FAQs
Let’s take a look at some of the most frequently asked questions about conversion rate optimisation.
What is a good conversion rate?
‘Good’ conversion rates can vary depending on your industry and your goal. A small, highly engaged audience might give you a high conversion rate, but a much larger audience with a lower conversion rate could generate more revenues.
For ecommerce, a conversion rate of around 2-5% is often regarded as ‘good’. But it depends on what you want to achieve – if your existing rate is 0.5%, increasing that to just 1% would represent a 100% growth in the actual volume of conversions.
Remember too that conversion rates of over 100% are theoretically possible, if you count each individual conversion separately when the same customer completes multiple funnel goals.
How long does it take to see CRO results?
CRO is an organic growth method. You need time to conduct detailed, logical A/B testing, accumulate sufficient data to carry out rigorous analysis, and then to build on those conclusions as you iterate the process many times over.
All of this is a good thing. Incremental gains will start to add up over the lifetime of your CRO campaign, and will persist for some time once you stop optimising or put your focus on other aspects of your website and content.
Simple changes can be made faster (e.g. A/B testing can be carried out more quickly than complex multivariate testing) but sometimes you need that complexity – and the time it takes to collect data – to identify the little tweaks and finishing touches that might otherwise be missed.
Can CRO be applied to all types of websites?
All commercial websites can benefit from CRO, regardless of the types of conversion you hope to generate.
As we’ve seen in this guide, there are several main kinds of websites, including:
- Sales-driven ecommerce websites
- Lead generation/service-oriented websites
- Content-focused sites (e.g. blogs)
Your website might fall into more than one of these categories, for example you might have an ecommerce site that sells physical hardware AND SaaS services AND downloadable whitepapers.
CRO is the universal tool to improve your conversion rates across all of those different areas. If you can define it as a goal for the purposes of funnel analysis, then you can raise your completion rate via CRO.
What tools are best for CRO?
Third-party tools can generate tracking data for your CRO campaigns, making it easier to test the effectiveness of different versions of your content, and to see exactly what your conversion rate actually is.
Some of the leading tools for CRO optimisation are:
Google Marketing Platform
Until late 2023, Google Optimize (also known as Google Website Optimizer) was a relatively simple tool for small business webmasters to carry out basic A/B testing and even some multivariate analysis.
Google Optimize has since been bundled into Google Marketing Platform, an integrated platform that brings together other Google products like Google Analytics and Google Search Console, for even better visibility of your visitor data and your performance on Google SERPs.
If you use Google Analytics, it’s definitely worth exploring Google Search Console and tools like Google PageSpeed Insights, as using them together can give you a much more detailed understanding about your website design, your content, and what needs to be improved.
Hotjar
Hotjar is a website heatmap tracking tool that can work alongside platforms like Google Analytics to yield more detailed data. Described as ‘behaviour analytics software’, there are free and paid premium versions to help you see how visitors interact with your pages.
The greater granularity of Hotjar’s data means that you not only track your bounce rate, but can see exactly what page elements are being ignored (or are not working at all) so you can focus on optimising those parts of the page – and you can use that data alongside Analytics to correlate your conclusions and make more confident decisions about how to proceed
It’s good to ‘double up’ on your analytics data in this way, because getting the same trend on two distinct third-party platforms is a sure sign that it’s a genuine result and not just a coincidence.
Optimizely
Optimizely makes it easier to conduct A/B and multivariate testing, toggle new design features on and off with a single click, and offer personalised versions of your website to visitors (e.g. a ‘welcome back’ message to returning customers).
It was founded in 2010 by Google alumni Dan Siroker and Pete Koomen, so again, it has some convincing credentials if you like to tie your CRO campaigns to the search engine with the biggest market share.
Optimizely has a choice of pricing plans for each feature set – basically a small business or large enterprise option – so although there’s no free version, you should find there’s a plan to suit the size of your organisation