7 Steps for the Perfect Landing Page

When I design landing pages I don’t try to cram everything above the fold and clutter up the top 500 pixels of my design, but I do like to design so that images, headlines or text teeter on the line. This creates a ‘teaser’ for the user to scroll down more and check out the rest of the page.

1 Think ‘about’ the fold

With all the debate swirling around blogs and magazines about the importance or non-importance of the fold, when you’re designing a landing page please consider using it to your advantage.

When I design landing pages I don’t try to cram everything above the fold and clutter up the top 500 pixels of my design, but I do like to design so that images, headlines or text teeter on the line. This creates a ‘teaser’ for the user to scroll down more and check out the rest of the page.

I personally believe that most users scroll anyway when a page loads, it’s almost reflex, but this doesn’t mean that they see or read everything below the fold. It’s more of a quick ‘size up’. If the page looks too long they may get chased away. So put things below the fold that are eye catching. A lot of designers will put all the cool graphics above the fold and then bury large blocks of boring text below the fold. If the user does a quick scroll down and sees all of that boring text, they might get scared and leave your page.

2 One clear call to action

Only have one, very clear call to action. Don’t muddle up your page with too many things that will distract the user from the main purpose of the landing page. Distraction is a huge factor when designing a landing page, and all too often we like to make our landing pages so beautiful that the call to action gets lost.

Eliminate the distraction by simplifying the site and make its purpose very clear and explicit for the user. Think about the purpose of the site and eliminate everything else that doesn’t directly relate to it. Groupon has created a very beautiful and simple landing page that does not distract the user from the call to action.

How to focus your call to action:

  • Ask the user a question.
  • Use graphics, arrows or visual direction to guide the users eye.
  • Call to action should be at the top of the page.
  • Make sure the color of your call to action is not used anywhere else on the page.
  • Condense your call to action to one sentence or question.
  • Place call to action on a simple background to allow it to stand out.
  • Simplify your text, simplify your text, and then simplify your text.

3 Visual cues – remove the heavy text

When designing your landing page try to use more visuals and less text. I try to stick to a 60/40 split, where 60% of the page should consist of a visual cue and 40% is text. Images and graphics will get the user’s attention, you only have a few seconds to grab it, so make it count.

I prefer to use a more ‘infographic’ or heavy graphic approach to visuals where I can combine text and graphics together. Infographics are very easy to look at and understand. If done correctly, this can convey your message very effectively.

A very good example of this is Camera+:

Nobody likes to read text, especially small text or even fine print text. If you do need block paragraphs of text please use a friendly font size; no smaller than 14px. Try to break up your blocks of text as well, don’t just lump them all together in one big mass. If a user sees a giant glob of text they are likely to run away.

4 Button or form?

Okay, this can be a tricky question. Most of the time landing pages are the place where your user signs up for something, right? So you’ll need a form, right? Forms suck and nobody wants to fill them out, but they are a necessary evil to any and every landing page. So, do you just slap your form on the page? Or do you use a button that serves up the form? This really depends on your form. If your form is pretty short, say 1 to 3 fields than I say slap right on the page. Short forms are less intimidating and scary, so save your users the hassle of clicking on a button, just give them the form.

Now, if your form is longer create yourself a nice call to action button and serve up the form in a modal window or some other visual presentation. If your form is super long, then I suggest you break it up into steps just for usability sake. A button can be tricky though because they are usually pretty small. Buttons need to stand out just like a large form box and enough to get the user’s attention. But if you treat a call to action button the same as you would any other call to action, then you’ll be just fine.

Here is a couple of good examples or landing pages that use only buttons, no forms:

 

5 Got links? Get rid of them

Remove all links other than your call to action, you don’t want your user leaving that page. My only exception to this rule is the privacy policy page which should always open up in a separate window. When your user hits your landing page you never ever want them to leave that page through that page. The user should only have two options; sign up or back out.

If your landing page is a part of your over all site – which for a lot of products this may be the case – try to eliminate as much navigation as possible. Your site may offer more benefits to your product and so having the user navigate away from the landing page may be beneficial in some cases, but there are other pages you don’t want this traffic to see like your about page, contact page, forum or blog pages. If the user starts reading through these other pages they may get too distracted and never come back.

While these pages are great to have on your site and may support your product, they need to be very specific and related to your call to action. If any of these sub pages don’t support your overall call to action directly I would suggest you remove your navigation from your landing page.

6 Free always works

It’s true, it always does. Almost any good landing page offers something free, whether it is a product, trial, service or just information, make sure that your landing page says free on it somewhere. Users like free, they feel less pressured or obligated when they see the word free so most of them are more likely to sign up when they have no monetary strings attached. Free is always an easy decision to make, so make it for them.

This doesn’t mean you have to use the free or print the word ‘free‘ seven times in bright pink to get the users attention. Here is a few other alternatives to the word ‘free’ that still mean free:

  • No obligation
  • No credit card required
  • Complimentary trial
  • No commitment required
  • No charge
  • It costs nothing

7 Provide security

Privacy is a huge factor on the interwebs these days, more so than just five years ago (I blame Facebook) and people are much more aware of security hazards on the web. Protecting the security of your users and letting them know you care about their privacy can be a very good selling point. In some cases it can be a breaking factor for conversion. If users don’t see a privacy policy or a security certificate they may just turn around and walk away. These extra security measures will allow your users to be more comfortable with your site.

Every landing page should have these security items:

  • An SSL certificate and HTTPS
  • A visible SSL certificate logo, even if its only visible in the footer or below the fold
  • A very visible link to your privacy policy
  • A check box in the form indicating that they have seen the privacy policy

When these items are present on the page the user will feel more comfortable with your product, offer or service and chances are they won’t think twice about giving you their email or phone number. Some people think that this practice of adding these items scares the user because it may make them feel uncomfortable, but this is not true. Users are much more aware of security risks these days and they will be comforted to know that you care about their privacy and that you are just some information stealing scam site.

Related Articles:

10 Factors that Affect Your Bounce Rate

22 Creative Landing Page Designs – A Showcase, Critique, and Optimization Discussion

Your Landing Page Sucks! Here are 10 Examples That Don’t…

The Anatomy of a Perfect Landing Page

 

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Patrick Cox

Patrick is a UX Designer and Researcher at Instructure (Canvas LMS).. He also enjoys family, snowboarding, sports, bacon and is jealous of your beard.

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  1. Nice article!

    I have to say about “Register for free” that it’s something that makes me distrust sometimes, because so many times i found “Register for free” and then you have to pay for something after registering if you want to continue. Of course they’re not lying, ’cause you registered for free, but normally when you have to specify that something is free it’s because something in this website is not free.

    About registering, i think it’s better to avoid this step if really is not needed (yep, i know, sounds obvious, but not always developers/designers think well in this).

    Thanks for the article! 🙂

  2. Although there is no exact formula to making a perfect landing page, there are some common rules of thumb to increase your chances of making a winning one.

  3. Nice points, well explained and with informative graphics.
    Just Awesome.

  4. Good points. On the idea of just one call-to-action button: sometimes I use two of them, for example “Request a quote now” (for people in a hurry) and another one like “Find out more” or “Take a product tour” – which is the one I actually want people to click, because I want to make the visitors engage more with the website. I use this often on homepages of complex products because it’s unlikely that a person will buy at his first visit. I let him dig deeper into the site, where I expose him to more and more information. Somewhere deeper inside the website, I make them click that one and only call-to-action button.

    There, just a thought.

  5. Nice example of landing pages…
    But!!
    ‘5 got links? get rid of them’

    This is very subjective, A case in point if you where selling A BMW 5 series, you would lose reassurance and user trust if the landing page the deal was on did not have original website Navigation and features, for high priced items and services people will be un-trusting if they cannot navigate your website, i would estimate the border line is anything over $50 will have peoples trust issues on alert. with spammers and hackers doing anything to get your details users have to trust your page, the more it looks hard sell or less navigation the more there trust issues are alerted.

    Think of this a landing page should be like the name suggests a page to land at from where you can find the information you need in the site.
    The concept of landing pages where originally thought out to save badly designed websites. If your website as been created for UX you really should not need bespoke landing pages…..