How to build a landing page that converts visitors into buyers
Let’s say a friend tells you about this stylish brand of shoes made of banana fibres, but for the life of her she can’t remember the brand name.
“Something to do with ‘Bananas’... just google it”. If the brand has done its SEO right, their name should pop up when you google ‘Banana shoe brand in India’.
The landing page that opens up when you click through is your first point of contact with this brand. Everything you read and see over the next few seconds will play a pivotal role in shaping your perception of this brand. It will also determine if you will become a paying customer or just another visitor who clicks away.
This is how 90% of customers discover a brand these days.
If you are selling something then you need to have a website. If you want to make money selling it your website needs to have a landing page that converts visitors to paying customers.
Landing page - the first page your visitor sees, and if you get it right, not the only one
Every website you have ever visited has one of these. Some call it the home page; others call it the landing page.
It doesn't matter what you label it; the job is the same.
CONVINCE AND CONVERT
An effective homepage will convince the casual visitor to spend more time on your site. It will have enough relevant information to make the user feel that your product or service is 'The Solution' to 'The Problem' that torments them.
Once they are convinced, the next step is to nudge them to click the buy or read more button. This action should take them on a journey that ends with them converting from website visitors to paying customers and a Kaching! sound in your shopping cart tracker.
Your home page can be broken down
into 5 essential parts
#1
The hero banner with a hero message
This is the first thing your user will see on the first page. The most crucial element here is the headline or hero message. It should tell the user in no uncertain terms why your product is the solution they are looking for.
Don't give in to the temptation to get cute. A catchy slogan that sounds great but means nothing will not work.
Answer the user's "What's in it for me?" question in your brand's tone of voice.
Here are three great examples
There is no doubt about what content on demand does. They explicitly state exactly what the visitor will get from their services. Remove stress and help the customer focus on things that are more important to them. Exactly what every potential customer wants to hear.
A good example of using the headline and subhead to land the entire value proposition in one frame. Why should a product company be interested in Enterpret? The two lines on the hero banner answers the question succinctly.
A great example of brevity. A three-word headline that tells you exactly what the product does. The clever use of favicons in the subhead ticks all boxes.
What about the hero image?