Archive for the ‘Usability – Conversion’ Category

The Importance of Good Design on Conversion Rate

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

When it comes to your conversion rate, you may not have thought about how your site’s design factors in. All too often, designers and developers are trying to put together the slickest looking pages, with the most up to date web technology, and as a result, they forgo considering a visitor’s experience. When designing any site, it is critical to consider things from the visitor’s point of view. Doing so can be the difference between visitors converting to customers, and visitors leaving without making a purchase.

A common pitfall in site design is to make it too complicated. How many times have you visited a site, and had to click through a landing page animation? While the site designer probably spent a long time putting together a cool Flash animation, and while they certainly thought it would attract attention, typically, these things annoy visitors. When you visit a site, you are looking for specific information, not flashy animations. These types of design elements can turn visitors away before they even get to your product page.

As well, some site designers employ ads that automatically play audio and video, or they include music that plays in the background. Not only can these design elements become annoying and turn people away, but they can also slow down loading times exponentially. And some designers do not even include a function to turn off these audio and video elements, leading to visitor frustration, and no conversion.

Yet another design flaw that is often overlooked by designers and developers is the checkout process. If you have gotten a visitor to attempt to make a purchase, you are on the right track. However, if they get to the checkout and can’t figure out how to complete the transaction, they will be even more frustrated in the end, as they have just spent time on your site, they found what they wanted, but now they can’t purchase it. Having a poorly designed checkout system is essentially thumbing your nose at the customer, telling them that you have what they want, but they can’t get it.

In the above examples, the designer simply did not consider the user’s experience. Companies spend millions of dollars and thousands of hours per year on focus groups in order to figure out what customers like and what they don’t like. Why? Because the customer is the entire reason for going into business. When people visit your site, you want them to purchase something, not leave. And if your site is poorly designed and not engineered for a comfortable user experience, not only will customers not make purchases, but they will not come back in the future. Your site may even gain a reputation for its poor design, leading to a bad reputation.

Eric Wyatt writes on social media and internet marketing, focusing on conversion rate optimization and landing page design.

—GuestBlogger

Google AdWords Conversion Tracking

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

Everyone wants to stretch their AdWords budget to get the best ROI for their money, but how do you know that you are performing at your best? Google includes a tool in standard Adwords accounts called conversion tracking. Put simply, conversion tracking allows you to monitor a user’s actions on your website and links that data to your AdWords stats in terms of budget. You can setup several different types of actions, which are goals that you want your user to accomplish, such as signing up for a newsletter, clicking on a button, completing a purchase, or submitting a form. The action types are:

  • Leads
  • Signup
  • Purchase / Sale
  • View of a Key Page
  • Other

Setting up the conversion tracking is relatively straightforward. Once you create and name your action you are provided with a snippet of Javascript to place in your page. Results are tracked immediately and can be monitored at the campaign, ad group, and keyword levels. Once enough results are calculated, you will be able to see how much it costs you for a user to take an action. For example, in a week if you have 100 clicks at $2.00 / click and 15 conversions then each conversion will have cost you $13.33. Using this information can become a metric for performance. You can work on  decreasing your cost per click, increasing your Quality Score, and reducing you cost per conversion.

Good Luck!

[What is AdWords]

—Alan

Google Adwords and Keyword Quality Scores

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

A customer has asked you to create a Pay-Per-Click (PPC) advertising campaign to drive traffic to their web site. You do your competitive keyword analysis, research the industry, and develop a targeted plan that should theoretically work wonders. But it doesn’t. What happened? Have you looked at your keywords quality score? In Google Adwords each keyword is assigned a numerical value out of 10 that affects how much you are paying per click. If you are scoring 4 / 10 or lower then you have some work to do. Google calculates your quality score for each keyword based on several factors including  historical clickthrough rate (CTR),  the quality of your landing page content,  and the relevance of the keywords to your ads in the keyword’s ad group. Improving your score for a specific keyword can mean a better return on your adwords budget. In other words, less money for more traffic. Google isn’t stupid. If you are selling real estate and your keywords are for hair care and your ads are targeted for electronics then your quality score is likely to be low. Everything flows from the keywords so be sure that the keywords you are using are actually contained within the content of your landing page and then create ads that are interesting and concise (not like you have a choice with brevity).  If one ad doesn’t perform try several variations and weed out the weak ones.

Good Luck!

—Alan