We've been studying business video in the lab using eye-tracking equipment. Cisco offers some very helpful tips on how to choose the right video for your business.
You can request to be notified when our ground-breaking study is complete.
If you like to study the steady march of the generations, you'll find this study of Millennials fascinating. Basically, Millennials are here to frustrate the retiring Boomer generation. They are the revenge of GenX. I think you can see from this article that Millennials will baffle Boomers (and GenX) with their attitudes.
@peeplaja has just saved you a whole lot of time. He's done the research and found the studies that you can use to refute the often poor advice your designers are giving your Web team.
Spend some time with this post and the links he references if you want to consistently create effective, high-converting websites.
The author of this article lists 12 interesting insights taken from eye-tracking studies. He can't resist qualifying some of the ones he may disagree with. While every audience is different, these tips are excellent places to start on almost any page.
When considering how much to invest in social networks, the important question is not "Are my customers using social media?" They are.
A better question to ask is "Are my customers using social media to make decisions about my product?" Odds are, they aren't.
This paradox is most evident in the "fastest growing" segment of social media: those over 55 years of age. This segment is large, but it does not generally make buying decisions using social media. That's an important distinction.
Peep Laja @peeplaja has put together a great list of ways to increase conversion rate. The remarkable thing about this list is that he provides a case study for each of his recommendations, proof that these ideas have works somewhere. This lets you understand the circumstances that drove the improvements in conversion and help you choose the tactics you will use on your site. Thanks, Peep.
@unbounce Here is some data that we are seeing elsewhere, in which video increases conversion rates. The universal appeal of video is quite surprising -- and powerful.
If you enjoy studying the psychology of persuasion the way we do here at Conversion Sciences, you'll love this infographic from the folks at Help Scout.
When you place the logos of third parties on your site, you are "borrowing" the trust they have created for yourself. Such logos include client logos, website certified logos, associations you belong to, and even the credit card company logos found on checkout pages.
Here is an interesting study on which common trust symbols are perceived as most trustworthy.
it's interesting that scientists side to use stories -- from The Moth podcast -- to stimulate test subjects' brains in this fMRI study. The conclusion is that these stories stimulate areas scattered across our cortex. Stories light up our brains. No wonder storytelling I'd so powerful in marketing.
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.
@neilpatel collects some of the most interesting eye-tracking images available and provides seven insights that can help you design your pages and choose images. We have done our own eye-tracking study of business video and you can get the full report now. The report offers similar conclusions for the use of video in a landing page. It includes over 30 minutes of embedded video that you can watch yourself.
Neil's conclusions include:Be careful you you use [images of] peopleThat people love media (especially on search results pages)That men and women look at images differentlyThat simple images can be more effectiveThe power of the left side of the pageThe power of facesThat people love hand-written notes (my favorite)Enjoy the images he provides.