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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

Why do consumer loyalty rewards programs need careful crafting? - 0 views

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    The pshychology of consumer behavior is baffling, and this article offers no exceptions.
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
Brian Massey

Website Features That Influence Shoppers: 10 Indicators And 3 Lessons - 0 views

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    @fusionmex via @TheGrok I"ve been working with a number of e-commerce clients over the past few months. Conversion optimization has the potential to increase their conversion rates, increase their average order value and put more money in their pockets. However, Conversion Strategy is the tide that floats all pages. If you are selling online, consider some of these features requested by consumers.
Brian Massey

Website Features That Influence Shoppers: 10 Indicators And 3 Lessons | Conversion-Kitchen - 1 views

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    @fusionmex via @TheGrok I"ve been working with a number of e-commerce clients over the past few months. Conversion optimization has the potential to increase their conversion rates, increase their average order value and put more money in their pockets. However, Conversion Strategy is the tide that floats all pages. If you are selling online, consider some of these features requested by consumers.
Brian Massey

Lander Academy: Dustin Spark's Worst Landing Page Mistakes - 0 views

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    Dustin Sparks is another fixture in the Conversion epicenter we have here in Austin, an epicenter that includes both Bryan and Jeffrey Eisenberg.

    Dustin provides a very comprehensive and easy to consume list of the landing page mistakes that are costing businesses money across the Web. To find out how you can get a free copy of the Kindle edition of my new book join my Friends of the Author list now.
Brian Massey

Learn How To Increase Your Conversions From These 5 Consumer Psychology Studies - 0 views

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     @KISSMetrics - You don't have to be a psychologist to create good messages and strategies for your business, but it really helps to know the subtle things that make people more comfortable taking action. This article summarizes some of my favorite research on buyer psychology.

    If you offer a trial of your product, use email to deliver "mints" of helpful information. This will increase the likelihood that they will buy. See #4.

    Design your pricing in clusters around your most profitable offering. See #5.

    Be specific in your calls to action. See #3.

    Community involvement and social proof are also covered. See #1 and #2.

    I hope you enjoy this as much as I do.
Brian Massey

7 Ways to Add "WOW" Factor to Your Landing Pages - ion interactive blog - The... - 0 views

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    The question to ask on a landing page is, "Will WOW increase my conversions?" Some of these "WOW" features have proven to reduce conversion rates.  Rotating banners of any sort attract the eye away, and can pull readers out of the "meat" of the page where they are more likely to convert. Accordian menus and tabbed content may prevent scanners from quickly consuming the page. It's a bit of a Catch 22: they may not have the patience to click on each item until they've scanned the content... which is hidden. Social widgets can deliver social proof and increase conversion rates. However, social media chicklets that let the visitor go off to Facebook or Twitter work against the purpose of a landing page: to keep visitors on the page until they make a decision. Why send traffic that you've paid for off to Mark Zuckerberg? Lightbox popovers are universally derided if you ask people. However, they almost always increase conversion rates. 

    Every audience is different, so test these WOW features with your own crowd.
Brian Massey

Survey: Consumers Prefer Mobile Browser To Apps For Local Information - 0 views

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    In light of @joeljharvey's recent presentations on mobile web development, we are not surprised by the findings of this survey. Mobile visitors want a mobile experience, not because they thought about it, but because they are, well, mobile.

    Come by The Conversion Scientist blog to hear what else we have to say about building great mobile sites.
Brian Massey

The Noisy Fallacies of Cambridge Analytica and Psychographic Targeting | WIRED - 0 views

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    "This sort of caricature of a consumer segment was created as much for potential targeting as for populating ad agency pitches to clients."
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

http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.san&forwarddg=1&art_aid... - 0 views

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    Shimon Sandler offers some tips for linking phone orders to search campaigns, ranging from simple (using a pay-per-call provider) to more involved (setting up a database of unique promo codes tied to specific keywords).

    You can create a unique landing page for each product that features a different phone number for each of the engines, or add a promo/reference code to each product page and train your phone sales reps to ask for and record this code for every order.

    Sandler says that you can also put a printable coupon on each landing page that consumers need to redeem in-store, or try an IVR phone system that tracks phone calls and their sources. - Read the whole story...
Brian Massey

Surveying 900 consumers about exit popups | Nudgr Blog - 0 views

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    I always tell my audiences that exit-intent popovers will increase lead generation and often increase sales in an ecommerce setting. However, there is a negative brand impression from them. Nobody likes popovers, if you ask them.

    Now we have some data on what people THINK about exit-intent popovers.
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