For as long as business owners have had a location to hang their sign, they’ve worked to attract more customers. Many businesses, even seasoned marketers, rely on a checklist of tactics they believe will drive sales. But tactics alone won’t cut it—you need a strategic approach.
In my book, A CEO's Guide to Web Strategy, I outline four key components of marketing, tailored specifically to web marketing. These components are timeless, though the tactics to execute them evolve with the digital landscape.
The Four Components of Web Marketing
Here’s how I break down marketing for your website:
- Location (Web Presence or Website): Your website is your digital storefront. Without a strong, accessible presence, no one will find you.
- Brand Awareness (Search Engine Optimization – SEO): SEO ensures your site ranks high enough to be discovered by potential customers.
- Visitors (Traffic Generation): High rankings don’t guarantee clicks. You need strategies to drive people to your site. Some call this search engine marketing (SEM), but I see SEM as one tactic within traffic generation.
- Transactions (Conversion Rate Optimization – CRO): Traffic is useless if visitors don’t take action. CRO focuses on turning visitors into leads or customers.
Even with a great website, there’s no guarantee people will find it—that’s where SEO comes in. High rankings don’t ensure visits, so you need traffic generation. And even with traffic, you need CRO to convert visitors into buyers.
What Is Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO)?
Let’s break down CRO clearly:
- Conversion: Getting someone to take a desired action, like visiting another page, filling out a form, or making a purchase.
- Conversion Rate: The percentage of visitors who complete that action versus those who don’t.
- Conversion Rate Optimization: Testing and tweaking your website to increase that percentage.
A common misconception is that CRO is just about generating leads or sales. It’s not. CRO is about analyzing and improving your site to encourage more of the actions you want. I’ve worked with clients who assumed a flashy design would drive sales, only to find that small tweaks, like clearer buttons, doubled conversions.
How to Optimize for Conversions
CRO starts with observation. You can’t predict what visitors will do—you have to test and learn. The goal is to increase the percentage of people taking your desired action, whether that’s filling out a form, buying a product, or clicking to another page.
There’s a bigger piece to CRO: targeting the right audience. You can maximize total conversions or focus on attracting the most serious prospects. CRO helps you analyze results to find what works best, based on how you define success. For example, I once helped a retailer test two landing pages—one broad, one niche. The niche page had fewer conversions but higher-quality leads, saving them time and boosting sales.
Here are practical steps to start:
- Test layouts: Experiment with button placement, colors, or form lengths.
- Analyze behavior: Use heatmaps to see where users click or drop off.
- Refine messaging: Ensure headlines and CTAs are clear and compelling.
- Segment audiences: Tailor pages for different visitor types, like first-timers versus returning customers.
Track CRO Effectively
Strategically, CRO requires a mindset shift. Your opinion on design doesn’t matter—what matters is what your visitors do. If a less “perfect” design drives more conversions, rethink your preferences.
Tactically, tracking conversions is straightforward with tools like Google Analytics 4 (GA4), which replaced Universal Analytics in 2023. GA4 lets you set up conversion events (formerly goals) to track actions like form submissions or purchases. You can link these to initial user actions and build custom funnels to see where visitors drop off.
Set a Conversion Event in Google Analytics 4
To set up a conversion event in GA4, follow these steps:
- From the GA4 Admin panel, select your property.
- Go to Events and click Create Event or use predefined events like form_submit or purchase.
- Define the event parameters, such as a specific page URL or button click.
- Mark the event as a conversion under Conversions in the Admin panel.
- Save and allow GA4 to start tracking. Data appears almost instantly, with historical insights available for up to 14 days.
GA4’s User Flow report shows where users exit your funnel, helping you tweak landing pages or promotions. You can also assign monetary values to conversions, like average transaction amounts, to measure ROI.
Maximize Your Marketing Results
CRO is how you pinpoint which marketing tactics deliver. If a tactic isn’t working, cut it. By testing and refining, you ensure your website not only attracts visitors but turns them into customers. What’s one change you’ll test on your site to boost conversions?
Feb 9, 2023 9:42:00 AM
Ready to simplify and succeed? Let’s make it happen—because your business deserves practical, no-nonsense wins. Find me on LinkedIn.