
1000 prospects come to your site or sales page. 1% of them buy a $50 product. You’ve made $500.
You invest 2 days trying a few different ways to increase your conversions, and 3 are successful. You only increased your conversions by 1%, yet you’ve doubled your income, selling 2% of the prospects who come to your sales page.
Now for every 1000 prospects, you make $1,000.
And you send 1000 prospects a day, meaning…
Yet so many marketers never bother to do any of the things I’m about to suggest.
Why? I suppose it’s one of those things they’ll “get around to” but they never do.
So here’s what I recommend: If you don’t want to do any of the following, then OUTSOURCE it. We wrote an entire article on the importance of outsourcing elsewhere in this edition, so I won’t harp on it here.
Let’s get started on boosting your conversions:
1: Create A Compelling And Clear Value Proposition

Your value proposition can be the number 1 element that determines if people will bother to read more on your page.
And it’s also the main thing you need to test.
In a nutshell, your value proposition clearly states:
- How your product solves the customers’ problem or improves their situation (relevancy)
- Delivers specific benefits (quantified value)
- Tell why they should buy from you instead of your competition (unique differentiation)
Here’s an example from Prey: https://www.preyproject.com/
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I could do an entire article on creating a compelling value proposition – and I’ll do exactly that in a future post for you.
2: Perform A/B Testing

You create two alternative versions of your page, each with a different headline / color scheme / call to action etc.
You do a split test to see which one works better. When you find out what converts better, then you test something else.
The more elements you test, the higher you can boost your conversions.
Things to test: Headline, page layout and navigation, the offer itself, using different media (such as a video) and even a radical change if you think you might want to start over.
You can use Google Optimize if you’re looking for a free A/B tester, or Optimizely if you want more options.
3: Set Up A Proper Sales Funnel

Sometimes your conversions are taking a hit because you’re asking for the signup or the sale too soon in the process.
If people are still in ‘browsing’ mode, they might not be psychologically ready to subscribe or buy.
If you’re looking to improve conversions on a squeeze page that only asks for their email address, your focus should be on improving the reason why they would want to sign up. Making your offer more compelling – something that will immediately spark their desire – should do it.
But if you’re selling a product, it’s possible that you need to do more to build trust, develop a relationship and prove your expertise.
Remember, the longer and deeper the relationship with the prospect, the more likely they are to buy from you.
4: Address Objections Before They Arise

No matter what you’re selling or how much you’re selling it for, there will be objections.
If I tried to sell $100 bills for $1, there would be objections (and you know what they are.)
Make a list of all the possible concerns your prospects might have.
And then address each one of those in your presentation / webpage / sales funnel.
5: Build Trust

People won’t buy from you if they have no need for your product, if they have no money to buy your product, if they’re not in a hurry, and if they don’t trust you.
There’s not a lot you can do about the first 2 items on that list.
You can create urgency by limiting the number of products to be sold or the duration of your sale.
So what makes people trust your website?
Several things:
- You’ve got citations and testimonials clearly visible.
- You’re endorsed by well-known people in your niche.
- You’ve got a physical address and maybe even a photo of your office.
- If you or your business has relevant credentials, you’ve got them displayed.
- You’ve got clear, easy to find contact information that includes a phone number.
- Your site looks professional – not something a kid whipped up on his Intel 486 in the 1990’s.
- Your site contains plenty of useful information.
- You update your site’s content often. If your latest blogpost is from 2016, you’ve got a problem.
- You show restraint with hype, blinking banners (please don’t!) ads, popups and such.
- You have zero or nearly zero errors (when it comes to trustworthiness, one error is forgivable, two aren’t.)
6: Stop Trying To Sound Smart

If I were to give you a value proposition that reads like this…
“Revenue-focused sales automation and marketing effectiveness solutions unleash collaboration throughout the revenue cycle,”
…would you have a clue what I was talking about?
Because I sure don’t. It’s not useful to the person reading it, unless your goal is chase them off of your page. Then I suspect it’s highly effective.
Just remember, clarity if key. If they don’t understand exactly what you’re saying, they’re not going to convert.
7: Remove All Distractions

Your goal is to get people to focus solely on the action you want them to take and nothing else. Take a look at your page for anything that might divert the visitor away from what you want them to do. Minimize distraction, unnecessary product options, links and extraneous information.
And ask yourself if there is anything else you can remove that is not contributing to the conversion.
Increasing your conversion rate isn’t hard, but it does take effort…
Effort that will be well-rewarded in increased sales and revenues long after you’re done making the necessary changes.




