When a visitor to your website goes from
being a visitor to becoming a customer, that is considered a “conversion”. Isn’t
that the main reason businesses are online? To generate customers!
Conversion can be several things but is
always when you achieve a desired outcome.
Consider a "conversion" to be some sort of result – such as a
sale, posting a comment or review, filling out a form, or whatever action you
are looking to achieve by your website visitors.
Successful conversion may be defined
differently by different individuals.
One example of a conversion event can be
the obvious -a sale. But what if a customer were to abandon an online shopping
cart? This event could then be used to market a special offer, e.g. free
shipping, in order to convert that visit into a sale.
|
|
Maybe your desired conversion is to have
your visitor fill out a form, maybe a membership. By reviewing your website
metrics you can determine why this event is not happening. Maybe your site is
unclear on how to get to the form or perhaps the visitors are all bypassing the
form and bounce to another website. It’s time to revisit how that form is perceived.
Conversion measurement of your website becomes
important to showing the return on investment (ROI) for your company. To
accomplish this, you need to manage the customer experience by making it
memorable and personal. Optimized navigability is necessary. As well as, well-optimized
site pages, landing pages and calls to action. Making small changes can make a
large impact to your bottom-line. How will you ensure that customers can find
what they want? Let’s start by looking
at an example of a company’s homepage. The homepage should include enough to
educate, engage and encourage a diverse audience to explore the rest of your
website (Meher, 2012). An effective homepage can turn many visitors into
buyers.
In this example the Homepage of this
software company is missing some key elements. “the original homepage did
a good job outlining its five different product lines, it failed to guide
visitors to the right product due to a lack of information…..85% of the
homepage's traffic was unique, meaning that the majority of visitors were
unfamiliar with the company and its products. Visitors were unable to identify
the difference between each product and which one to select” (Meher,2012).
The original page is also missing an effective call to action (CTA). A CTA is
what drives your customer to take the desired action. In the original homepage
the CTA, although nice and red, it is below the fold where the visitor has to
scroll to see. On the new homepage the CTA is front and center attracting the
eye of your visitor immediately.
Other factors that aid in conversion are
the same factors that make you want to return to any business. It’s clean, credible,
transparent and trustworthy. If you establish trust visitors believe in your
brand and messages. Remember it is easier to keep a customer than to attract a
new one. Loyalty builds those lasting relationships.
The
use of conversion metrics can help your business find out what works, and focus
your advertising dollars there. There are many metric tools out there (Google
Analytics, ChartBeat, CrazyEgg , MOZ, Compete , and Optimizely). Making informed business and content management
decisions can make your website a profitable. Use your statistics to track your
progress over time. Measure a campaign from start to finish, evaluate, update
your site, and measure again. You will be surprised at how this focused effort affects
your company’s performance.
Share what has worked for you.
Meher, J. (March2012) How to Increase Your
Conversion Rate. Retrieved from: HubSpothttp://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/31104/Extreme-Homepage-Makeover-How-to-Increase-Your-Conversion-Rate-106.aspx
Kusintz, S.
(April2014) The 7 Principles of Conversion Centered Design. Retrieved from: http://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/principles-of-conversion-centered-design-slideshare
No comments:
Post a Comment