I have created a lot of landing pages since I joined the internet marketing community. I was trying to keep track for awhile and eventually gave up - my last count was somewhere around 5 hundred individual landing pages that I designed, maintained, and tested. ..all for various employers, companies, and clients.
The reason that these pages were so important was because they were the gateway from all of our internet marketing efforts. If you clicked on a banner, search listing, affiliate link, press release, or anything else we used for online promotion - you were taken to a unique landing page. We even tracked print response by driving activity online. There was no campaign we ran that did not have its own landing page to test and measure its success.
So at this point I can say that I am somewhat knowledgeable about landing pages. Lets have some fun and check out two LED sign manufacturers that use pay-per-click advertising to drive traffic.
Here were the top two listings...
LED Signs by BigBrite
Free Shipping, Low Price Guarantee
Order Signs Online or Call
BigBrite.com
Watchfire Digital Outdoor
LED billboards designed and
manufactured to last. Free paper.
www.WatchfireDigitalOutdoor.com
(I removed the google tracking so it wont charge them if you click)

The first problem is that BigBrite pushes everyone to the homepage. While there are instances where this may be suitable in this one it is not. None of the information from the ad is reinforced on the homepage where there is no coherent message other than to BUY NOW!
If you aren't ready to purchase - then what? I guess you can aimlessly navigate around the site to find what you are looking for but my guess is that you would most likely leave before you found it.

This is a landing page that reinforces the message from the ad - encouraging those visitors to sign up for the white paper. They aren't trying to sell you a sign right away - instead they want to help you inform yourself on making the decision - and open the line of communication. They realize that you aren't going to pick up the phone right now and tell them to "Sign me up! And while your at it heres my credit card info!" Their interest is to persuade you over time to make the purchase. (BTW, these signs are NOT cheap)
Watchfire also minimizes noise on the landing page by removing all navigation and links. While they do not intend for you to buy today they still need to capture some return from your visit so they are not taking any chances. You can only take the action they intend. This is a fair trade since they are not bombarding you with anything you didn't already expect from the ad.
When thinking about landing pages keep in mind that most of the traffic coming to your site are first-time visitors, all coming at different stages of the buying process. Very few are looking for the immediate purchase so understanding that most likely wont sell to them on this visit will probably drastically change your approach. If you look at this as more of an opportunity to begin a relationship with your customer you will most likely see more long term rewards with a more responsive customer when you go to re-sell, up sell, or cross sell.
5 comments:
Excellent post on landing pages! The main "mistake" that clients who come to me for help with their PPC campaigns have been making on their own is in using their home page as the landing page for their ad - instead of creating customized landing pages for each targeted ad. This is great info!
Caroline
Thanks for the post! I couldn't agree more and would be remiss if I didn't point my audience to one of your great articles about PPC and landing pages - its a must read!
Hello! The one thing I noticed about the two sites you are comparing is, that the first "Big Brite" is mainly selling "Indoor LED Signs" which is a huge difference "price wise" (and that they can be ship via UPS etc.) to their outdoor counterpart. The second site it seems are pushing the outdoor signs. Big Brite is an online ecommerce site, while the other is aimed at selling outdoor signs, and it dosen't even seem that they sell "online".
I should have made that clearer. While I did not want to imply a complete apples to apples comparison I did want to show that inconsistent ad messaging as well as pushing traffic to the homepage is an example of bad practice. Especially since its an e-commerce site, the opportunity to drop visitors to a custom landing page is a huge "missed opportunity".
I am somehow familiar about landing pages but with the help of this article I got to know a lot more about it. Thank you for this awesome detail about landing page design.
landing page optimization
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