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You'll never know
how much money you're losing until you measure, optimize and test. There
are two schools of thought as to how you should start.
School 1
Start
with an "minor" page on your site. Use that page as your "sparring ground"
to avoid serious mistakes while learning about testing. The danger in
starting your testing with a "minor" page is that it will take long to see
results. You'll grow impatient, and may abandon the concept of testing
before appreciating its benefits.
School 2
Start with a high
traffic page so you can see results quickly. We all want results now. We
don't want to wait for the answer.
The page parts to test are:
1. Headline
It's the first
thing visitors see when landing on your site. It will either rivet their
attention, or make them feel they are on the wrong page.
It's easy to
test. You can easily write a few benefits packed headlines to test. Craft
3-5 different headlines and designate an A/B test to verify the
effectiveness of each.
2. Opening
Paragraph
The opening lines
and paragraph of your sales letter must enthrall the reader. A copywriter
will usually prove useful in this function.
An A/B test can
be used to measure the effect of each paragraph. If you are doing it
yourself write 3-5 paragraphs, let it ferment for a day or two, look at them
again, rewrite them and then run the test.
3. Product
Benefits
List the most
important benefit first. But your visitor may have a different ranking of
the most important benefit.
Vary the order of
your benefit statements to test which positioning converts at the highest
rate. This could provide clues into rewriting your sales letter for higher
conversions. It is valuable experience which you can use in other sales
letters or share with a friend.
4. Call to
Action
There many ways
to tell visitors what you want them to do. And depending on your product,
visitor etc, some will be more effective than others.
Rather than
simply copying what other marketers are doing, choose several different
calls to action. This is a critical section so don’t leave it to chance by
being a copycat. Outline 3-5 different segments and label them A/B. Read
them after a day or two, run the test.
5. Visual
Elements
There is a song
by Bread which goes to say that a picture is worth a thousand words. But the
picture has to be right. Garish colors, poor photographs all told bad
visuals can bring down your conversion rate.
Good visuals on a
page can make a person’s mood change and induce conversion.
Again you have to
test. Here the testing becomes very difficult since there are usually many
visual elements on the page. Choose the first ones to test. Choose the
large visuals to change.
Don’t try and
change many of the visual elements, you’ll end up with what is called a
multivariate test which is a prescription for disaster.
Never rest and
assume that your conversion rate has peaked. There will always be room for
improvement. |