Marketers often overlook the simplest element: the name of the offer, sale, or content piece. A/B testing the title is easier than changing creative or landing pages and can have the biggest impact on actual conversions, not just clicks or opens.
An offer's name should not be monolithic. For better performance, create multiple titles for the same content or product and deploy them to different audience segments based on their unique triggers and language preferences. This allows for personalization at the naming level.
A generic button like "Submit" is a wasted opportunity. The call-to-action is your last chance to persuade the user. Treat its copy as a critical sales variable and A/B test compelling, action-oriented phrases like "Yes, I'm in" to maximize conversions.
Explicitly telling users what action to take in marketing copy taps into their subconscious willingness to follow instructions. Simple commands like 'open this,' 'save this post,' or 'screenshot this' prompt users to act, leading to measurable lifts in metrics like email opens and post saves on platforms like LinkedIn.
Marketers often over-optimize form fields while ignoring the core value exchange. A weak call to action like "Request a Demo" offers no immediate value. A strong, front-and-center offer (e.g., "Save 20% Today") is the primary motivator for a user to provide their information.
The packaging of a lead magnet—specifically its headline—has a disproportionate impact on how many people opt-in. Businesses should spend more time testing the name and framing of their lead magnet rather than endlessly tweaking the content inside, provided the content solves a real problem.
Rephrase call-to-action buttons from a brand command (e.g., "Donate Now") to a user's first-person statement (e.g., "Yes, I want to help"). This simple change in perspective makes the user an active participant, significantly increasing engagement and click-through rates on emails, landing pages, and social media posts.
During busy periods like early Q1, audiences crave efficiency. Starting subject lines, landing page headlines, or social posts with 'TLDR' immediately signals a concise summary. This tactic respects the reader's time and can significantly increase engagement and conversion rates.
Instead of overhauling an offer, simply add one descriptive word—a 'modifier'—to the title. Testing "HR Guide" versus "Quick Fix HR Guide" is an easy, effective way to see a radical impact on conversions by changing the perceived value and specificity of the offer.
During periods when audiences feel time-pressed, like late January, using 'TLDR' (Too Long; Didn't Read) at the start of subject lines, landing page headlines, or social posts is highly effective. It acknowledges the reader's time scarcity and promises a quick summary, which can significantly increase engagement and conversions.
For channels without massive viewership, testing titles and thumbnails simultaneously creates too many variables for statistically relevant results. A YouTube liaison advises testing wildly different concepts for either the title *or* the thumbnail, but not both at once, to get clear, actionable data.