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9 Ways to Increase Your Form Conversions

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9 Ways to Increase Your Form Conversions

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This presentation is from Affiliate Summit West 2017 (January 15-17, 2017 in Las Vegas, Nevada). Session description: In this session, I will review 9 ways you can increase your Form Conversions including using Google Maps APIs, Mobile Usability and Modal Windows. We’ll even get your Mom to help out!

This presentation is from Affiliate Summit West 2017 (January 15-17, 2017 in Las Vegas, Nevada). Session description: In this session, I will review 9 ways you can increase your Form Conversions including using Google Maps APIs, Mobile Usability and Modal Windows. We’ll even get your Mom to help out!

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9 Ways to Increase Your Form Conversions

  1. 1. 9 Ways to Increase Your Form Conversions Rich Plakas January 15, 2017 Start Time: 1:00 pm End Time: 1:30 pm Session: 3B Location: Champagne 3
  2. 2. Question: What is a Good Form Conversion Rate?
  3. 3. Answer: Conversion Rates Will Differ for Different Websites, Industries, Etc.
  4. 4. Don’t Compare Your Conversion Rates to Other Sites. Instead, Spend Your Time and Resources Improving Your Own Conversion Rates.
  5. 5. An Easy Way to Measure Form Conversions: Google Analytics • Set Your Form to go to a “Thank You” page after a user completes the Form. • Set up a Google Analytics Goal with Custom -> Destination -> “/thankyou” • Optionally Set up a Value
  6. 6. 1. Limit Input Fields “Less is More.” The quicker someone can fill out your form, the less likely they are to Abandon it before finishing the form.
  7. 7. 1. Limit Input Fields “I Love Filling Out Long Forms!” -Said no one ever.
  8. 8. 1. Limit Input Fields • Only ask for the information you really need. • For example, if you DON’T need the person’s phone number, then remove the phone number field completely. • Alternatively, you can make the Phone Number field optional (not required). People are usually more weary about giving out their phone number vs. giving out their email address.
  9. 9. 1. Limit Input Fields
  10. 10. 2. Autocomplete Fields If you are asking for information such as a mailing address, use the Google Maps API code for “Place Autocomplete Address Form” (or similar code). This code will start to autocomplete their address as they type it in, saving time as well as preventing typing mistakes. Another option is to ask for Zip Code first, and then have the form autocomplete the city and state. Implementing either of these depends on the form software you are using. Ask your web developer to help you do it.
  11. 11. 2. Autocomplete Fields
  12. 12. 3. Field Spacing & Location Make sure your fields are spaced out far enough and labeled clear enough to prevent “entry confusion”. This was most commonly seen when the city field was placed on top of the zip code field. An easy fix is to add more spacing above the zip code field or move it to the right of the state field. Fields should flow logically & naturally.
  13. 13. Look through your previous submitted form entries for other common mistakes that people might be making. We have seen form entries where people were entering their First and Last name in the First Name field. This happened when the Last Name field was placed to the right of First Name field. The solution was just to place the Last Name field below the First Name field for better visibility. 3. Field Spacing & Location
  14. 14. 3. Field Spacing & Location
  15. 15. 4. Add Checkboxes/Dropdowns Add selection checkboxes and/or dropdowns for common inquiries instead of only having a general note paragraph field. (You still want to keep that paragraph field!) Not only does this make it easier (and quicker) for someone to fill out your form, it will also make it easier for you to segment form entries after. Again, we are trying to reduce the time and friction required to fill out your form.
  16. 16. 5. Mobile Usability It is 2017, Is Your Form Mobile Friendly? Check your form’s mobile usability. Have you tried to fill out your form on your smartphone. Was it easy? Did you get hung up anywhere? Are any fields bleeding off the screen or missing?
  17. 17. 5. Mobile Usability
  18. 18. 5. Mobile Usability
  19. 19. 6. Avoid Negative Copy Avoid using negative wording such as: “We Won’t Spam You” and instead use a positive version such as “We Respect Your Privacy”
  20. 20. 7. Change Your Call to Action Change your Call to Action – CTA On many forms the default Call to Action to complete the form is: “SUBMIT” Or “REGISTER” The word ‘submit’ can have a negative connotation and it doesn’t tell me what will happen when I hit that button.
  21. 21. 7. Change Your Call to Action Better CTAs would be: “Contact Me” “Send Me Free Tips” “Send Me a Free Estimate” “Send Me a Free EBook” Make sure your CTA Button stands out, is obvious and easy to press on mobile.
  22. 22. 7. Change Your Call to Action
  23. 23. 8. Testing & “The Mom Test” Document and Test the changes you make to your Form. Add a calendar entry such as “January 18, 2017: We changed the CTA from ‘Submit’ to ‘Sign Me Up!’ Be aware of external factors when making changes and testing. For example, we find the week leading up to April 15 to be very slow for most sites (except Accountant websites!) What do I do if I do not have enough Form Submissions to do proper A/B testing? Do “The Mom Test”
  24. 24. 8. Testing & “The Mom Test” WTF is “The Mom Test” ? Your page and form should be simple enough, that my non- technical Mom can figure out how to fill it out. When designing a form (or a web page for that matter) we often suffer from being to intimate with the product or company. This leads to form (and page) design that assumes the person visiting your website & filling out your form has the same intimacy or knowledge (when in fact they do not).
  25. 25. 9. Modal Forms & Multi Step Forms A Modal Form “Pops Up” when a user clicks on a button such as “Sign Up”. Some recent research suggests modal window forms convert better because they activate a part of our brains that make us want to complete something we started. Be cautious though as Modal windows don’t work well on Mobile Devices. If you decided to use them, please test and have a solution that also works on Mobile Devices.
  26. 26. 9. Modal Forms & Multi-Step Forms As of January 10, 2017, sites that use Interstitial modals (or pop-ups) on mobile pages may lose some Google Ranking Mojo!
  27. 27. 9. Modal Forms & Multi Step Forms
  28. 28. 9. Modal Forms & Multi Step Forms Multi-Step forms show only part of the form at a time. They can make a longer Form appear visually “less overwhelming” compared to a single page Form that actually has less fields. Showing the ‘Percent Complete’ helps our brains want to finish since we can see a visual representation of “The End”.
  29. 29. 9. Modal Forms & Multi Step Forms
  30. 30. 9. Modal Forms & Multi Step Forms You can replicate some of the Modal Effect by having a button or link for the form that jumps down to the form which is on the bottom of the page.
  31. 31. Clicking the Button or the Link will Jump You Down to the Form Section on the Page.
  32. 32. Q & A Rich Plakas rich@connectedsystems.us www.connectedsystems.us @RichP on Twitter Contact Info Approximately 12 minutes of Q&A

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