Top 5 Landing Page Mistakes

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Top 5 Landing Page Mistakes

  
  
  

This Friday starts our 6 week session on Landing Pages. Before we get started you should understand a few of the biggest mistakes businesses make when creating landing pages that can drastically decrease conversion rate. top 5 landing page mistakes

1) Keeping Navigation

You’ve done the hard work of getting your visitors to your landing page, so why give them the opportunity to leave? Removing the navigation has been proven to increase conversion rates as visitors have less options and a more direct course of action on the page. The single option available on a landing page should be to complete the form.

I know you might be thinking “Well, don’t I want them to be able to navigate throughout my site?” Of course you do! But, you can bring back the navigation on a thank you page after they fill out your conversion form.

*You may hear us refer to removing the page's navigation as “going naked” during Content Camp webinars and in Success articles.

2) Form is Below the Fold

A landing page visitor shouldn't need to scroll down the page to see the form.  Putting the form above the fold makes it clearly visible for the visitor once the page loads. In the vast majority of cases the visitor will be expecting to see this form and will not want to go digging for it by scrolling down the page.

3) Too Many Form Fields

The rule of thumb for the number of fields in a form is "get all the information you absolutely need, and nothing more".  The fields you display should allow you to either follow up or qualify the lead. The less information you ask for, the higher the form's conversion rate will be. You’ll have the opportunity to find out more details on the lead through lead nurturing.

You can also experiment by making certain, more valuable fields required while making others optional. Still, the number of form fields matters when a visitor makes a decision to start the process and less is always better.  

4) No Image

Just like with blogging, an image is an essential piece to a landing page’s success. A relevant graphic helps draw the attention of the visitor while reinforcing the value of whatever your offer is. Like the saying goes, a picture is worth 1,000 words and in many cases can make the difference between someone being just a visitor or an actionable lead.

5) Doesn’t Pass the Blink Test

If a visitor can’t easily understand whatever your offer is within five seconds, your landing page isn’t passing the blink test. Most landing pages don't pass the blink test because of an overload of unnecessary information on the page that isn’t critical for conversion. Just like forms, less is more and concise and bulleted details can accomplish the goal of demonstrating the value of your offer.  

What are some other mistakes you have seen on landing pages? What are some creative ways a landing pages conversion rate can be increased?

landing page mistakes

 

 

 

 

 


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Comments

@Lawrence: We're going to be creating a landing page during the second webinar on the 18th using the landing page wizard. 
 
See you around the campfire!
Posted @ Friday, December 09, 2011 3:12 PM by Mark Kilens
Billy, 
Great advice. I wonder how many Hubspoters take advantage of the landing page creator. It leads you through all of these best practices, step-by-step. 
 
Even an old guy with a bad memory like me can't get lost.  
 
Looking forward to camp. I'll bring the virtual marsh mellows.
Posted @ Friday, December 09, 2011 3:12 PM by lawrence berezin
Use the old standard- Keep it simple. No fluff just stay on topic. Use short sentences and a video is helpful as well. Give out freebies. I may have to check out webinar on the 18th-sounds informative!
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by Jeff A. Jones
@Lawrence: We're going to be creating a landing page during the second webinar on the 18th using the landing page wizard. 
 
See you around the campfire!
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by Mark Kilens
Billy, 
Great advice. I wonder how many Hubspoters take advantage of the landing page creator. It leads you through all of these best practices, step-by-step. 
 
Even an old guy with a bad memory like me can't get lost.  
 
Looking forward to camp. I'll bring the virtual marsh mellows.
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by lawrence berezin
Good information. The menu navigation has always been a point of discussion in the past. With those stats - discussion ended. No menu navigation!!
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by Ross Davis
@Jody: Great question! Jeanne shared some data with me and according to a MarketingSherpa study, landing pages that don't have menu navigation see a 10% to 50% increase in the page’s conversion rate. 
 
It also depends on how the page is being used. If you're sending people to a landing page from an email marketing campaign, paid search, or call to action then you definitely don’t want to show the navigation. But, if you’re using the page as part of a search engine marketing (SEM) campaign then it could be appropriate to show the navigation. 
 
We’ll definitely talk more about this during the webinar series. 
 
Thanks for bringing it up! 
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by Mark Kilens
Thanks for the explanation on removing the navigation to the landing page.
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by Stephen Crewson
I'm curious what research you have to indicate that the 'naked' (no nave) landing pages do better? Are there statistics to validate this?  
 
I've seen pages created both ways perform well - more because the content was appropriate than whether navigation was stripped.  
 
Thanks for your insights. 
Jody
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by Jody Raines
@Dan You can submit a landing page for review under Content Review Requests. Looking forward to having you again!
Posted @ Tuesday, January 03, 2012 7:17 AM by Billy MacDonald
Great info, very helpful
Posted @ Tuesday, April 23, 2013 8:43 AM by Ryan Todd
Comments have been closed for this article.