Conversion Optimization Checklist

from http://www.squidoo.com/how-to-get-more-clicks-sales

  1. Choose your target. What is the page's goal? What do you define as conversion? Write it on a sticky and evaluate your page by it.
  2. Clarity. Keep your page simple, focused, and on-target. Use direct, specific language.
  3. Make a powerful first impression. New arrivals decide whether to stay or go within a few seconds. Focus their attention with a strong, specific headline declaring your topic. Catch the eye with a crisp-looking graphic. Tell them what they'll find on your page within the first sentence or two. Use lively, polished, edited language -- yes, good writing does make a good first impression!
  4. Establish trust. Web users are worried about malware, personal information harvesting, and buying from unproven sources. Use familiar, reassuring logos like Amazon's to ease concerns. Use a profile image and blurb, testimonials and personal reviews, a professional-looking design, and anything else you can do to show you're genuine and trustworthy.
  5. Talk benefits, not only features. Ask yourself: So what? What's in it for them? "Soothes aches and pains" is more important to a customer than "Now in cherry flavor."
  6. Offer something UNIQUE. Give your readers a specific reason to go with you and not the other guy...which is the whole web! On Squidoo, this means not simply copying basic product info or repackaging generic cotent; set your page apart with your own words, your own photos, your own perspective.
  7. Use a Call To Action. This marketing term means guiding visitors by telling them what to do. "Buy now." "View item." Follow on Twitter." Use active voice, not passive. But remember, people want to be persuaded, not pressured, and may be anxious about online purchases. If you're getting hundreds of hits but no clicks, test different copy like "View eBay Listing" instead of "Buy Now on eBay" to ease them into a sale.
  8. Appeal to emotions; don't drown with facts. Be exciting! Get your audience enthused! People buy— or click— based on emotion and intuition more than reasoning.
  9. Put your best stuff first. Just like newspapers, start with the big news, then offer more in-depth commentary, info, or details for the unconvinced or curious later.
  10. Tailor your page to your audience with your delivery, graphics, and writing style. Notice how TV commercials for different markets have different styles, appealing to different audiences. Use traffic stats to analyze who's landing on your page and what they're searching for, then respond in a style suited to that audience, their needs, in their lingo.
  11. Fine-tune your SEO to attract consumers (those most likely to buy, read, or click), not window shoppers. Specific, targeted traffic converts better than lots of traffic that didn't come for your specific product/topic. Use products' official names and model numbers, to target people who are looking for those items.
  12. Use bold graphics and clear visual structure. Bulleted lists, checkmarks, large product images, and lots of white space channel readers' attention. But...
  13. Remove distractions. That goes for both visual elements and content. If it's off-topic, jarring, confusing, or turns your reader's attention away from your goal, remove it! Save it for another page.
  14. Offer freebies. Free downloads, free graphics, free shipping, free printables: give a gift to establish a relationship.
  15. Convey a sense of urgency. But be careful. If you apply too much pressure, visitors will think you're pushing a phony product. Instead, use truthful offers like: Free shipping until Christmas!