A/B Testing: Product page testing increases conversion 78%

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Product pages are arguably the heart of an ecommerce website.

It’s where potential customers learn about your products in a guided conversation that should deliver value and an overall top-notch customer experience.

Consequently, the elements on those pages are also potentially where you’re losing conversions due to anxiety.

At MarketingExperiments, we define customer anxiety as “a psychological concern stimulated by a given element in the sales or sign-up process.”

So how do you identify and mitigate anxiety on product pages?

In this MarketingExperiments Blog post, I wanted to share a recent experiment where an e-book retailer asked that same question and started testing to discover a way to answer it.

But, before we dive in, let’s view the background notes on the test to put the experiment into context.

Background: A large e-book retailer.

Goal: To increase the overall number of e-book sales.

Research Question: Which attempt to reduce anxiety will result in the highest conversion rate?

Test Design: A/B variable cluster split test

 

Side by side

ebook-retailer-versions

 

The team hypothesized that testing key product page elements could help them determine the true impact of anxiety on a product page.

Here is a quick breakdown of the elements the team chose to test in each treatment:

  • Version A – Attempted to reduce anxiety by using security seals
  • Version B – Highlighted compatibility by illustrating the product is multi-device friendly
  • Version C – Provided a synopsis of the content to help customers determine if the e-book would suit their interests at the top of the page
  • Version D – Emphasized quick accessibility to the product upon purchase

 

Results

 product-pages-test-results

 

Moving the product description up on the page resulted in a 78% relative increase in conversion.

 

What you need to understand

Anxiety is lethal to conversion.

However, it can often be corrected with strategic changes to product page elements that mitigate anxiety by overcorrecting for it.

But before you do that, you have to test your way into identifying, isolating and optimizing those elements that are having the biggest impact to conversion.

To learn more about how anxiety impacts conversion, you can watch the on-demand Web clinic replay of “Product Pages Tested.”

 

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A/B Testing: The value of choice in decision-making [More from the blogs]

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3 Comments
  1. Megan Bush says

    What did the control look like?
    Where was the description before it was pushed up?’
    I’m a little surprised by the result, but I love the methodology of testing the different anxiety points the shopper could experience. Thank you for sharing!

    1. Erin Hogg says

      Hi Megan! The control version of the experiment is discussed in the Web clinic video. Here’s a timestamped link when it’s examined: http://youtu.be/wdcjJveWsjg?t=22m34s

      You can also see it on slide 32 from the presentation: http://www.slideshare.net/marketingexperiments/product-pages-tested-how-carefully-poinpointing-customer-anxiety-led-to-a-78-increase-in-conversion

      I hope this helps your marketing efforts, thanks for commenting!

      Erin Hogg
      Copy Editor
      MarketingExperiments

  2. Tahire Khan says

    I guess the next stage would be to split test synopsis, as its an e-book I would even go a stage further and modify and split test the e-book based on findings of the synopsis a/b tests. Now that would be true digital marketing!

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