Saturday, May 28, 2016

The Impact of the Landing Page on Website Performance




In measuring the performance of your website it is important to understand the characteristics and behaviors of the user during a website engagement. By using specific metrics a marketer can create an understanding of the user intent and their experience as they navigate from a source and as they enter a website. These metrics can be classified as Visit Characterization and they include a range of specific measures which provide insight on the effectiveness of your website and whether the site is accomplishing your goals and objectives (Reed College, 2016). Visit Characterization provides awareness on where website visits are originating and through what sources they are being referred from other sites or digital media platforms. These measures also include an understanding on how and where visitors are entering your website. 


Visit Characterization metrics include:
  • ·        Entry Page
  • ·        Landing Page
  • ·        Exit Page
  • ·        Visit Duration
  • ·        Referrer
  • ·        Page Referrer
  • ·        Session Referrer
  • ·        Visitor Referrer
  • ·        Click-through
  • ·        Click-through Rate/Ratio

Each one of these measures provides insight on specific characteristics of a given website visit. Analyzing these events can give marketers a better understanding of consumer interests through the actions they have taken. One of the most critical components of the start of a visit is the landing page as it often plays a key role in attracting new visitors to a website as it is often the first impression in a website visit.

The Landing Page

To build website traffic marketers will often create campaigns or initiate other marketing efforts to attract and engage users.  Landing pages are a significant tool for any promotion specific marketing particularly for marketing efforts where a measured ROI is essential. Landing pages are a fundamental part of a successful inbound marketing strategy and can be linked directly to a campaigns metrics and result.


Landing pages are often the foundation of lead generation efforts. Creating unique landing pages which are designed to appeal directly to a target audience enables marketers to link website performance to a specific marketing effort (Hussain, 2013). As a result unique campaign specific landing pages should be designed and utilized every time a marketing effort is planned to build traffic to your site.




          Key Landing Page Features

In developing marketing campaigns landing pages are often optimized for specific keywords, themes, or calls to action. Since landing pages represent a touch point or an opportunity to present a message to the visitor, they have a particular importance in conveying information that appeals to the target audience and motivates the visitor to become more engaged with the site (WAS, 2006).

          The Headline

There are several areas to consider when designing a landing page to maximize the opportunity to attract new visitors and build traffic to your website. Among the key features includes the page headline. The landing page headline is one of the first things a visitor will see and read. The headline should relate to the offer that is on your landing page. It should also convey benefits and very quickly communicate what problem this page can solve. An effective headline should clearly and concisely convey the intent of the page and must compel the user to take a closer look.

          Measure, Test, Adjust

As you analyze the results of your web traffic and realize adjustment to your web landing page is needed it is often a simple task to make changes. For example if click through rates are not generating the desired activity. One of the best features about marketing in the digital environment is the ability to quickly make adjustments to a website and modify campaigns as you comprehend and learn what users like and what they do not like. Making a link bolder and more visible may make a significant difference in improving a click through rate (Sloan, 2013).  

As marketers modify the content of their web landing page they can make changes to items such as text, images and call to action to see what resonates most with users. Marketers can also conduct A/B testing by creating two different site designs and testing them against each other (Dane, 2015). A/B testing can be effective when used against a baseline control and compared to a variety of test samples to improve response rates. Test samples can include modifying the call to action or smaller subtle changes such as changing buttons or colors or even modifying the copy slightly.

Monitoring and measuring the performance of your website through website analytics provides marketers with an opportunity to understand what is happening on their site and a strong analysis program can help provide insight on what is working and what needs adjustment. The landing page is but one component in a marketing effort and an overall website experience. Developing an effective landing page however can often significantly impact the success of a specific marketing effort and greatly assist in accomplishing your marketing and website objectives.




Works Cited

Dane, J. (2015, December 21). 3 landing page best practices debunked. Retrieved from Optimezly: https://blog.optimizely.com/2015/12/21/landing-page-best-practices-debunked/
Hussain, A. (2013, April 12). 7 key design tips for high-converting landing pages. Retrieved from Hub Spot: http://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/7-landing-page-design-tips#sm.0001y364vfrnyd2fqfq1dfnm0te63
Reed College. (2016). Week 1 lesson: intro to web analytics and the basics of web analytics. Retrieved from West Virginia University: https://ecampus.wvu.edu/webapps/blackboard/execute/displayLearningUnit?course_id=_64077_1&content_id=_2976590_1&framesetWrapped=true
Sloan, E. (2013, November 14). 3 essential ingredients of landing page headlines that convert. Retrieved from Unbounce: http://unbounce.com/landing-page-examples/successful-landing-page-headlines/
WAS. (2006). Web analytics “big three” definitions. Retrieved from Web Analytics Association: http://www.digitalanalyticsassociation.org/Files/PDF_standards/WebAnalyticsDefinitionsBig3.pdf




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