Webinar!
But first, a story…
The Power of Compelling Copy
Betabrand started with one product and what most would consider a weak value proposition. They offered a pair of corduroy pants on which the wales were positioned horizontally rather than vertically.
That’s it.
You can see from the picture that the pants are pretty stylish, but is horizontal whales really enough to build a business on?
Instead of just sitting back and hoping customers would say “yes”, Betabrand used copywriting to create a tongue-in-cheek branding campaign to that turned their product into an humorous conversation piece.
Betaband described their “Cordarounds” as follows:
The company even went as far as to create diagrams, demonstrating the “data” behind their crotch heat lowering pants.
And of course, the data on this revolutionary pants technology was presented by the Betabrand Supercomputer, a “sentient machine with aspirations of overthrowing the human race.”
All of this, of course, is complete bullcrap.
BUT
It’s humurous.
It’s interesting.
And it’s just believable enough to make think, “Wait, is this real?”
As Betabrand’s CEO Chris Lindland said, “If you create something with a hook, you can experience dramatic results.”
In this case, unique branding, driven by irreverant, humurous copywriting, propelled the company to 432% growth over 3 years. They have since expanded to numerous products, each designed to be conversation starters, like the “Bike To Work Pants” or the “Pinstripe Executive Hoodie”.
They’ve created something really successful, and I would argue it’s more because of how they’ve used the copy to brand themselves than the fairly unremarkable products themselves.
On that note, let’s look at how you can utilize compelling copy within your own business.
What Is Direct-Response Copywriting?
Direct-response copywriting is writing designed to elicit an immediate, emotional response from the reader. It’s purpose is to compel a “direct response” – what we would refer to as a conversion.
Unlike informative or educational copy, direct-response copy has only one purpose in mind: optimize the reader’s emotional state and then close the sale.
This usually looks like arousing an emotional response to a problem the reader is facing.
For example:
If you are attempting to sell skills assessment software to a business, you might be tempted to focus on how advanced the software is or how many unique features it has versus your competitors. As a business owner, this type of stuff is what you think about the most, and it’s easy to assume your customers will see things the way you see them.
In reality, your customers don’t care about your product. They care about solving their own problems and achieving their own goals. In this example, they care about finding talented people who will accelerate their company’s growth. They are scared of wasting time and money only to make a bad hire and lose more time and money.
When writing the copy, your job is to tap into that frustration, pain, and fear. You want to talk about how much money companies waste on bad hires. You wan’t to discuss how challenging it is to know whether a candidate will perform for you based on past experience. You want to tap into that fear and then offer your product as a solution.
With your assessment software, businesses can ensure they hire the right people. They can assess a candidate’s personality for team compatibility and assess the candidate’s skills for job competence. They can know EXACTLY what they are getting when they make a new hire and skip the nasty surprises that come from unexpected revelations.
Now you aren’t selling a product. You are selling a solution and you’ve painted a picture of life with that solution all of your prospect’s mind.
The Bouncers In Your Brain
So the question has to be asked, why not simply say things to people in a straightforward manner? Why shouldn’t we just lay everything out on the table and trust consumers to make a rational decision based on available data?
Ignoring the fact that your business might not actually be the best choice, let’s assume it is the best choice. Let’s assume that you have the best product on the market.
Why do we need to go out of our way to try to tap into a customer’s psyche?
The answer is that the psyche is already in play, whether you try to tap into it or not! Your customers’ brains already have “bouncers” standing guard at the entrance. If you want to have a chance, you have to first get past these bouncers.
Roy H. Williams, founder of the wizard academy introduced them to me. Let’s meet them.
The first thing we see here is Brocca’s Area. This is the part of the brain that is responsible for taking words, translating them into their meaning via the verbs, and then casting that meaning onto the visual/spacial sketchpad that is in our brain. Brocca’s area allows us to visualize taking some future action, which is a prerequisite for us to actually take that action in reality.
Next we have Wernicke’s Area. This part of the brain has access to our memories, and it’s primary job is take nouns that we hear and connect them to the relevant memories. So for example, if we hear or read the word “car”, Wenicke’s area connects that word to our memories of cars, helping us give meaning to the word.
These two areas are the gatekeepers for our Motor Cortex, the area of the brain that initiates physical action. We don’t want messages we hear to be automatically turned into action, so Brocca’s area and Wernicke’s area serve as bouncers to filter what messages get through to the motor cortex.
Getting Past Brocca’s Area
Brocca’s area evolved to help us prioritize what we process versus what we can ignore. This area keeps a sort of cache of familiar things that no longer need to be processed, like the sound of wind blowing, the computer humming in the background, or the driving route you take from work to home every day. It helps free our brain to focus on things that need to be consciously processed or monitored.
In order to register our message in Brocca’s area, we need to present something that is not familiar – something that is:
Our goal when it comes to Brocca is to “wake it up” so to speak. When we hit Brocca with something unexpected, it has to focus in and send the message down to Wernicke in order to find out what it means.
As you can see in the example above, the page that breaks away from “business as usual” has as significantly higher conversion rate than the page that looks like what you’d expect to see on every website you’ve ever been to.
In perhaps the most extreme example of this, Ling Valentine sells over £35 million worth of car leases each year through what any good CRO expert would tell you is an absolute disaster of a website.
As you can see in the right-hand image, there is a method to the LingsCars madness. Everything Ling does is designed to grab attention in a market where differentiation is a challenge. Whether it’s the insane website, the outlandish speaking outfit, or the missile launcher with her branding on it, Ling’s marketing is all about waking up Brocca’s area and commanding attention in an industry where you’d rarely look twice.
So how can you apply this to your own business?
One of the best way’s to utilize this strategy is on a page’s headline, since the headline’s sole purpose is to compel people to start reading. Say something unexpected or unbelievable. You can even same something that is objectively wrong – something the reader KNOWS is objectively wrong – and then follow it up with an illustration that turns it into a symbolic point.
The main takeaway here is that we need to present people with something unfamiliar in order to grab their attention.
Infiltrating Wernicke’s Area
So if our goal is to shock Brocca awake, why doesn’t marketing simply consist of doing the most shocking things we can imagine?
The answer is that Brocca is only the brain’s first bouncer. There’s more to the story.
Once we’ve grabbed Brocca’s attention by presenting something unexpected, our message is sent along to Wernicke’s area. Wernicke has an entirely different set of criteria for what’s noteworthy and what is simply novelty.
In order to get past Wernicke, our message needs to incorporate at least one of the following:
Remember that Wernicke’s area is attached to our memories, so in order get past this bouncer in the brain, our copy needs to connect to the reader’s memories in a meaningful way.
For example:
One business that offered help for addicts and their families started their copy with an appeal to a better future, calling themselves “A Place of New Beginnings.”
But vague references to a better future aren’t nearly as powerful as speaking directly to painful, existing memories. Those memories are real, they are emotional, and they drive behavior. That’s why changing the copy to “Addiction Torments Addicts and Their Loved Ones” increased conversions by 184%.
When people who feel tormented by their addiction (or who have seen the negative effects of their addiction on loved ones) read this copy, it resonates with them. They can relate. It’s relevant to their lives, and it’s tapping into a place of pain and problems that need to be solved.
Your copy should do the same thing.
Let’s learn how.
How To Write Persuasive Copy
Writing persuasive, direct-response copy is more science than art. Here at Conversion Sciences, we follow a step-by-step process:
Each of these steps enhances our ability to evade the brain’s bouncers and provoke a response.
1. Understand Your Audience
Who are you speaking to?
This is the first and probably the most important step. If we don’t understand who we are speaking to, we can’t talk about what is important to them. We can’t be relevant. Alternatively, if we have a thorough understanding of our audience, we can bumble our way through the rest of the steps, and we’ll probably still manage to get through to a few of them.
A consumer can typically be classified in one of four ways.
You will likely have consumers in all four of these categories visiting your site, however, you might be able to determine that most of the traffic coming from a given marketing channel is in one quadrant and optimize accordingly.
Here at Conversion Sciences, we like to primarily focus on another, simpler classification system: Transactional vs. Relational
Transactional buyers #1 fear in life is spending a dollar more than they have to. These are the coupon hunters and deal finders. They aren’t necessarily looking for the cheapest option, but they are absolutely looking for the best deal. They are going to visit 10 websites and 4 physical stores before making the purchase.
They get a big dopamine rush from saving money on purchases, and they will actually convert at a higher rate if you give them obstacles like coupon codes. They see themselves as the experts and shopping is part of the fun.
You can appeal to these buyers in your copy by focusing on the savings.
Relational buyers #1 fear is choosing the wrong thing. They are not looking for the best price, and they are happy to pay a premium if it ensures they get what they’re looking for. These buyers want an expert to help them make the right decision, and they see shopping as the part of the expense.
You can appeal to these buyers in your copy by focusing more on the quality:
Once you have identified and learned everything you can about your audience, it’s time to solve their problems.
2. Solve Their Problems
In many cases, it’s easy to identify the problems your customers face because your product was designed explicitly to solve them. But what happens when your product isn’t really a solution? What happens when your product is a pair of pants, like in our original Betabrand example?
There are two strategies we can take here:
Continuing with our Betabrand example, when we are talking about $100+ pants, we aren’t talking about an audience with legitimate problems or a product designed to solve legitimate problems.
They’re just pants.
But why do people pick a particularly pair of pants to purchase? When you are able and willing to spend $100 on a pair of pants, what are the deeper needs that influence your decision making?
Once we start digging, there’s a lot we can find:
Solving the problem is as simple as speaking to this core purpose driving the reader’s behavior.
Alternatively, what some people do (and what Betabrand is doing for their cordarounds) is go out and create a need. In other words, they convince the customer that he or she is experiencing a problem that needs to be solved.
The most humorous examples of this come from the infomercial industry, where the characters are fundamentally incapable of performing the most basic activities:
https://youtu.be/3eMCURWpNAg?t=8s
Does anyone really struggle THAT much with cracking eggs? Probably not, but the visualization of failed crack attempts can resonate with the most extreme memeories a person has and make them feel like, “Meh, it might be worth it to shell out a few bucks for this product.”
Betabrand uses a more subtle example in it’s own marketing:
Do normal corduroys really make a dude’s gonads feel like “the fiery eyes of Satan”? Obviously not. BUT if a guy reading this has noticed feeling hot in his corduroy pants in the past, this “fake” need will jump out at him and potentially influence his decision making.
3. Show The Damned Offer
On the more straightforward end of things, it’s important to actually show your audience your offer. It should be VERY clear what is being sold and every benefit should be clearly demonstrated, via the copy and page images.
Are you selling roofing paint that reflects sunlight and maintains a cool temperature. Show it in action!
Images like these are a thousand times more beneficial than stock images or other generic page elements. Stock photos can actually sabotage your conversion rate in a hurry.
Make sure you are clearly showing your offer to readers.
4. Keep Your Promises
Your sales process isn’t a single moment of decision. It’s a funnel.
Your visitors clicked on something to arrive at your landing page and when they click on your Call to Action (CTA) they will see a followup page of some sort. It’s VERY important that you deliver on your promises and meet customer expectations at each stage of this journey.
Don’t be like Zumba and follow-up an advertisement with a completely unrelated webpage.
Make sure that the landing page for every click meets the expectation of the person who clicked through to it.
5. Get Geographical
Our final step might not apply to every business, but if it’s relevant for your business, you can see major results.
Geographic segmentation and personalization offers a massive opportunity for increased conversions. The business pictured below was able to increase conversions by 27% simply by allowing users to select which region they were in.
This is just one of many, many examples of businesses using geographic segmentation to optimize their conversion rates.
When a reader sees their local area mentioned in the pitch, it scores major relevance points in Wernicke’s area.
How To Get Great Copywriting For Your Website
If you have read this far, it means you probably aren’t a copywriter by profession. You are looking to utilize the power of direct response copywriting, either by writing it yourself or hiring a copywriter.
If you aren’t bringing in a CRO agency to improve your site’s conversions, we typically recommend you do the following:
The reality is that copywriting is a very specific skillset, and while you can certainly improve your site’s copy just by following the principles in this article, you are going to get much better results when you hire a freelance copywriter with a proven portfolio.
That said, you should never simply be paying someone to write something for you and then calling it a day.
Working with a copywriter is a great opportunity for AB testing. Instead of simply throwing up something new and hoping it works… test, test, test!
Create several different variations of your landing pages and run a statistically sound series of split tests to identify actual winners and improve your overall conversion rate.
Webinar And Followup Q&A
After my webinar on this topic, there were some questions asked.
Good questions.
Probing questions.
Important questions.
We just didn’t have time (e.g. Brian went on and on and on).
With the help of our host, SiteTuners, I’ve been able to collect these questions and have provided thoughtful answers to them for you.
If you didn’t get to attend the Webinar — and I assume there was a very good reason you missed it – you can watch it via the form below. It’s absolutely worth an hour of your time!
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Watch the Recorded Webinar >>
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Oops! We could not locate your form.
Let’s take a look at those questions!
Is there a place for Profanity in Copy?
Andres asked if there was any “data on the use of profanity in the conversion copy? See last example: heat reflection paint ‘kicks ass’. Is this an attractor or offender?”
Profanity can be a part of your voice. Gary Vaynerchuck famously uses profanity in his videos and presentations. It’s part of his “no BS” approach. I used some profanity in my presentation, including the caption that with “kicks ass,” another with “get laid” and my term “Business Porn.” However, I’m not typically profane in my writing.
When I use it, it can have impact. But I don’t have to be profane to have impact.
Roy H. Williams says,
Good copywriters take chances, but they know if those chances are contributing to the bottom line. Good copywriters are measurable.
In fact, I think I’ll toss in a little profanity right now.
What if my company has a stick up its butt about professionalism?
Lainie asked, “Any recommendations for a nonprofit that demands professionalism and no hint of humor?”
Kyle wanted to know if I had any “suggestions for encouraging an employer to take chances with their copy.”
If “professionalism” means “business speak” then there is little hope for them, at least online. Many a copywriter suffers from PESD (Post Editorial Stress Disorder). They create a body of copy that has Broca-busters, metaphors, similes and double entendre. Then the executives review the copy, editing out all color and controversy.
The result is what I call Styrofoam copy. Lifeless. Tasteless. Brittle.
No wonder it’s so hard to find good copywriters. They’ve all been broken down by PESD.
Data may be your only hope. We didn’t hand the headline “Are you tired of lying?” to our addiction center client. We proposed it as part of a test. Once they saw the upside, they had to make a decision: stay safe or take the extra business.
Offer to test more daring copy. But don’t test anything that won’t be accepted, no matter how many donations it generates.
Copy is more than Words
Jerome ask, “Is there a time/place for elegant banners with no copy?”
On a page that is meant to make an impression these banners are appropriate. This is a branding and image approach. On a site designed to entice action, the elegant banners must extend the value proposition or they are taking up valuable space.
The question to ask is, “Am I designing for me or for my visitors?”
This looks cool, but doesn’t help someone who is on a mission to find a solution.
Sites that use parallax techniques are often designing for themselves. They win awards, but they don’t make it easy to find what I’m looking for.
Do Broca and Wernicke Get Old and Cranky
Lori asked an interesting question about the aging brain. “Does the aging brain perceive copy differently than the younger brain. In other words, does the brain change its perceptions?”
I wish I could answer this with the results of studies. The answer is, “Yes.” Older visitors respond differently than a younger crowd. But each audience is different.
Older visitors come with poorer eyesight. So, your copy design should take this into account.
Balancing SEO-targeted and Human-targeted Copy
Tabatha asked, “How do you balance SEO and these copywriting techniques?”
Landing pages are rarely targets of SEO. Landing pages more frequently serve ads, emails and affiliate links. There are exceptions.
On an ecommerce product page, however, the two intersect. Product pages are often landing pages and need good SEO copywriter.
If there is a conflict because your SEO copywriter wants to stuff keywords into every headline and subhead, you should probably find a better search optimizer.
How is the Web Different?
Katy asked, “Does the same methodology about engaging copy needing to get past Broca apply to direct mail pieces also?”
Much of what I’ve learned about copy has been taken from direct response mail copywriters. But, the writing for the web is different. Web visitors are seekers and searchers. They have a specific agenda and need to know they are on the right path toward solving a problem.
If you want to learn how to apply direct response tactics to web headlines, I recommend the book Great Leads by Michael Masterson and John Forde.
Images of the Invisible
Cynthia is involved in continuing education and asked, “What kind of images do you use for services that all have the same value proposition but doesn’t just show happy business people?”
I recommend real people in place of stock photography. Your teachers. Your students. The human eye can tell the difference between a stock photo and a real photo.
Jan wondered if we “use client logos with permission.”
We do ask permission to use client logos. It’s in our master services agreement. You might ask your lawyer to add a paragraph to your agreements like this one:
Are You a Tease?
Jeffrey asked if I had any “thoughts about lightly teasing the reader?”
A tease is a bona fide Broca-buster. Tease away.
This is especially effective when you tell a story, but withhold the ending while you build your value proposition. Brains hate to be teased because it makes them pay attention.
Psych! This eBook is just a PDF.
Creating Book Alikes
Deanne asked about the tool I used for creating eBooks renderings in 3D.
The tool that allowed me to create all of these wonderful 3D images from nothing was BoxShot4.
And a question from the Brainiacs
Dawn piqued my interest by asking, “Where does cognitive dissonance play out in this?”
In all truth, I had to look “cognitive dissonance” up.
When I am promised one thing in an ad, and then sent to a home page, I will experience cognitive dissonance.
If the one specification that I believe is important cannot be found on a product page, I will experience cognitive dissonance.
If I don’t like to read, but the only images on a page are business porn, I will experience cognitive dissonance.
Good copywriters know how to create a moment of cognitive dissonance and then unite the expected with the unexpected like the punch line to a joke. This creates cognitive sonance, I guess.
Tim Gets Some Extra Credit
One final note. In the Webinar, I failed to credit Tim Ash as the originator of the term “Big Fat Bouncers in your Brain” during an interview several years ago.
Thanks Tim.
21 Quick and Easy CRO Copywriting Hacks
Keep these proven copywriting hacks in mind to make your copy convert.
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How Will You Optimize In 2017?
Conversion Optimization2017 is just around the corner, and that means a new year with a fresh batch of goals and milestones.
If you increased your website’s conversion rate by 10%, how would that affect your business’ overall growth this year? How would that accelerate your career or revolutionize your bottom line?
Now’s the time to get optimization efforts in motion, and we’re excited to hear about what you have planned for 2017. Leave us a comment and let us know what you’re up to!
In the meantime, here’s a quick recap of Conversion Sciences’ 10 most popular articles from 2016.
And of course, if you’d like to have a group of proven experts handle your CRO efforts in 2017, the Conversion Sciences team is here to help. Our calendar fills up fast this time of year, so don’t put it off.
Contact us right now to schedule a free consultation.
Christmas Conversion Principles: How To Choose A Christmas Card For Your Boss
Conversion OptimizationWe’ve examined a number of holiday cards to determine the one most likely to win you some conversion optimization (CRO) budget for the coming year. Watch this critique and give your manager the card that will deliver.
Primary Conversion Principle Metrics
Christmas cards are a lot like landing page on the web. They have to appeal to visitors quickly and deliver something meaningful.
Christmas Metrics
We’ll be examining the Christmas Card Graph for each card.
Christmas Card Graph
Christmas Conversion Principles: Lessons Learned
When Choosing a Card for your Boss, Don’t be too Safe.
Playing it safe often means being boring. Open rates will suffer.
Do not play it safe or open rates will suffer.
Don’t let your designer make the decisions.
One man’s beautiful design is another’s reading nightmare. Don’t let design get in the way of communicating. Do not lose your message, you are after a brand new CRO budget, after all.
Over Designed Card
Don’t deliver less than you promise.
Making promises is the best way to get people to open your cards — and read your landing page. However, if you over-promise, you can do more damage than good. Conversion rates improve when there are good reasons to open the card.
Flattery works, but underpromise and overdeliver.
Use copy that engages the reader.
Our brains need to be challenged to be engaged. Rhymes, humor and alliteration will work to engage the reader and get them to take action.
Use engaging copy to convert.
Be interactive.
Sometimes you just have to get them involved to get them interested and your CRO budget secured. Consider asking them to do something on your page.
Budget Secured Card.
It shouldn’t be a surprise that all of these lessons can be applied to your website and landing pages. This is what we do at Conversion Sciences.
Happy holidays!
How Mobile Ecommerce Will Profit This Holiday Season [Infographic]
Conversion Marketing StrategyMobile ecommerce is transforming online shopping, especially during the holidays. Here are some eye-opening statistics in an infographic.
Most businesses are giving away their mobile visitors. Either they don’t provide a mobile-friendly experience or they have a responsive site that doesn’t give mobile visitors anything different.

This is an opportunity for you. Mobile visitors will be one of your fastest-growing segments. However, the mobile experience is unique and mobile visitors want something designed for their on-the-go, thumb-driven searching and buying. Those businesses that deliver a special mobile experience for their visitors will steal many holiday shoppers this year, and more next year.
If you are on the fence about adopting a mobile app as part of your marketing strategy, take a look at what mobile commerce will mean to businesses this holiday season.
1
92% of Consumers Shop with Smart Phones
With 9 out of 10 Americans owning a smartphone, it’s understandable that 92% of consumers will search for holiday gifts using their phones. Mobile ecommerce is here, and it’s here to stay.
People nowadays have to cope with busy, crazy lives and they search for ways to save time. How often do you hear people stressed about Christmas shopping? Mobile apps give consumers opportunities to simplify their lives, and the number of active mobile shoppers taking advantage of that simplicity continues to grow.
2
Time on Mobile Increases During the Holidays
November and December are the best months for retailers to increase their mobile revenue streams. These two months see more sales than other months, and 47% of customers prefer using a mobile app for shopping during this time of year. In fact, for the first time in history, smartphones and tablets have higher online penetration than desktop computers.
3
Mobile Generates Revenue
This year, Black Friday ecommerce sales hit $3.34 Billion, with mobile sales topping the billion dollar mark for the first time in history. Consumers spent an incredible $1.2 Billion via their mobile devices, a 33% increase from 2015.
Surprisingly, despite this continued growth in mobile commerce, 98% of companies still lack a mobile app designed for expedited customer shopping.
4
Mobile Apps Can Influence Every Part of the Sales Funnel
Small retailers often underestimate the importance of mobile apps—especially during the holidays. They certainly make shopping much simpler, but the benefits that they offer regarding affordable marketing and customer engagement cannot be overlooked either.
To put it simply, 71% of online shoppers prefer searching for products in retail stores using their app. Creating a pleasant shopping experience is important for businesses of all sizes. Think about your shopping habits. You are not the only consumer who searches for products online before later purchasing them. Everyone wants to save money, and mobile apps are a great way to make sure you are getting the best deal out there this holiday season.
Conclusion
If there is any time of year where businesses can’t afford to ignore mobile commerce, it’s the holiday season. As the trends continue to shift toward mobile, you cannot afford to overlook its potential.
If your mobile sales are under-performing, contact Conversion Sciences for a free consultation, or if you don’t have a mobile app, come check us out at Bizness Apps. Check this out if you need last minute holiday marketing ideas for ecommerce.
8 Ecommerce Testing Examples You Should Have Tried Already
CRO Tests | Multivariate | AB TestingPreston Pilgrim presents 8 successful ecommerce testing examples, highlighting some fairly easy-to-implement wins. This is the type of stuff that you should probably have tested already on your site. If you havent’ tried these, there’s no time like the present.
Ecommerce and conversion CRO are the ultimate match: Lots of moving parts. High traffic volume. When it comes to ROI, the sky’s the limit.
The following examples provide a great overview of what success can look like when you are executing on a proven AB testing framework.
1. Intuit Increases Conversions With Proactive Live Chat
Intuit Enterprise introduced proactive chat in various spots on their website. A small pop-up window with a call to action stating, “Chat now with a QuickBooks Sales Consultant” allowed potential buyers to instantly gain answers to their questions, clearing away roadblocks on the path to a sale.
Adding chat to the checkout process resulted in a 20% increase in conversions and a 43% increase in average order value.
Intuit proactively offers live chat.
Most impressively, when Intuit added proactive chat to the product comparison page, sales increased by 211%.
Proactively offering live chat increased sales for Intuit by 211%
THE LESSON: When you’re thinking about adding chat, think about the areas where your customers are the most likely to have questions. This may be when comparing products, or could be regarding payment options. Put some thought into the correct placement and watch the conversions skyrocket.
On a cautionary note, sometimes, displaying a “live chat” that isn’t actually live can alienate visitors. While it might work for certain audiences, for others, it can come across as misleading. If you are going to display a “live chat” without actually offering live chat services, just make sure to first verify that they aren’t alienating your visitors.
2. SmileyCookie Increases Sales With Optimized Header
SmileyCookie is a niche ecommerce store that sells cookies and gourmet gift baskets. While the site was getting a fairly solid conversion rate, they decided to spend some time optimizing the header bar that was normally used for seasonal promotions.
This is a great place to test your value propositions.
SmileyCookie.com spent time optimizing the bar above their header and below the navigation.
They tested a number of different value propositions, including the following:
Tests included focusing on sales, pricing and value.
It turns out that immediacy was an important value to the largest segment of their visitors. The winning variation “Order Today -> Ships Next Business Day” delivered an impressive 12.61% conversion rate at 95% confidence. Even more importantly, the success of this test brought in an additional $1.01 per visitor for SmileyCookie.
THE LESSON: The winning variation gives us some insight into what many ecommerce shoppers are looking for: fast shipping & handling. Any time you can lower uncertainty and solidify expectations, conversions tend to improve.
But an even more important takeaway is SmileyCookie’s investment in testing 5 different options for a large impact area like the site promotional header. No matter how good your predictions are, you will almost always get better results when you are able to test multiple options as opposed to just two.
3. Express Watches Boosts Conversions With Trust Building
Express is a UK company that sells Seiko watches. It’s an industry where buyers have legitimate concerns about purchasing online. What if the watch I buy is a fake?
In answer to this, ExpressWatches A/B tested placing a “price guarantee” stamp or an “authorized dealer” stamp on the product page.
If you’re buying a high-end watch, is price really the most important issue? ExpressWatches questioned “Never Beaten on Price”
Replacing “Never Beaten on Price” with a Seiko authorized dealer badge “borrows” brand trust from Seiko.
This stamp of “authenticity” garnered a sizable 107% jump in sales.
THE LESSON: If you’re operating in an industry with fraud risk, proving your authenticity can go a long way. In this case, ExpressWatches “borrowed” trust by tapping into Seiko’s brand authority. What associations logos, media logos and consumer review logos do you qualify to display?
While this split test worked, it’s not a guarantee it will work in all industries. You will need to run your own split tests, try different variations of how you display authenticity and see how it affects your conversions.
This most likely wouldn’t have a significant effect on conversions when dealing with lower priced “commodity” items, but with larger purchases, this type of split test can go a long way!
4. SAP BusinessObjects Increases Conversions With Prominent CTA Button
SAP BusinessObjects replaced its original small blue text “add to cart” link with a large, orange button.
Original:
Where would you click to get a Crystal Reports trial?
Alternate version:
BusinessObjects made the call to action the most visually prominent element on the page.
And conversions increased by 32%!
THE LESSON: Make your call to action count by making it visually prominent. Don’t make customers hunt for your “buy” button. Make it front and center and easy to click through and the sales will naturally increase.
I also want to conclude here that just because you make something bigger and stand out more, it doesn’t mean it will convert higher. In some cases, decreasing the size of the button or CTA has had positive impacts on conversions. The main takeaway you need to grab from this case study is to always split test your main CTA’s and buttons. Good designers know how to make something visually prominent.
5. Horloges Increases Average Order Value With Guarantee
Horloges.nl is a watch dealer in the Netherlands. Their banner originally had information about overnight shipping (“Morgen al in huis”), free shipping (“Gratis verzending”) and their status as an “official” G-Shock dealer.


Horloges.nl changed their banner to make it smaller, and include a 2-year guarantee on watches.
This change caused the average order value to increase by 6%, and total conversions improved by 41%.
THE LESSON: Adding a guarantee is an excellent way to increase new customers’ comfort level in purchasing from a new vendor. Consider changing banner ads to make them simpler and easier to read in order to increase their efficacy.
This test changed several variables: the offers, the layout, and the font styling. When you test, start with guarantees and once you find one that works, test out how to present that guarantee on your page. Where can you place it? Where does it stand out? Should you only put it on products pages? These are all things you might want to split test.
6. MALL.CZ Increases Conversions With Larger Images
MALL.CZ is the second largest ecommerce retailer in the Czech Republic. Much like Amazon, they sell a wide variety of products, including kitchen supplies and electronics. Product images are an important component in their purchase process, and the company was curious how increasing image size might influence sales.
MALL.CZ’s original product descriptions emphasized lengthy copy and had a smaller product photo.
The category page for Mall.cz may be difficult to scan with competing images, buttons and badges.
MALL.CZ then tried altering the descriptions to emphasize a large product image above the text:
Increasing image size made the category page visually easier to scan.
This variation resulted in a 9.46% increase in sales.
THE LESSON: It can pay off to play around with image sizes and layout. There is some evidence to show that in other circumstances, larger images can actually deter sales, so clearly the issue is product/industry dependent. But if you’re looking for a factor to experiment with, image size has the potential for big rewards.
Aside from image size, playing around with different images in general is another great idea for running split tests.
Option 1: Split test image size, find out what converts at a higher rate.
Option 2: Split test different product images and angles and see what converts higher.
Option 3: Test a 3-D, click-to-rotate type image display, where viewers can get a 360 degree look at the product.
7. Express Watches Further Improves Conversions With Social Proof
Few things can impart safe buying like reading a positive review from a fellow customer. Knowing that other people have purchased the product and had a good experience with the product and retailer is a large factor in influencing customers to click “add to cart”.
Express Watches conducted a customer survey and discovered that their customers wanted to know information about price comparison, if the company was trustworthy, and whether the watch would be genuine and not “fake”.
Is a five-start rating enough without the actual reviews on this product page?
ExpressWatch tested this more aggressive presentation of reviews on their product page.
Express decided to answer those questions by adding a Customer Reviews widget on their product pages. Adding the reviews widget, ExpressWatch saw a 58.39% increase in sales.
THE LESSON: Social proof is a proven way to overcome visitor objections and push the sale closer to checkout will increase sales. Clear roadblocks by decreasing customers’ worries and adding symbols of trustworthiness.
When you think about the logic of the buyer, it makes sense. When you are injured or sick and you need to see a doctor or therapist, you are most likely going to ask your close relatives or friends if they have any recommendations on a doctor they have used in the past that they have had success with. If they give you a recommendation with positive feedback, it’s most likely you are going to choose that doctor over any other ones in the area. The takeaway, positive feedback can increase conversions tremendously.
Just realize that if you’re showing your reviews to the public, too many negative reviews can lower your conversion rate. At the same time, having a 100% positive review rate will also lower conversions, as this tends to be viewed as being manipulated in some way. Negative reviews are an important part of visitor research.
The best review profile looks like what you’d expect to see if a bunch of people tried out a great product. Most would love it. Some would be unimpressed. And one or two would trash it out of spite.
8. Corkscrew Wines Increases Sales With Prominent Discounts
What good is a sale if you’re not advertising it enough? The whole point of launching a sale is to move product, and in order to do that, customers need to be aware that there’s a deal out there that can’t be missed.
Corkscrew Wines experimented with adding sale information in a red circle, front and center over the product image.
The price is discounted on this product page, but the visitor has to do the math.
If you’re offering a discount, don’t hide it.
The result? A whopping 148.3% increase in sales. Both product description pages showed the same price- but the second simply highlighted the savings.
THE LESSON: Let people know when they’re saving money. They’ll want to buy more!
Again, there are many different ways to split test this. In this particular case they are displaying the discount on the bottle and title. Play around with this, try displaying it in different locations, try larger images, try different colors that stand out.
Conclusion
Hopefully, today’s ecommerce testing examples have provided you with some pointers for you next batch of split tests.
Preston Pilgrim is a marketer at Acro Media, a digital agency focused on optimizing Drupal point of sale product pages, contact pages, homepages, and more. Learn more from Preston’s expertise via the Acro Media blog.
Remember that your customers ultimately hold the key to increased sales, and any worthwhile AB testing framework starts with getting a thorough understanding of how they are engaging with your site and what they are feeling in the process.
For further reading, check out Conversion Sciences’ rundown of The 7 Core AB Testing Strategies Fundamental to CRO Success.
10 CRO Experts Explain How To Profitably Analyze AB Test Results
Conversion OptimizationThe AB test results had come in, and the result was inconclusive. The Conversion Sciences team was disappointed. They thought the change would increase revenue. What they didn’t know what that the top-level results were lying.
While we can learn something from inconclusive tests, it’s the winners that we love. Winners increase revenue, and that feels good.
The team looked closer at our results. When a test concludes, we analyze the results in analytics to see if there is any more we can learn. We call this post-test analysis.
Isolating the segment of traffic that saw test variation A, it was clear that one browser had under-performed the others: Internet Explorer.
Performance of Variation A. Internet Explorer visitors significantly under-performed the other three popular browsers.
The visitors coming on Internet Explorer were converting at less than half the average of the other browsers and generating one-third the revenue per session. This was not true of the Control. Something was wrong with this test variation. Despite a vigorous QA effort that included all popular browsers, an error had been introduced into the test code.
Analysis showed that correcting this would deliver a 13% increase in conversion rate and 19% increase in per session value. And we would have a winning test after all.
Conversion Sciences has a rigorous QA process to ensure that errors like this are very rare, but they happen. And they may be happening to you.
Post-test analysis keeps us from making bad decisions when the unexpected rears its ugly head. Here’s a primer on how conversion experts ensure they are making the right decisions by doing post-test analysis.
Did Any Of Our Test Variations Win?
The first question that will be on our lips is, “Did any of our variations win?”
There are two possible outcomes when we examine the results of an AB test.
Joel Harvey of Conversion Sciences describes his process below:
“Post-test analysis” is sort of a misnomer. A lot of analytics happens in the initial setup and throughout full ab testing process. The “post-test” insights derived from one batch of tests is the “pre-test” analytics for the next batch, and the best way to have good goals for that next batch of tests is to set the right goals during your previous split tests.
That said, when you look at the results of an AB testing round, the first thing you need to look at is whether the test was a loser, a winner, or inconclusive.
Verify that the winners were indeed winners. Look at all the core criteria: statistical significance, p-value, test length, delta size, etc. If it checks out, then the next step is to show it to 100% of traffic and look for that real-world conversion lift.
In a perfect world you could just roll it out for 2 weeks and wait, but usually, you are jumping right into creating new hypotheses and running new tests, so you have to find a balance.
Once we’ve identified the winners, it’s important to dive into segments.
This is fairly easy to do with enterprise tools, but might require some more effort with less robust testing tools. It’s important to have a deep understanding of how tested pages performed with each segment. What’s the bounce rate? What’s the exit rate? Did we fundamentally change the way this segment is flowing through the funnel?
We want to look at this data in full, but it’s also good to remove outliers falling outside two standard deviations of the mean and re-evaluate the data.
It’s also important to pay attention to lead quality. The longer the lead cycle, the more difficult this is. In a perfect world, you can integrate the CRM, but in reality, this often doesn’t work very seamlessly.
Chris McCormick, Head of Optimisation at PRWD, describes his process:
When a test concludes, we always use the testing tool as a guide but we would never hang our hat on that data. We always analyse results further within Google Analytics, as this is the purest form of data.
For any test, we always set out at the start what our ‘primary success metrics’ are. These are what we look to identify first via GA and what we communicate as a priority to the client. Once we have a high level understanding of how the test has performed, we start to dig below the surface to understand if there are any patterns or trends occurring. Examples of this would be: the day of the week, different product sets, new vs returning users, desktop vs mobile etc.
We always look to report on a rough ROI figure for any test we deliver, too. In most cases, I would look to do this based on taking data from the previous 12 months and applying whatever the lift was to that. This is always communicated to the client as a ballpark figure i.e.: circa £50k ROI. The reason for this is that there are so many additional/external influences on a test that we can never be 100% accurate; testing is not an exact science and shouldn’t be treated as such.
Are We Making Type I or Type II errors?
In our post on AB testing statistics, we discussed type I and type II errors. We work to avoid these errors at all cost.
To avoid errors in judgement, we verify the results of our testing tool against our analytics. It is very important that our testing tool send data to our analytics package telling us which variations are seen by which segments of visitors.
Our testing tools only deliver top-level results, and we’ve seen that technical errors happen. So we can reproduce the results of our AB test using analytics data.
Did each variation get the same number of conversions? Was revenue reported accurately?
Errors are best avoided by ensuring the sample size is large enough and utilizing a proper AB testing framework. Peep Laja describes his process below:
First of all I check whether there’s enough sample size and that we can trust the outcome of the test. I check if the numbers reported by the testing tool line up with the analytics tool, both for CR (conversion rate) and RPV (revenue per visit).
In the analytics tool I try to understand how the variations changed user behavior – by looking at microconversions (cart adds, certain page visits etc) and other stats like cart value, average qty per purchase etc.
If the sample size is large enough, I want to see the results of the test across key segments (provided that the results in the segments are valid, have enough volume etc), and see if the treatments performed better/worse inside the segments. Maybe there’s a case for personalization there. The segments I look at are device split (if the test was ran across multiple device categories), new/returning, traffic source, first time buyer / repeat buyer.
How Did Key Segments Perform?
In the case of an inconclusive test, we want to look at individual segments of traffic.
For example, we have had an inconclusive test on smartphone traffic in which the Android visitors loved our variation, but iOS visitors hated it. They cancelled each other out. Yet we would have missed an important piece of information had we not looked more closely.
Visitors react differently depending on their device, browser and operating system.
Other segments that may perform differently may include:
These segments will be different for each business, but provide insights that spawn new hypotheses, or even provide ways to personalize the experience.
Understanding how different segments are behaving is fundamental to good testing analysis, but it’s also important to keep the main thing the main thing, as Rich Page explains:
Avoid analysis paralysis. Don’t slice the results into too many segments or different analytics tools. You may often run into conflicting findings. Revenue should always be considered the best metric to pay attention to other than conversion rate, after all, what good is a result with a conversion lift if it doesn’t also increase revenue?
The key thing is not to throw out A/B tests that have inconclusive results, as this will happen quite often. This is a great opportunity to learn and create a better follow up A/B test. In particular you should gain visitor feedback regarding the page being A/B tested, and show them your variations – this helps reveal great insights into what they like and don’t like. Reviewing related visitor recordings and click maps also gives good insights.
Nick So of WiderFunnel talks about segments as well within his own process for AB test analysis:
“Besides the standard click-through rate, funnel drop-off, and conversion rate reports for post-test analysis, most of the additional reports and segments I pull are very dependent on the business context of a website’s visitors and customers.
For an ecommerce site that does a lot of email marketing and has high return buyers, I look at the difference in source traffic as well as new versus returning visitors. Discrepancies in behavior between segments can provide insights for future strategies, where you may want to focus on the behaviors of a particular segment in order to get that additional lift.
Sometimes, just for my own personal geeky curiosity, I look into seemingly random metrics to see if there are any unexpected patterns. But be warned: it’s easy to get too deep into that rabbit hole of splicing and dicing the data every which way to find some sort of pattern.
For lead-gen and B2B companies, you definitely want to look at the full buyer cycle and LTV of your visitors in order to determine the true winner of any experiment. Time and time again, I have seen tests that successfully increase lead submissions, only to discover that the quality of the leads coming through is drastically lower; which could cost a business MORE money in funnelling sales resources to unqualified leads.
In terms of post-test results analysis and validation — besides whatever statistical method your testing tool uses — I always run results through WiderFunnel’s internal results calculator which utilizes bayesian statistics to provide the risk and reward potential of each test. This allows you to make a more informed business decision, rather than simply a win/loss, significant/not significant recommendation.”
In addition to understanding how tested changes impacted each segment, it’s also useful to understand where in the customer journey those changes had the greatest impact, as Benjamin Cozon describes:
We need to consider that the end of the running phase of a test is actually the beginning of insight analysis.
Why is each variation delivering a particular conversion rate? In which cases are my variations making a difference, whether positive or negative? In order to better understand the answers to these questions, we always try to identify which user segments are the most elastic to the changes that were made.
One way we do it is by ventilating the data with session-based or user-based dimensions. Here is some of the dimension we use for almost every test:
This type of ventilation helps us understand the impact of specific changes for users relative to their specific place in the customer journey. Having these additional insights also helps us build a strong knowledge base and communicate effectively throughout the organization.
Finally, while it is a great idea to have a rigorous quality assurance (QA) process for your tests, some may slip through the cracks. When you examine segments of your traffic, you may find one segment that performed very poorly. This may be a sign that the experience they saw was broken.
It is not unusual to see visitors using Internet Explorer crash and burn since developers abhor making customizations for that non-compliant browser.
How Did Changes Affect Lead Quality?
Post test analysis allows us to be sure that the quality of our conversions is high. It’s easy to increase conversions. But are these new conversions buying as much as the ones who saw the control?
Several of Conversion Sciences’ clients prizes phone calls and the company optimizes for them. Each week, the calls are examined to ensure the callers are qualified to buy and truly interested in a solution.
In post-test analysis, we can examine the average order value for each variation to see if buyers were buying as much as before.
We can look at the profit margins generated for the products purchased. If revenue per visit rose, did profit follow suit?
Marshall Downey of Build.com has some more ideas for us in the following instagraph infographic.
Revenue is often looked to as the pre-eminent judge of lead quality, but doing so comes with it’s own pitfalls, as Ben Jesson describes in his approach to AB test analysis.
If a test doesn’t reach significance, we quickly move on to the next big idea. There are limited gains to be had from adding complexity by promoting narrow segments.
It can be priceless to run on-page surveys on the winning page, to identify opportunities for improving it further. Qualaroo and Hotjar are great for this.
Lead quality is important, and we like to tackle it from two sides. First, qualitatively: Does the challenger page do anything that is likely to reduce or increase the lead value? Second, quantitatively: How can we track leads through to the bank, so we can ensure that we’ve grown the bottom line?
You might expect that it’s better to measure revenue than to measure the number of orders. However, statistically speaking, this is often not true. A handful of random large orders can greatly skew the revenue figures. Some people recommend manually removing the outliers, but that only acknowledges the method’s intrinsic problem. How do you define outlier, and why aren’t we interested in them? If your challenger hasn’t done anything that is likely to affect the order size, then you can save time by using the number of conversions as the goal.
After every winning experiment, record the results in a database that’s segmented by industry sector, type of website, geographic location, and conversion goal. We have been doing this for a decade, and the value it brings to projects is priceless.
Analyze AB Test Results by Time and Geography
Conversion quality is important, and Theresa Baiocco takes this one step further.
For lead gen companies with a primary conversion goal of a phone call, it’s not enough to optimize for quantity of calls; you have to track and improve call quality. And if you’re running paid ads to get those phone calls, you need to incorporate your cost to acquire a high-quality phone call, segmented by:
When testing for phone calls, you have to compare the data from your call tracking software with the data from your advertising. For example, if you want to know which day of the week your cost for a 5-star call is lowest, you first pull a report from your call tracking software on 5-star calls by day of week:
Then, check data from your advertising source, like Google AdWords. Pull a report of your cost by day of week for the same time period:
Then, you simply divide the amount you spent by the number of 5-star calls you got, to find out how much it costs to generate a 5-star call each day of the week.
Repeat the process on other segments, such as hour of day, ad position, week of the month, geographic location, etc. By doing this extra analysis, you can shift your advertising budget to the days, times, and locations when you generate the highest quality of phone calls – for less.
Look for Unexpected Effects
Results aren’t derived in a vacuum. Any change will create ripple effects throughout a website, and some of these effects are easy to miss.
Craig Andrews gives us insight into this phenomenon via a recent discovery he made with a new client:
I stumbled across something last week – and I almost missed it because it was secondary effects of a campaign I was running. One weakness of CRO, in my honest opinion, is the transactional focus of the practice. CRO doesn’t have a good way of measuring follow-on effects.
For example, I absolutely believe pop-ups increase conversions, but at what cost? How does it impact future engagement with the brand? If you are selling commodities, then it probably isn’t a big concern. But most people want to build brand trust & brand loyalty.
We discovered a shocking level of re-engagement with content based on the quality of a visitor’s first engagement. I probably wouldn’t believe it if I hadn’t seen it personally and double-checked the analytics. In the process of doing some general reporting, we discovered that we radically increased the conversion rates of the 2 leading landing pages as secondary effects of the initial effort.
We launched a piece of content that we helped the client develop. It was a new client and the development of this content was a little painful with many iterations as everyone wanted to weigh in on it. One of our biggest challenges was getting the client to agree to change the voice & tone of the piece – to use shorter words & shorter sentences. They were used to writing in a particular way and were afraid that their prospects wouldn’t trust & respect them if they didn’t write in a highbrow academic way.
We completed the piece, created a landing page and promoted the piece primarily via email to their existing list. We didn’t promote any other piece of content all month. They had several pieces (with landing pages) that had been up all year.
It was a big success. It was the most downloaded piece of content for the entire year. It had more downloads in one month than any other piece had in total for the entire year. Actually, 28% more downloads than #2 which had been up since January.
But then, I discovered something else…
The next 2 most downloaded pieces of content spiked in October. In fact, 50% of the total year’s downloads for those pieces happened in October. I thought it may be a product of more traffic & more eyeballs. Yes that helped, but it was more than that. The conversion rates for those 2 landing pages increased 160% & 280% respectively!
We did nothing to those landing pages. We didn’t promote that content. We changed nothing except the quality of the first piece of content that we sent out in our email campaign.
Better writing increased the brand equity for this client and increased the demand for all other content.
Testing results can also be compared against an archive of past results, as Shanelle Mullin discusses here:
Shanelle Mullin, ConversionXL
The clearer you can communicate the ROI of your testing program to stakeholders and clients, the better. It means more buy-in and bigger budgets.
You can archive your test results in a few different ways. Tools like Projects and Effective Experiments can help, but some people use plain ol’ Excel to archive their tests. There’s no single best way to do it.
What’s really important is the information you record. You should include: the experiment date, the audience / URL, screenshots, the hypothesis, the results, any validity factors to consider (e.g. a PR campaign was running, it was mid-December), a link to the experiment, a link to a CSV of the results, and insights gained.
Why Did We Get The Result We Got?
Ultimately, we want to answer the question, “Why?” Why did one variation win and what does it tell us about our visitors?
This is a collaborative process and speculative in nature. Asking why has two primary effects:
Our goal is to learn as we test, and asking “Why?” is the best way to cement our learnings.
21 Quick and Easy CRO Copywriting Hacks
Keep these proven copywriting hacks in mind to make your copy convert.
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