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#3 The Safest Place
16 octobre 2011, par kent1
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Revolution of Open-source and film making towards open film making
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Autres articles (81)
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26 avril 2011, par kent1The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
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13 septembre 2013Jolie sélection multiple
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Il suffit pour cela d’activer le plugin Chosen (Configuration générale du site > Gestion des plugins), puis de configurer le plugin (Les squelettes > Chosen) en activant l’utilisation de Chosen dans le site public et en spécifiant les éléments de formulaires à améliorer, par exemple select[multiple] pour les listes à sélection multiple (...)
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What Is Incrementality & Why Is It Important in Marketing ?
26 mars 2024, par ErinImagine this : you just launched your latest campaign and it was a major success.
You blew last month’s results out of the water.
You combined a variety of tactics, channels and ad creatives to make it work.
Now, it’s time to build the next campaign.
The only issue ?
You don’t know what made it successful or how much your recent efforts impacted the results.
You’ve been building your brand for years. You’ve built up a variety of marketing pillars that are working for you. So, how do you know how much of your campaign is from years of effort or a new tactic you just implemented ?
The key is incrementality.
This is a way to properly attribute the right weight to your marketing tactics.
In this article, we break down what incrementality is in marketing, how it differs from traditional attribution and how you can calculate and track it to grow your business.
What is incrementality in marketing ?
Incrementality in marketing is growth that can be directly credited to a marketing effort above and beyond the success of the branding.
It looks at how much a specific tactic positively impacted a campaign on top of overall branding and marketing strategies.
For example, this could be how much a specific tactic, campaign or channel helped increase conversions, email sign-ups or organic traffic.
The primary purpose of incrementally in marketing is to more accurately determine the impact a single marketing variable had on the success of a project.
It removes every other factor and isolates the specific method to help marketers double down on that strategy or move on to new tactics.
With Matomo, you can track conversions simply. With our last non-direct channel attribution system, you’ll be able to quickly see what channels are converting (and which aren’t) so you can gain insights into incrementality.
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Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
How incrementality differs from attribution
In marketing and advertising, it’s crucial to understand what tactics and activities drive growth.
Incrementality and attribution help marketers and business owners understand what efforts impact their results.
But they’re not the same.
Here’s how they differ :
Incrementality explained
Incrementality measures how much a specific marketing campaign or activity drives additional sales or growth.
Simply put, it’s analysing the difference between having never implemented the campaign (or tactic or channel) in the first place versus the impact of the activity.
In other words, how much revenue would you have generated this month without campaign A ?
And how much additional revenue did you generate directly due to campaign A ?
The reality is that dozens of factors impact revenue and growth.
You aren’t just pouring your marketing into one specific channel or campaign at a time.
Chances are, you’ve got your hands on several marketing initiatives like SEO, PPC, organic social media, paid search, email marketing and more.
Beyond that, you’ve built a brand with a not-so-tangible impact on your recurring revenue.
So, the question is, if you took away your new campaign, would you still be generating the same amount of revenue ?
And, if you add in that campaign, how much additional revenue and growth did it directly create ?
That is incrementality. It’s how much a campaign went above and beyond to add new revenue that wouldn’t have been there otherwise.
So, how does attribution play into all of this ?
Attribution explained
Attribution is simply the process of assigning credit for a conversion to a particular marketing touchpoint.
While incrementality is about narrowing down the overall revenue impact from a particular campaign, attribution seeks to point to a specific channel to attribute a sale.
For example, in any given marketing campaign, you have a few marketing tactics.
Let’s say you’re launching a limited-time product.
You might have :
- Paid ads via Facebook and Instagram
- A blog post sharing how the product works
- Organic social media posts on Instagram and TikTok
- Email waitlist campaign building excitement around the upcoming product
- SMS campaigns to share a limited-time discount
So, when the time comes for the sale launch, and you generate $30,000 in revenue, what channel gets the credit ?
Do you give credit to the paid ads on Facebook ? What about Instagram ? They got people to follow you and got them on the email waitlist.
Do you give credit to email for reminding people of the upcoming sale ? What about your social media posts that reminded people there ?
Or do you credit your SMS campaign that shared a limited-time discount ?
Which channel is responsible for the sale ?
This is what attribution is all about.
It’s about giving credit where credit is due.
The reason you want to attribute credit ? So you know what’s working and can double down your efforts on the high-impact marketing activities and channels.
Leveraging incrementality and attribution together
Incrementality and attribution aren’t competing methods of analysing what’s working.
They’re complementary to one another and go hand in hand.
You can (and should) use attribution and incrementality in your marketing to help understand what activities, campaigns and channels are making the biggest incremental impact on your business growth.
Why it’s important to measure incrementality
Incrementality is crucial to measure if you want to pour your time, money and effort into the right marketing channels and tactics.
Here are a few reasons why you need to measure incrementality if you want to be successful with your marketing and grow your business :
1. Accurate data
If you want to be an effective marketer, you need to be accurate.
You can’t blindly start marketing campaigns in hopes that you will sell many products or services.
That’s not how it works.
Sure, you’ll probably make some sales here and there. But to truly be effective with your work, you must measure your activities and channels correctly.
Incrementality helps you see how each channel, tactic or campaign made a difference in your marketing.
Matomo gives you 100% accurate data on your website activities. Unlike Google Analytics, we don’t use data sampling which limits how much data is analysed.
2. Helps you to best determine the right tactics for success
How can you plan your marketing strategy if you don’t know what’s working ?
Think about it.
You’ll be blindly sailing the seas without a compass telling you where to go.
Measuring incrementality in your marketing tactics and channels helps you understand the best tactics.
It shows you what’s moving the needle (and what’s not).
Once you can see the most impactful tactics and channels, you can forge future campaigns that you know will work.
3. Allows you to get the most out of your marketing budget
Since incrementality sheds light on what’s moving your business forward, you can confidently implement your efforts on the right tactics and channels.
Guess what happens when you start doubling down on the most impactful activities ?
You start increasing revenue, decreasing ad spend and getting a higher return on investment.
The result is that you will get more out of your marketing budget.
Not only will you boost revenue, but you’ll also be able to boost profit margins since you’re not wasting money on ineffective tactics.
4. Increase traffic
When you see what’s truly working in your business, you can figure out what channels and tactics you should be working.
Incrementality helps you understand not only what your best revenue tactics are but also what channels and campaigns are bringing in the most traffic.
When you can increase traffic, you can increase your overall marketing impact.
5. Increase revenue
Finally, with increased traffic, the inevitable result is more conversions.
More conversions mean more revenue.
Incrementality gives you a vision of the tactics and channels that are converting the best.
If you can see that your SMS campaigns are driving the best ROI, then you know that you’ll grow your revenue by pouring more into acquiring SMS leads.
By calculating incrementality regularly, you can rest assured that you’re only investing time and money into the most impactful activities in terms of revenue generation.
How to calculate and test incrementality in marketing
Now that you understand how incrementality works and why it’s important to calculate, the question is :
How do you calculate and conduct incrementality tests ?
Given the ever-changing marketing landscape, it’s crucial to understand how to calculate and test incrementally in your business.
If you’re not sure how incrementality testing works, then follow these simple steps :
Your first step to get an incrementality measurement is to conduct what’s referred to as a “holdout test.”
It’s not a robust test, but it’s an easy way to get the ball rolling with incrementality.
Here’s how it works :
- Choose your target audience.
With Matomo’s segmentation feature, you can get pretty specific with your target audience, such as :
- Visitors from the UK
- Returning visitors
- Mobile users
- Visitors who clicked on a specific ad
- Split your audience into two groups :
- Control group (60% of the segment)
- Test group (40% of the segment)
- Target the control group with your marketing tactic (the simpler the tactic, the better).
- Target the test group with a different marketing tactic.
- Analyse the results. The difference between the control and test groups is the incremental lift in results. The new marketing tactic is either more effective or not.
- Repeat the test with a new control group (with an updated tactic) and a new test group (with a new tactic).
Matomo can help you analyse the results of your campaigns in our Goals feature. Set up business objectives so you can easily track different goals like conversions.
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Here’s an example of how this incrementality testing could look in real life.
Imagine a fitness retailer wants to start showing Facebook ads in their marketing mix.
The marketing manager decided to conduct a holdout test. If we match our example below with the steps above, this is how the holdout test might look.
- They choose people who’ve purchased free weights in the past as their target audience (see how that segmentation works ?).
- They split this segment into a control group and a test group.
- For this test, they direct their regular marketing campaign to the control group (60% of the segment). The campaign includes promoting a 20% off sale on organic social media posts, email marketing, and SMS.
- They direct their regular marketing campaign plus Facebook ads to the test group (40% of the segment).
- They ran the campaign for three weeks with the goal for sale conversions and noticed :
- The control group had a 1.5% conversion rate.
- The test group (with Facebook ads) had a 2.1% conversion rate.
- In this scenario, they could see the group who saw the Facebook ads convert better.
- They created the following formula to measure the incremental lift of the Facebook ads :
- Here’s how the calculation works out : (2.1% – 1.5%) / 1.5% = 40%
The Facebook ads had a positive 40% incremental lift in conversions during the sale.
Incrementality testing isn’t a one-and-done process, though.
While this first test is a great sign for the marketing manager, it doesn’t mean they should immediately throw all their money into Facebook ads.
They should continue conducting tests to verify the initial test.
Use Matomo to track incrementality today
Incrementality can give you insights into exactly what’s working in your marketing (and what’s not) so you can design proven strategies to grow your business.
If you want more help tracking your marketing efforts, try Matomo today.
Our web analytics and behaviour analytics platform gives you firsthand data on your website visitors you can use to craft effective marketing strategies.
Matomo provides 100% accurate data. Unlike other major web analytics platforms, we don’t do data sampling. What you see is what’s really going on in your website. That way, you can make more informed decisions for better results.
At Matomo, we take privacy very seriously and include several advanced privacy protections to ensure you are in full control.
As a fully compliant web analytics solution, we’re fully compliant with some of the world’s strictest privacy regulations like GDPR. With Matomo, you get peace of mind knowing you can make data-driven decisions while also being compliant.
If you’re ready to launch a data-driven marketing strategy today and grow your business, get started with our 21-day free trial now. No credit card required.
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21 day free trial. No credit card required.
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Attribution Tracking (What It Is and How It Works)
23 février 2024, par ErinFacebook, TikTok, Google, email, display ads — which one is best to grow your business ? There’s one proven way to figure it out : attribution tracking.
Marketing attribution allows you to see which channels are producing the best results for your marketing campaigns.
In this guide, we’ll show you what attribution tracking is, why it’s important and how you can leverage it to accelerate your marketing success.
What is attribution tracking ?
By 2026, the global digital marketing industry is projected to reach $786.2 billion.
With nearly three-quarters of a trillion U.S. dollars being poured into digital marketing every year, there’s no doubt it dominates traditional marketing.
The question is, though, how do you know which digital channels to use ?
By measuring your marketing efforts with attribution tracking.
So, what is attribution tracking ?
Attribution tracking is where you use software to keep track of different channels and campaign efforts to determine which channel you should attribute conversion to.
In other words, you can (and should) use attribution tracking to analyse which channels are pushing the needle and which ones aren’t.
By tracking your marketing efforts, you’ll be able to accurately measure the scale of impact each of your channels, campaigns and touchpoints have on a customer’s purchasing decision.
If you don’t track your attribution, you’ll end up blindly pouring time, money, and effort into activities that may or may not be helpful.
Attribution tracking simply gives you insight into what you’re doing right as a marketer — and what you’re doing wrong.
By understanding which efforts and channels are driving conversions and revenue, you’ll be able to properly allocate resources toward winning channels to double down on growth.
Matomo lets you track attribution across various channels. Whether you’re looking to track your conversions through organic, referral websites, campaigns, direct traffic, or social media, you can see all your conversions in one place.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Why attribution tracking is important
Attribution tracking is crucial to succeed with your marketing since it shows you your most valuable channels.
It takes the guesswork out of your efforts.
You don’t need to scratch your head wondering what made your campaigns a success (or a failure).
While most tools show you last click attribution by default, using attribution tracking, or marketing attribution, you can track revenue and conversions for each touchpoint.
For example, a Facebook ad might have no led to a conversion immediately. But, maybe the visitor returned to your website two weeks later through your email campaign. Attribution tracking will give credit over longer periods of time to see the bigger picture of how your marketing channels are impacting your overall performance.
Here are five reasons you need to be using attribution tracking in your business today :
1. Measure channel performance
The most obvious way attribution tracking helps is to show you how well each channel performs.
When you’re using a variety of marketing channels to reach your audience, you have to know what’s actually doing well (and what’s not).
This means having clarity on the performance of your :
- Emails
- Google Ads
- Facebook Ads
- Social media marketing
- Search engine optimisation (SEO)
- And more
Attribution tracking allows you to measure each channel’s ROI and identify how much each channel impacted your campaigns.
It gives you a more accurate picture of the performance of each channel and each campaign.
With it, you can easily break down your channels by how much they drove sales, conversions, signups, or other actions.
With this information, you can then understand where to further allocate your resources to fuel growth.
2. See campaign performance over longer periods of time
When you start tracking your channel performance with attribution tracking, you’ll gain new insights into how well your channels and campaigns are performing.
The best part — you don’t just get to see recent performance.
You get to track your campaign results over weeks or months.
For example, if someone found you through Google by searching a question that your blog had an answer to, but they didn’t convert, your traditional tracking strategy would discount SEO.
But, if that same person clicked a TikTok ad you placed three weeks later, came back, and converted — SEO would receive some attribution on the conversion.
Using an attribution tracking tool like Matomo can help paint a holistic view of how your marketing is really doing from channel to channel over the long run.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
3. Increase revenue
Attribution tracking has one incredible benefit for marketers : optimised marketing spend.
When you begin looking at how well your campaigns and your channels are performing, you’ll start to see what’s working.
Attribution tracking gives you clarity into the performance of campaigns since it’s not just looking at the first time someone clicks through to your site. It’s looking at every touchpoint a customer made along the way to a conversion.
By understanding what channels are most effective, you can pour more resources like time, money and labour into those effective channels.
By doubling down on the winning channels, you’ll be able to grow like never before.
Rather than trying to “diversify” your marketing efforts, lean into what’s working.
This is one of the key strategies of an effective marketer to maximise your campaign returns and experience long-term success in terms of revenue.
4. Improve profit margins
The final benefit to attribution tracking is simple : you’ll earn more profit.
Think about it this way : let’s say you’re putting 50% of your marketing spend into Facebook ads and 50% of your spend into email marketing.
You do this for one year, allocating $500,000 to Facebook and $500,000 to email.
Then, you start tracking attribution.
You find that your Facebook ads are generating $900,000 in revenue.
That’s a 1,800% return on your investment.
Not bad, right ?
Well, after tracking your attribution, you see what your email revenue is.
In the past year, you generated $1.7 million in email revenue.
That’s a 3,400% return on your investment (close to the average return of email marketing across all industries).
In this scenario, you can see that you’re getting nearly twice as much of a return on your marketing spend with email.
So, the following year, you decide to go for a 75/25 split.
Instead of putting $500,000 into both email and Facebook ads and email, you put $750,000 into email and $250,000 into Facebook ads.
You’re still diversifying, but you’re doubling down on what’s working best.
The result is that you’ll be able to get more revenue by investing the same amount of money, leaving you with higher profit margins.
Different types of marketing attribution tracking
There are several types of attribution tracking models in marketing.
Depending on your goals, your business and your preferred method, there are a variety of types of attribution tracking you can use.
Here are the six main types of attribution tracking :
1. Last interaction
Last interaction attribution model is also called “last touch.”
It’s one of the most common types of attribution. The way it works is to give 100% of the credit to the final channel a customer interacted with before they converted into a customer.
This could be through a paid ad, direct traffic, or organic search.
One potential drawback of last interaction is that it doesn’t factor in other channels that may have assisted in the conversion. However, this model can work really well depending on the business.
2. First interaction
This is the opposite of the previous model.
First interaction, or “first touch,” is all about the first interaction a customer has with your brand.
It gives 100% of the credit to the channel (i.e. a link clicked from a social media post). And it doesn’t report or attribute anything else to another channel that someone may have interacted with in your marketing mix.
For example, it won’t attribute the conversion or revenue if the visitor then clicked on an Instagram ad and converted. All credit would be given to the first touch which in this case would be the social media post.
The first interaction is a good model to use at the top of your funnel to help establish which channels are bringing leads in from outside your audience.
3. Last non-direct
Another model is called the last non-direct attribution model.
This model seeks to exclude direct traffic and assigns 100% credit for a conversion to the final channel a customer interacted with before becoming a customer, excluding clicks from direct traffic.
For instance, if someone first comes to your website from an emai campaignl, and then, a week later, directly visits and buys a product, the email campaign gets all the credit for the sale.
This attribution model tells a bit more about the whole sales process, shedding some more light on what other channels may have influenced the purchase decision.
4. Linear
Another common attribution model is linear.
This model distributes completely equal credit across every single touchpoint (that’s tracked).
Imagine someone comes to your website in different ways : first, they find it through a Google search, then they click a link in an email from your campaign the next day, followed by visiting from a Facebook post a few days later, and finally, a week later, they come from a TikTok ad.
Here’s how the attribution is divided among these sources :
- 25% Organic
- 25% Email
- 25% Facebook
- 25% TikTok ad
This attirubtion model provides a balanced perspective on the contribution of various sources to a user’s journey on your website.
5. Position-based
Position-based attribution is when you give 40% credit to both the first and last touchpoints and 20% credit is spread between the touchpoints in between.
This model is preferred if you want to identify the initial touchpoint that kickstarted a conversion journey and the final touchpoint that sealed the deal.
The downside is that you don’t gain much insight into the middle of the customer journey, which can make it hard to make effective decisions.
For example, someone may have been interacting with your email newsletter for seven weeks, which allowed them to be nurtured and build a relationship with you.
But that relationship and trust-building effort will be overlooked by the blog post that brought them in and the social media ad that eventually converted them.
6. Time decay
The final attribution model is called time decay attribution.
This is all about giving credit based on the timing of the interactions someone had with your brand.
For example, the touchpoints that just preceded the sale get the highest score, while the first touchpoints get the lowest score.
For example, let’s use that scenario from above with the linear model :
- 25% SEO
- 25% Email
- 25% Facebook ad
- 25% Organic TikTok
But, instead of splitting credit by 25% to each channel, you weigh the ones closer to the sale with more credit.
Instead, time decay may look at these same channels like this :
- 5% SEO (6 weeks ago)
- 20% Email (3 weeks ago)
- 30% Facebook ad (1 week ago)
- 45% Organic TikTok (2 days ago)
One downside is that it underestimates brand awareness campaigns. And, if you have longer sales cycles, it also isn’t the most accurate, as mid-stage nurturing and relationship building are underlooked.
Leverage Matomo : A marketing attribution tool
Attribution tracking is a crucial part of leading an effective marketing strategy.
But it’s impossible to do this without the right tools.
A marketing attribution tool can give you insights into your best-performing channels automatically.
One of the best marketing attribution tools available is Matomo, a web analytics tool that helps you understand what’s going on with your website and different channels in one easy-to-use dashboard.
With Matomo, you get marketing attribution as a plug-in or within Matomo On-Premise or for free in Matomo Cloud.
The best part is it’s all done with crystal-clear data. Matomo gives you 100% accurate data since it doesn’t use data sampling on any plans like Google Analytics.
To start tracking attribution today, try Matomo’s 21-day free trial. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.
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5-Step Conversion Rate Optimisation Checklist
27 octobre 2023, par ErinDid you know the average conversion rate across e-commerce businesses in August 2023 was 2.03% ? In the past year, conversion rates have increased by 0.39%.
Make no mistake. Just because conversion rates are higher this year doesn’t make it any easier to convert visitors.
Cracking the secrets to improving conversion rates is crucial to running a successful website or business.
Your site is the digital headquarters all of your marketing efforts funnel toward. With every visitor comes an opportunity to convert them into a lead (or sale).
Keep reading if you want to improve your lead generation or convert more visitors into customers. In this article, we’ll break down a simple five-step conversion rate optimisation checklist you need to follow to maximise your conversions.
What is conversion rate optimisation ?
Before we dive into the steps you need to follow to optimise your conversions, let’s back up and talk conversion rate optimisation.
Conversion rate optimisation, or CRO for short, is the process of increasing the number of website visitors who take a specific action.
In most cases, this means :
- Turning more visitors into leads by getting them to join an email list
- Convincing a visitor to fill out a contact form for a consultation
- Converting a visitor into a paying customer by purchasing a product
However, conversion rate optimisation can be used for any action you want someone to take on your site. That could be downloading a free guide, clicking on a specific link, commenting on a blog post or sharing your website with a friend.
Why following a CRO checklist is important
Conversion rate optimisation is both a valuable practice and an absolute necessity for any business or marketer. While it can be a bit complex, especially when you start diving into A/B testing, there are a variety of advantages :
Get the most out of your efforts
When all is said and done, if you can’t convert the traffic already coming to your site, dumping a ton of time and resources into traffic generation (whether paid or organic) won’t solve your problem.
Instead, you need to look at the root of the problem : your conversion rate.
By doubling down on conversions and following a conversion rate optimisation checklist, you’ll get the greatest result for the effort you’re already putting into your site.
Increase audience size
To increase your audience size, you need to increase your traffic, right ? Not exactly.
While your audience may be considered people who have seen your content or follow you on social media, a high-value audience is one you can market to directly on an ongoing basis.
Your website gives you the playground to convert visitors into high-value audience members. This is done by creating conversion-focused email signup forms and optimising your website for sale conversions.
Generate more sales
Boosting sales through CRO is the core objective. By optimising product pages, simplifying the checkout process, and employing persuasive strategies, you can systematically increase your sales and maximise the value of your existing traffic.
Reduce customer acquisition costs (CAC)
With conversion optimisation, you can convert a higher percentage of your website visitors into paid customers. Even if you don’t spend more on acquiring new customers, you’ll be able to generate more sales overall.
The result is that your customer acquisition costs will drop, allowing you to increase your total acquisitions to your customer base.
Improve profitability
While reduced customer acquisition costs mean you can pour more money into customer acquisition at a cheaper rate, you could simply maintain your costs while driving sales, resulting in increased profitability.
If you can spend the same amount on acquisition but bring in 20% more customers (due to using a CRO checklist), your profit margins will automatically increase.
5-step CRO checklist
To double down on conversion rate optimisation, you need to follow a checklist to ensure you don’t miss any major optimisation opportunities.
The checklist below is designed to help you systematically optimise your website, ensuring you make the most of your traffic by continuously refining its performance.
1. Forms
Analysing and optimising your website’s forms is crucial for enhancing conversion rates. Understanding how visitors interact with your forms can uncover pain points and help you streamline the conversion process.
Ever wonder where your visitors drop off on your forms ? It could be due to lengthy, time-consuming fields or overly complex forms, leading to a frustrating user experience and lower conversion rate. Whatever the reason, you need the right tools to uncover the root of the issue.
By leveraging Form Analytics, you gain powerful insights into user behaviour and can identify areas where people may encounter difficulties.
Form Analytics provides the insights to discover :
- Average time spent on each field : This metric helps you understand where users may be struggling or spending too much time. By optimising these fields, you can streamline the form, reduce user frustration and increase conversions.
- Identifying drop-off points : Understanding where users drop off provides insights into which form fields may need improvement. Addressing these drop-off points can increase the conversion rate.
- Unneeded fields with a high blank submission rate : Discovering fields left blank upon submission can highlight areas for simplification. By eliminating unnecessary fields, you can create more concise and user-friendly forms that may entice more visitors to engage with the form.
Hear first-hand how Concrete CMS achieve 3x more leads with insights from Form Analytics.
These data-driven insights empower you to optimise your forms, remove guesswork and settle debates about form design. By fine-tuning and streamlining your forms, you can ensure a smoother path to conversion and maximise your success in converting more visitors.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
2. Copywriting
Another crucial element you need to test is your copywriting. Your copywriting is the foundation of your entire website. It helps communicate to your audience what you have to offer and why they need to take action.
You need to ensure you have a good offer. This isn’t just the product or service you’re putting out there. It’s the complete package. It includes the product, rewards, a unique guarantee, customer service, packaging and promotions.
Start testing your copy with your headlines. Look at the headers and test different phrases to convert more potential customers into paying customers.
Here are a few tips to optimise your copy for more conversions :
- Ensure copy is relevant to your headline and vice versa.
- Write short words, short sentences and short paragraphs.
- Use bullets and subheaders to make the copy easy to skim.
- Don’t focus too heavily on optimising for search engines (SEO). Instead, write for humans.
- Focus on writing about benefits, not features.
- Write about how your offer solves the pain points of your audience.
You can test your copy in several areas once you’ve begun testing your headers – your subheaders, body copy, signup forms and product pages (if you’re e-commerce).
3. Media : videos and audio
Next, testing out different media types is crucial. This means incorporating videos and audio into your content.
Don’t just take a random guess by throwing stuff against the wall, hoping it sticks. Instead, you should use data to develop impactful content.
Look at your Media Analytics reports in your website analytics solution and see what media people spend the most time on. See what kind of video or audio content already impacts conversions.
Humans are highly visual. You should craft your content so it’s easy to digest. Instead of covering your website in huge chunks of text, split up your copy with engaging content like videos.
High-quality videos and audio recordings allow your readers to consume more of your content easily, and help persuade them to take action on your site.
4. Calls to action (CTA)
This brings us to our next point : your call to action (CTA).
Are you trying to convert more prospects into leads ? Want to turn more leads into customers ? Trying to get more email subscribers ? Or do you want to generate more sales every month ?
You could write the most compelling offer flooded with beautiful images, videos and CRO tactics. But your efforts will go to waste if you don’t include a compelling CTA.
Here are a few tips to optimise your CTAs :
- Keep them congruent on a single web page (e.g., don’t sell a hat and a sweater on the same page, as it can be confusing).
- Place at least one CTA above the fold on your web pages.
- Include benefits in your CTA. Rather than “Buy Now,” try “Buy Now to Get 30% Off.”
- It’s better to be clear and concise than too fancy and unique.
Optimising your call to action isn’t just about your copywriting. It’s also about design. Test different fonts, sizes, and visual elements like borders, icons and background colours.
5. Web design
Your site design will impact how well your visitors convert. You could have incredible copywriting, but if your site is laid out poorly, it will drive people away.
You must ensure your copy and visual content fit your website design well.
The first place you need to start with your site is your homepage design.
Your site design consists of the theme or template, colour scheme and other visual elements that can be optimised to improve conversions.
Here are a few tips to keep in mind when optimising your website design :
- Use a colour scheme that’s pleasant rather than too distracting or extreme.
- Ensure your design doesn’t remove the text’s clarity but makes it easier to read.
- When in doubt, start with black text on a white background (the opposite rarely works).
- Keep plenty of whitespace in between design elements.
- When in doubt about font size, start by testing a larger size.
- Design mobile-first rather than desktop-first.
Finally, it’s critical to ensure your website is easy to navigate. Good design is all about the user experience. Is it easy to find what they’re looking for ? Simplify steps to reduce the need to click, and your conversions will increase.
Start optimising your website for conversions
If you’re looking to get the most out of the traffic on your site by converting more visitors into leads or customers, following this 5-step CRO checklist will help you take steps in the right direction.
Just remember conversion rate optimisation is an ongoing process. It’s not a one-time deal. To succeed, you need to test quickly, analyse the impact and do more of what’s working and less of what’s not.
To optimise your website for better conversion rates, you need the right tools that provide accurate data and insights to effectively increase conversions. With Matomo, you gain access to web analytics and CRO features like Form Analytics and Media Analytics, designed to enhance your conversion rate optimisation efforts.
Try Matomo free for 21 days and take your conversion rate to the next level. No credit card required.
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