Conversion Optimization Blog

Conversion Optimization Blog (3)

padlock-iconWhen dealing with internet marketing of any form visitors will only convert if they trust you. The web can be a very impersonal place and as a breathing, living, money-earning individual with privacy and fraud concerns deciding who you give your details or money to is a massive decision.

Over the last few years the conception that you will get swindled if you buy something online is rapidly diminishing. This has laid the foundation for huge amounts of online turnover, which is continuously and rapidly on the rise!

So how do you get a piece of this pie? Easy – show your visitors you’re a legitimate, trustworthy company, with breathing, living and money earning individuals! The chances are the visitor browsing your site already knows they’re after what you have to offer, you just have to push them over that psychological “to-buy-or-not-to-buy” barrier. Here are a few trust-building elements to include on your site to drive this process:
At first glance visitors should see what country you service; there are a few tricks here:
The Form Cheat-Sheet – Optimizing Online Forms for Higher Conversion Rates Online forms are found on almost every website; unfortunately these are very poorly optimised and can be intimidating, confusing and down-right ugly. In order for a visitor to buy, sign-up for something or submit their details these messy forms need to be transgressed and if yours is sub-optimal you’ll be losing out on a large proportion of your potential clients. This blog entry covers a few of the basics, but these little differences can bring in tons more cash!

Form
  1. Title: Give the form an easy to understand title. Not “Application Form”, rather “Insurance Application Form”.

  2. Design layout: Keep it clean and neat, follow this simple recipe:
    1. Ensure the text is easily legible
    2. Keep the instructions on the left and the text blocks on the right
    3. Use a single column
    4. Align the components neatly

  3. Keep it simple: Give some good thought to the details you NEED to capture, if there is anything that is nice-to-know or not 100% vital at that point in your client interaction – drop kick it the hell off the page! If you have a field that is not always necessary, but sometimes required make it expandable. There is nothing that kills form conversion rates like a long form.

  4. Use easy to understand language: Design the instructions to be short, but idiot proof. Stay away or expand on any abbreviations.

  5. Split long forms: if the form is particularly long, split it into a multi-step form and side-step it the intimidation factor. Use a graphic representation to show the client where they are, how much longer they need to go and what to expect further into the form. Keep your questions well grouped by theme.

Thursday, 21 January 2010 09:31

Increase Sales Leads using Conversion Optimisation

Written by Alexi Vontas

Your website might get thousands of visitors a month, but the bottom line is that if it is not making you money, it is costing you money. How do you make people buy products on a website, or make contact enquiries? This brings to mind the age old proverb, “You can take a horse to the water, but you can’t make it drink”. Or can you?

The layout of your website and strategically placed calls-to-action are crucial to its success or failure. A call-to-action refers to an enquire button, a contact us link, or anything that engages the site visitor to take some kind of action that you consider valuable. There are various rules of thumb that should always be kept in mind when designing a layout for a site, and aiming for optimal conversion statistics.

They are:

  • Calls to action should stand out, be large enough and be very visible to the visitor.coins
  • These buttons, links or forms should ALWAYS be above the “fold” of the webpage. (The fold refers to the point at which you need to scroll down to view the bottom of the webpage).
  • Wording that often increases click-through rates include, “free”, “now”, “instant” & “enquire”.
  • Flashing or moving buttons often bring attention to the call-to-action, however this should not be excessive.
  • They should be visible on all pages, not only selected ones.

Right, now once you are getting all your visitors to the contact or sales forms, you need them to complete these forms before quitting. The conversion rate of any form is inversely proportional to the length of the form or number of required fields. So, the shorter the enquiry form for instance, the more people will complete and send it. A form with fifteen required fields however will have a relatively low conversion rate. Also a two step form will convert less than a single page form.

 

What this means to a webmaster is that without an increase in the number of visits to the website, we can increase substantially the number of leads we generate from the site using simple conversion optimisation techniques. Making it easier for users to contact you or buy a product, WILL increase conversions.

Have a look at this great blog entry posted by the SEO Gurus @ SEOmoz - 11 Conversion Lessons from 2009.

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