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Brian Massey

Enclothed Cognition - YouTube - 0 views

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    "Clothes have powers... over your mind."

    If you've seen me present, you notice that I wear a lab coat during my presentations. The reason is that it gives me an unfair advantage. Studies have shown that, when I wear a lab coat, I will make about half the errors in cognitive tests as if I was wearing my street clothes. This video sums it up nicely.
Brian Massey

Spotify says goodbye to the hamburger menu - 0 views

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    We test the content of header and footer bars on mobile websites--we call them stickies--and this includes the use of the hamburger menu icon. It doesn't always work well.

    For apps and mobile websites alike, "an app's popularity is determined more so by user engagement and retention rather that its App Store ranking."
Brian Massey

Design a Perfect Search Box - 0 views

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    @101babich When we isolate the visitors to a website that use site search, we often find a significantly higher conversion rate and average order value. Searchers are great customers.

    This does not imply cause and effect.

    However, after running tests that improve the visibility of search, we have found that we can increase the number of searchers, and that these new searchers are more likely to buy.

    It doesn't work every time, but it is certainly worth a try.

    The lesson? Follow Nick's advice here.
Brian Massey

The Psychology of Why Sexy Websites Suck at Sales - 0 views

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     @KISSMetrics makes the point that plain is the new sexy; conventional websites sizzle. This article offers scientific proof that we consider a website "sexy" if it presents information as we expect it. You don't need to pay a creative team to come up with a unique site. In fact you will probably have to reel them in a bit once you've completed this article.
Brian Massey

Marketers Have It Wrong: Forget Engagement, Consumers Want Simplicity - Forbes - 0 views

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    I've put forth in my new book that adding social media icons to a landing page is a bad idea. I get a lot of pushback on this. Here's some support for my position. Simplicity sells. "Engagement" doesn't. This article highlights three components that consumers need to make it easier to buy. They need to trust the information they receive.They need to learn effectively without distraction.They need to be able to weigh options confidently. Help your visitors choose and choose confidently. Worry about your social media strategy after the sale.
Brian Massey

98 New-School Content Marketing Articles | Unbounce - 0 views

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    As I'm putting the final touches on my up-coming book, it is very clear that content is the most important conversion strategy: It influences and enables almost every other strategy.

    If you need to get started on content marketing here is a pretty complete list of resources to get you started.
Brian Massey

SOON! Create Landing Pages easily, #LandingPages - 0 views

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    Site as a Service Home pages have one purpose: To get visitors to become "tryers" of your application. In general, we want to be as efficient as possible, asking for only the required information to join a trial. Then we let email carry the mail. Lander offers an interesting experience on their home page. This treatment requires several clicks when one would suffice. This does two very important things: It conveys a sense of the company's personality and brandIt discourages poorly qualified visitors making their list convert to buyers betterThis is a good trade-off a lower conversion rate (to tryer) and improving the quality of a list.
Brian Massey

4 Lead Conversion Tips To Profit From Your Blog Traffic | list building | building a li... - 0 views

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    @LoriMeyer541 offers a nice summary of why conversion is important and important relationship between your traffic and your site's ability to convert. "You certainly need traffic because without it, your business is dead.  But, traffic is not everything - unless you can convert it."Her prescriptions for making a blog convert require some heavy content development, but the larger point is this: You must offer something relevant to your readers to start them down the path of becoming customers.
Brian Massey

Wunderlist's Cross-Platform Acquisition & Onboarding Process | UX Magazine - 0 views

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    In my new book Your Customer Creation Equation I discuss the importance of getting new users of Online Services to return and login. This process is called "on boarding" and it is the process of making your new users experts at using your service. Wunderlist is how me and my wife share grocery lists. and their on-boarding process is very tight. Here's how they do it.
Brian Massey

The Total Content Approach | AustinAMA - 0 views

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     @flabastida lists ten "steps" for a "Total Content Approach." Taking these all together, it becomes clear that a business or a brand is fully realized only through its content. We can no longer rely on slogans and manipulation. A brand now has hopes, fears and dreams. Businesses must express opportunity as well as possibility. Don't worry. Our customers are there to help us understand ourselves.
Brian Massey

Infographic: Tips To Avoid Shopping Cart Abandonment - 0 views

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    I hope you know your abandonment rate. Take the number of purchases you get on your site divided by the number of people who put a product in your cart. This is your cart conversion rate. Subtract this number from 1 and you get your abandonment rate, or the percentage of people who abandon their shopping cart.

    If your abandonment rate is high (expect it to be over 70%) there are some things you can do about it. Here is a great infographic from Monetate that will show you some reasons people leave full carts.
Brian Massey

Mobile Site or Mobile App: Which Should You Build First? [INFOGRAPHIC] - 0 views

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    I only touch on the issue of Mobile Apps in my new book Your Customer Creation Equation. So I'm happy to share this very helpful infographic on Mobile websites vs. Mobile apps.

    Is it just me, or is it clear that mobile websites are the way to go (except in extreme situations)?
Brian Massey

The Brian Massey Daily - 0 views

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    I only touch on the issue of Mobile Apps in my new book Your Customer Creation Equation. So I'm happy to share this very helpful infographic on Mobile websites vs. Mobile apps.

    Is it just me, or is it clear that mobile websites are the way to go (except in extreme situations)?
Brian Massey

10 Digital Marketing Story Telling Tips For Small Businesses | Relative Bearing - 0 views

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    This article offers Orwell's Five Rules For Writing: Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech that you are used to seeing in print. Never use a long word where a short one will do. If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out. Never use the passive where you can use the active. Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word. You can see some of these principles in action.
Brian Massey

Seth's Blog: "Our biggest problem is awareness" - 0 views

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    @sethgodin says awareness isn't a scalable problem to solve. As website optimizers, we couldn't agree more. He continues. "The solution lies in re-organizing your systems, in re-creating your product or service so that it becomes worth talking about." ...or in making your website so intuitive that it isn't worth complaining about. --Brian
Brian Massey

Anatomy of a Successful Landing Page | John Fox - 0 views

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     @b2bmarketing via @huffpostbiz John Fox gets landing pages and is bringing the tale of this important online strategy to the masses who read the Huffington Post. Much of the article was based on an interview with yours truly.

    There are two defining characteristics of a landing page: It must keep the promise made by the link or ad that brings people to the page It is single-mindedly focused on getting them to take an action that will help them or the business Fox goes on the talk about trust, proof and images as keys to effective landing pages. He also talks about eliminating distractions and avenues for abandonment.

    Thanks for a great article, John.
Brian Massey

10 Annoying Stock Photos I Never Want to See Again - 0 views

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    If you've ever wondered what "business porn" is, this post covers pretty much all of it.

    The superhero, the running businessman, the meaningless graph, and the sexy business hottie.

    If I was to add one more, it would be the suited handshake.

    Megan Leap is available to take a look at your website and online strategy.
Brian Massey

Should I Use A Carousel? - 0 views

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    So, should you use a carousel, those rotating hero images now found at the top of most B2B and B2C websites?

    The answer is "carefully."

    This clever little site illustrates the reasons rotating banners are so frustrating. The timing, the amount of text and the order all come into play.

    We have been able to tune a rotating hero on an ecommerce site so that it outperformed a static image. But it took several test cycles and didn't work in every case.

    Have a little chuckle at yourself and enjoy the content on this site -- if you can read fast.
Brian Massey

Cognitive biases that affect decisions - Business Insider - 0 views

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    If I was to rename this article, it would be, "20 Kinds of Best Practices and Why They Won't Work".

    It is bad news to rely on best practices that are unsupported by data or testing. This article gives you 20 reasons why.
Brian Massey

Conversion Conference Blog » Retargeting Emails - Do E-commerce customers lik... - 0 views

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    Retargeting Emails - Do E-commerce customers like or loathe them? March 10th, 2011Leave a commentGo to comments By Charles Nicolls, SeeWhy At SeeWhy, when we first launched our remarketing service in 2009, Randy Stross wrote a piece about email remarketing in The New York Times suggesting that while remarketing might be a great idea for ecommerce websites, it's not a great idea for consumers. He likened emails following up on abandoned shopping carts to a salesman chasing you down the street if you didn't buy from his store. There are major differences, of course. We've long argued that remarketing emails, when done well, not only drive conversions but also build brand trust. They can deliver great service and provide customers with the confidence to return to buy-either online, by phone or in store. If Randy was right and customers universally resented the intrusion, then these emails wouldn't work. In aiming to answer the question more substantively, I turned to data, and specifically email marketing benchmarks. The key metrics to look at to determine whether customers like or loathe remarketing emails are: the recovery rate the open rate the clickthrough rate the unsubscribe rate Frankly, the evidence is overwhelming: Remarketing, when done well, is appreciated by customers. Here's the evidence: (1) The recovery rate The recovery rate is the percentage of visitors that abandon shopping carts, and remarketed visitors thatthen return and purchase following remarketing. At SeeWhy, we measure recovery rates across all our customers, and currently the average is 20 percent. So, one in five shopping cart abandoners come back and buy, having being remarketed. In some cases, the recovery rate is as high as 50 percent. Moreover, when remarketed customers buy, they spend on average 55 percent more than customers who didn't abandon their shopping carts. (2) The open rate The average email open rate for remarketing emails is currently 46 percent, m
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