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Make your Visitors Stick to your Landing Page with these Tips

A well-designed landing page means more conversions.  If your landing pages are not getting the conversions you want, then you will need to learn exactly what a landing page is and what it is not, how to make a landing page “sticky,” and check your design components to see if they meet best practices. That’s what you’ll be learning about in this article.

What is a Landing Page – Understanding its Purpose

A landing page is not your home page. It is a page that has a singular purpose – allowing the user to get exactly what was offered, nothing more. All marketing campaigns consist of offers – a discount, a free trial, a download. Ads attract people to the offer and guide them to the landing page.

[tweetthis]A landing page has a singular purpose – allowing the user to get exactly what was offered, nothing more.[/tweetthis]

Your landing page, of course, has a purpose for you too. You are looking to get something by influencing your visitor to complete a task:

Your purpose is NOT to give a user information about your company, your products or your services; it is not to tell your story; and it is certainly not to advertise anything beyond the offer. These are all things for another time. Right now, you want to begin the building of trust by giving the visitor exactly what you offered and nothing more.

How You Make Your Landing Page “Sticky”

If you are getting a large number of bounces from your landing page without conversions, then your landing page isn’t making them stick. A “sticky” landing page is one that keeps the user there long enough to complete the task of taking whatever offer you are providing. If you’re not getting the conversion rate you want, try evaluating your landing page against these things:

The visitor gives you a name and email address and then clicks the download button.

The visitor clicks on a “get your discount” button, provides a name and email address and then clicks a confirmation button to get a coupon code.

The visitor clicks on a button to start a free trial, provides some personal information, and submits it. The visitor is then instructed to check their email for the trial link. (The conversation about using the email option is still ongoing. It does force the user to take another step in the process, but sending the free trial link to an email ensures that the email is legitimate.)

Just remember this above all else. The visitor wants to get in, complete the task and get what was offered, get out, and do it quickly. If you ensure that this is the experience they have, they will trust you more when you initiate contact in the future. Conversion, at this stage, means they complete the task.

Here is an example of a great landing page:

Take a look at it in terms of the points listed above. The visitor has landed to join the “Rewards Club.” Nothing else is on the page – no ads, no other information. The visitor clicks the “Join Now” or the “Sign In” if s/he is already a member and going to get more rewards. Joining involves providing an email address once the visitor has clicked the CTA button.

Tips for Landing Page Design

When a user hits your landing page, they expect to be doing one thing only – register, sign-up, get the discount or download something. Your job is to make sure they know they are at the right place, what they are getting, and how to get it quickly. Therefore, think about these elements:

It is easy for a visitor to see why two pages are needed. The first is to enter his/her city. Then, the next page asks only for an email address. Why? Because alerts of special offers in the visitor’s city are going to be emailed directly, even though the user can access the site and pull up all deals that way. The green numbers help the user to understand a step-by-step process is happening.

The Design and the Testing

Who Will Design the Page?

Because your landing page will be so simple, you may not need a designer to do it. There are great tools for landing pages out there. If you do not know where to begin to look or have not had experience with any of the tools before, you could begin with Pagewiz. The tool is super easy and anyone can design a landing page with no IT background at all.

How Will You Test?

A/B testing is clearly the type of testing you will use for your landing page, and this can go on for as many design elements as you want to test. And each element should be tested separately. Here are the typical things that should be tested:

Just by adding a bit more value (locating a gym), conversion rate increase was huge.

Name:
Email:
URL:
What Can We Help You With:

When he removed the 4th line of the form, he had a 26% increase in conversion rate.

You may have conducted A/B testing on a CTA button and found one color. Try other colors against the same control button and see the conversion rate you get with each one. Here is what Home Finder found:

Each color version was tested against “A.” The blue button “won” with a 17% increase in conversion rate.

Testing is an ongoing process, and you must do it every time you add something new to a landing page.

[tweetthis]Testing is an ongoing process.[/tweetthis]

The Takeaway

If you follow these simple “rules,” your landing page will be good and sticky, and conversions will increase. Next week, we’ve got a discussion about reputation management and some expert tips and tools.