Wanna see an example of a high-performing landing page you can mimic?
Let’s break this page down section by section and explain what makes it convert so highly and bring in so much revenue.
Above the fold
Most customers do not scroll below the fold, so it’s imperative that you optimize this real estate to convince them to stay on your website.
Gel blaster does a great job of including only the MOST important aspects above the fold (see attached)
Social proof - "732 reviews" placed at the top of the page, this will be one of the first things visitors notice so it’s important this has its own line and is not nested somewhere else on the page
Product features - Critical to have these in an easily digestible form such as icons. Gel blaster does a great job with this
Bundles above the fold - This is where they hit it out of the park. It's so easy to be upsold. It doesn’t navigate you to another page, everything is kept on one page Also, they make sure to show how much $ you're saving by choosing the bundle. This is huge for increasing AOV.
Adding this bundle to the page is complex, there is no app that does this. You can do it with some liquid code. Basically, you’d create those elements for the bundles in Pagefly then need to pair each of those elements with a product variant. DM me for help with this.
Trust Badges - Well placed below the add to cart button in case the visitor has any reservations about returns, shipping, etc they don’t have to navigate to your shipping policies page. Remember, the less friction the better.
Product Photos - Gel Blaster did a great job with this. The first photo is a gif that shows the pellets shooting out the gun. Then the second is a detailed infographic followed by two high-quality renders. I recommend testing a gif or infographic as the first image
Below the fold:
“Why Gel Blaster” accordion + icons
You need to convince your visitors WHY they need to buy your product. A section like this needs to be high up on the page and prominently displayed. See how Gel Blaster uses a large chunk of the page on this alone
Section 3 - Embedded YT video
Never use an external link on the landing page, always embed the video, and if possible make it a gif. They added their Kickstarter video which is great for social proof + an explainer video.
Section 4 - How it works
Incredibly easy to understand section on how their product works. No big blocks of text. Simple photos that tell us everything we need to know.
Section 5 - What’s included
What I would change:
-Make the what’ included section a 1080x1080 photo and add it as a product photo as well
-Add a badge on the first product image that says “As seen on Kickstarter” for social proof
-Add a header above the YT video that gives some context. ex: "Our Story”
Hope this short thread was helpful for everyone when thinking about how their product landing pages should look. I create landing pages, websites and do CRO for e-commerce store owners. Shoot me a DM to get started.
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I always get asked:
“Cart page or skip to checkout?”
My answer - is neither.
A well-optimized slide cart will usually outperform.
Here is a full breakdown of an optimized cart page we did for @oliver__b1 for his brand Tabs
(use this for your store)
1/ Progress bar
As a CRO agency, we are research-driven, when we make design decisions it’s backed by research.
One of the things we found in our research is that 35% of people were ordering the “2 boxes” and 54% of people where ordering the “1 box”
There is clearly interest in people wanting to buy more than one box so adding a progress bar gives customers a nudge to order two and increase that AOV. Especially when having two boxes in a cart reaches the free shipping threshold.
If you have a many similar SKU’s, add a compare page
If you go onto your Google analytics behavior flow and notice lots of back-and-forth comparing products this is usually a sign customers need a compare page
Really nice how you can choose the bikes you want to compare via the dropdown and then also the color. It compares the bikes across many metrics like speed, battery and range
CRO Tip:
A founder section on the page can help massively with building trust.
We’ve seen this increase conversion rates by over 10%. Here are some good examples from other sites + FREE outline on how to write your own founder section for higher CVR
/thread 🧵
Really great founder section on the homepage. It hits on the founders mission, her pain points (which many customers also relate to) and compares how HoneyPot is superior HoneyPot.co
NoonBrew s/o @andrewbcase
Works well because establishes credibility:
“Allan’s background was in herbal medicine”
Mentions custom pain points and makes them relatable
“Would leave us anxious and overtime start to negatively impact our sleep at night”
We started working with one of the biggest e-bike brands in the US a few months ago.
Here is how we were able to increase their conversion rate over 30%
(and how you can do the same for your store)
🧵 🧵 🧵
Preface
The company FLX Bike sells high-end electric bikes starting from $1,500. Their conversion rate was struggling and they knew they needed to optimize their site before summer when they had a bigger sales rush.
Phase 1: Research
We put together a 175 page research report that dove into every leak in their funnel.
Here are some of the tools we used to conduct our research:
-Scrollmaps
-Clickmaps
-User testing
-Surveys (on-site, post purchase, exit intent)
I took a $2,000 course on writing high-converting product page copy so you don’t have to
Here is what you need to know + a FREE copy template doc included
Before I start, please RT and Like this thread. I am literally saving you thousands.
(10 ppl who RT will get a full review of their sales page copy)
To be a great copywriter you need to know your customers better than they know themselves. Every single pain point, insecurity, or doubt they may have should be reflected in the copy you write
But how do you know your customers' fears, desires, and pain points?