Hint: don't send send your online advertising
traffic to your homepage.
How do you convert online advertising traffic into customers? The key
is a phenomenon of human behavior that only comes into play on the web.
You won't read about this phenomenon in books or
articles on general principles of advertising or direct marketing. In
fact, traditional advertising professionals and direct marketers often
create only so-so online advertising campaigns simply because they've
never heard of this phenomenon, even though it's essentially the first
law of human web surfing behavior.
How to convert your online advertising traffic
into customersReady to find out what that all-important first law of
web surfing is? Prepare to be not very amazed. You see, everyone who
surfs the web already knows about this phenomenon of human behavior
because we all do it--even you.
So here it is, the first law of human web surfing
behavior, which you absolutely must take into account when marketing
your website: While surfing the web, almost everyone will hit the
"back" button if they think there's a chance--even a small chance--
they've come to the wrong web page.
The corollary to this law of web surfing behavior:
Anyone who clicks through to your site via an online advertising link
needs to know they've arrived at the right place as soon as they get
there.
Immediately. Within a second. From a click glance.
Without having to read anything. The average human attention span on
the web has been measured at eight seconds, and you'll have already
lost a few seconds while the page downloaded.
The Key(word) to Converting Advertisement-Clickers
into CustomersHow do you make absolutely sure visitors feel like
they've arrived in the right place?
Make the title and first heading of your landing
page (the page on which a visitor "lands" after clicking on an
advertisement) the same as the headline of the advertisement that
brought your visitor there. If the landing page links to a banner
(image) advertisement, use the same pictures and color scheme as the
advertisement.
The landing page absolutely must immediately
remind the visitor of the advertisement.
The advertisements, in turn, must flow logically
from the keywords they are targeting. Even if your advertisements are
appearing on websites rather than search engine results, you need to be
thinking in terms of the keywords people are using to search for your
product in order to speak the language of your prospective customers.
That's why it is very important both your
advertisement and landing page incorporate the target keyword
prominently, in headings as well as the page body. That's also why it's
so important you don't send your visitors from online advertising to
your homepage--it's unlikely you could optimize your homepage for all
your possible advertisements. Visitors who arrive via advertising need
to land on a special "landing page," or they may crash and leave your
site.
Conversions: your advertising campaign's goalBut
what happens once visitors land on your site and decide to stay more
than ten seconds? It's no use if they just hang around. They need to
convert.
Important definition: In online advertising
parlance, saying a website visitor "converts," means he or she has
taken a desired action toward becoming a customer, either 1) buying
something or 2) contacting you for more information, thereby becoming a
lead.
The percentage of visitors who convert out of the
total number of visitors who arrive at your page is the conversion
rate. Your goal is to get this rate as high possible. You do that by
finding the right message to display on your landing page, and also by
targeting the advertising so you are getting visitors who are most
likely to convert.
In order to get your visitors to convert once they
arrive, you need to make sure they have a clear path to conversion from
the landing page. The simpler the path, the better--a winding road
might lose some potential customers. This conversion path could be as
simple as a "buy now" button or a contact form, or as complex as a
multi-step shopping cart with required registration with required email
confirmation to scare away those who are not truly devoted buyers.
Targeting your trafficWhat you show visitors who
arrive at your site is only half the equation. The visitors themselves
are the other. As with everything in life, you can't convert a sow's
ear into a silk purse. In this case, the sow's ear is paid traffic that
is not targeted, or is coming from popunders or other forced viewing,
or is just plain faked (there is software specifically designed to
emulate human visitors so fraudsters can sell the "traffic").
Even in the best of cases, some traffic converts
better than others. Generally speaking, visitors who are looking for
you are the likeliest to convert, so conversion rates tend to be
highest from advertising on search engines. Conversion rates tend to be
lower from advertising on websites (so-called "content" or "contextual"
advertising).
Conversion rates are lower still on advertising on
website popups, and lowest of all on so-called adware (programs that
display popups on a user's computer; the people who sell this
advertising often label it "targeted traffic"). Sending emails that
consist of nothing but your advertisement, even if you've skirted the
legal definition of spam, is not worth the bad will and damage to your
brand.
Preaching to non-converting online advertising
trafficA significant percentage of visitors, maybe a majority, will
never just click "buy now." How do you reach them?
Many people simply will never make a purchase
without speaking to a salesperson first. For them, provide a convenient
contact form, as well as a live chat option--if you can afford the time
and expense--your email, and a telephone number. A telephone number is
especially important since there are some visitors who will never
convert without hearing the voice of someone on your end.
For visitors who are not ready to convert
immediately, you should have informational articles, "about us" pages
or FAQs ready to help them make up their minds.
For visitors who simply will not be ready to
convert today, give a reason to bookmark your page. Good articles. A
special offer. A newsletter to sign up for. Free advice.
Just make sure you don't place these alternative
non-converting options in too prominent a position, or you'll risk
distracting prospective customers. A few paragraphs up from the very
bottom of the page is a good place to catch people who are interested
in you enough to read the entire page, but still haven't converted. The
very bottom of the page should be reserved for a conversion option for
all the prospective customers accustomed to scrolling to the bottom of
the page to get a quick overview.
After all, if you want your visitors from online
advertising traffic to convert into customers, shouldn't you at least
make it easy for them?
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Joel Walsh has written as a staff writer for St. Martin's Press and
Barnes & Noble, as well as numerous online publications. He is
the head writer for UpMarket, a website content provider and online
advertising resource for small and medium-sized business websites. You
can get a template guide for writing a landing page, with samples, at: http://upmarketcontent.com/landing-page-template.htm