A well-designed landing page will capture your reader’s attention, lead them by the hand through the copy, and end with them happily taking the action you are requesting. The key to optimizing a landing page: keep the end goal in mind. Everything on the landing page must lead the reader to take the action you are requesting and your ultimate goal of the visitor.
A motivating sequence in the sales process looks like this:
Attention. Your headline should grab the prospect and keep them reading. It must answer the question in the reader’s mind: “What’s in it for me?” It also must flow logically from the page they were just on or you may lose them.
Problem. Identify with the reader: you understand the problem or concern they are facing. Spell it out using emotional language that stirs things up a bit. Push those hot buttons…
Solution. …Then step in with the answer. Show them you have the solution that they’ve been looking for! Present the benefits: paint the picture, including the promise, of how your product or service will improve their situation, or solve the problem they’re currently facing.
Proof. You need this for credibility. If you still have the reader’s attention, good job. But at this point, the reader will usually step back. Doubts cause hesitation. Strong proof elements will nudge them back on track. Be sure to include compelling testimonials, statistics, and research to back up your claims.
Action. Tell the reader exactly what you want them to do. Include a button to click on, a form to fill out, or a telephone number to call. This sounds obvious, but some landing pages do not optimize this feature and therefore are missing out on leads and potential sales.
All of these elements can and should be tested for effectiveness.
One final key to remember: consistency of message across all media platforms is essential. A landing page is designed to stand alone, but it should not vary in tone, message, promise, or “feel” of the company’s brand or ideals. Your goal, again, is to inspire trust in your product or service, leading the reader to act.