In order to get ahead of their competitors, most people spend so much time, money, and effort for pay-per-click campaigns, promo emails, and newsletters. Many online marketers give too much attention on convincing readers to click on links indicated in their ads, while very little focus is given to the structure and content of the web pages where those links lead to. To the reader’s disappointment, some linked sites barely contain significant amount of quality information.
If you would like to earn a bandwagon of prospect buyers, you need to create a landing web page that has good design and quality content. So how are you going to do this?
Keep your articles clear and concise. Aside from their short attention span, most people who research online have limited time to spend in front of their PCs. Present your point in just two to three sentences, or you can write your points in bulleted lists instead of long and tedious paragraphs.
Use the landing page to provide general product information. Include product photos, item descriptions, and price per product quantity or length of service. Short testimonials from your existing customers can also help.
Do not direct visitors to your homepage if you are advertising for a specific offer. In this way, you’ll prevent your prospect buyers from wandering away from the possible purchase or sign-up actions that you want them to take.
Utilize one landing page for every product or service. If you have enough resources, it’s best that you design a separate landing page and campaign for each product or service. If you offer a wide range of products or services, you can group them according to product or service type and then create a single landing page for each type.
Indicate your clear call to action. Always place an “Add to Cart” link beside the item description and price list of each product or service. “Enter email to subscribe” can work for promo emails and newsletters, or “Click here to download” if your service includes access to files or software.
Don’t ask too many personal details from your readers. Unless they’re making a credit card purchase for your products, asking for the users’ name and email address is enough. You need to assure the users that the information will be kept confidential.
Don’t overdo your web design. Avoid flashy signs as they can pull your readers’ focus away from the articles in your web page. Keep a consistent look and feel to your site – it helps if you use the same colors, fonts, lay-outs, and navigation buttons all throughout your website.
Landing pages play an important role in maximizing your pay-per-click ads or email campaigns, so you need to dedicate a thorough effort to keep your landing pages clean and usable. It can be a rigorous procedure to go through, but it eventually pays off by increasing your site traffic and sales.
Filed under: Frankly Speaking...Your Landing Page | Tagged: advertising online, adwords, call to action, email campaigns, how to write a landing page, increase sales, increase website traffic, landing page design, landing page templates, landing pages, mass exposure, maximize traffic, maximize your ad campaign, online marketing









Excellent article!
I am always amazed at how much emphasis is placed on just getting traffic without thinking about what is really important… sales!! As if money will simply appear because you throw enough people at your website.
If you are not concentrating on what you want people to do when they get to your site and providing enough incentive fro them to do it when they get there, you are wasting YOUR time and money and THEIR time.
Once you do as you suggest and clarify what you want your customers to do and who your customers are, then it becomes easier to design your website and product offering to what they want.
It also becomes easier to attract the right customers in the first place! And then guess what? Its not so hard to get them to buy what you are offering!
I just had to write something because it was so good to see someone actually talking about focusing on the website instead of just generating non-targeted traffic.
thanks
John