A Landing Page Is Not An Order Page (And Why It Matters)
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Article Title: A Landing Page Is Not An Order Page (And Why It
Matters)
Author: Leon Altman
Word Count: 656
Article URL: www.isnare.com/?id=4981&ca=Marketing
Format: 64cpl
Author's Email Address: laltman@investingin.com
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To explain my point I need to first confuse the issue a bit
(you’ll see why): While a landing page is not an order page, it
can, and in many cases should, contain the order form.
So what is the difference? Is this just a question of
semantics? Actually, there is a big difference and it can have
a big effect on your conversion rate. Generally, the order page
is another page on your website. As such, it will have links to
other parts of your site. Since someone who comes to the order
or signup page often comes from other parts of your site, and
has looked at descriptions of your products and service, you
can assume they are ready to buy or sign up. When that is the
case, there is little need to go into much sell, if any, before
getting to the form prospects need to fill out.
Prospects who come to your site after seeing your marketing
communications, online or offline, are in a different mindset.
Generally, they are not prepared to buy or sign up yet. They
need a landing page that includes some sell before seeing the
order form. Confronting this prospect with the order form or
signup form too early, before they feel prepared, can seem
presumptuous and you can easily lose this prospect.
How much sell is needed depends on the communications prospects
came from. A short ad or text link dictates longer sell than a
lengthy article or direct mail letter. Another factor in how
much sell/information copy is needed before asking for the
order is the complexity of your product or the offer.
Say the prospect came from a longer marketing communications
piece, either an article or a direct mail letter. While this
prospect has more information than the one who comes from a
short ad, there still needs to be some sell, even if it is to
just quickly reiterate the benefits and make the prospect feel
smart for coming to the landing page and taking advantage of
your offer.
And in all cases, the landing page must be consistent with the
marketing piece. If the prospect is suddenly confronted with a
landing page that seems different or just doesn’t seem to
connect with the piece they came from, a number of unfortunate
things happen. There is a credibility gap. The prospect senses
this is different and becomes on guard. And you lose the
momentum of the sell, where one benefit leads to another until
the close.
Let’s say you’ve determined the length of the sell copy on the
landing page. At this point, there is a crucial decision to be
made. After the sell, do you put the order form or signup form
on the same page or have prospects click to go to another page
to fill out the form?
There are two opposing prospect tendencies to deal with. The
more clicks a prospect needs to go through to get to the order
or signup, the more likely the prospect will not continue. On
the other hand, make prospects do too much scrolling and you’ll
lose a certain percentage of them. In addition, if there is too
much copy and graphics on a page, there is the danger that the
page looks too cluttered and intimidating.
There is no cookie-cutter solution. Generally, it is preferable
to have the order form on the same page as the preceding sell
copy; that is, on the landing page. Having said that, there are
numerous cases when having prospects click to go to a separate
order page is better.
So you see, a landing page is an important, yet flexible, stage
in the selling process. Always keep in mind the marketing piece
the prospect came from and develop your landing page
accordingly.
About The Author: With 25 years of experience, Leon Altman
focuses on helping marketers get more out of their investment
in marketing. To inquire about his services, write
leon@altmancommuncations.com . To sign up for his Free
Marketers FYI newsletter, visit his site at
www.InvestingIN.com/marketing
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