One in five clicks within a marketing email is on the company logo. Marketers often overlook this, defaulting the link to the homepage. To maximize conversion potential from an already engaged audience, the logo should direct users to the specific offer page relevant to the email's content.

Related Insights

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.

Instead of directing users to a landing page, ask them to reply to your email with a specific word (e.g., "guide") to receive content. This tactic significantly increases conversions by reducing friction and simplifying the user's action.

Instead of directing users to a landing page with a form, ask them to simply reply to the email with a keyword to receive a guide or discount. This reduces friction and can exponentially increase the number of people who take the desired action compared to traditional methods.

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.

Stop trying to convert customers directly within an email. An email's primary function is to provide enough evidence and intrigue to earn a click through to a dedicated sales page. The sales page, not the email, is responsible for the final conversion. This shift makes copy more conversational and less pushy.

A subtle but powerful formatting trick in emails and landing pages is to hyperlink an entire sentence or phrase, not just one or two words like "click here." This creates a larger, more obvious clickable target for the user, improving the experience and likely increasing clicks.

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.

Asking for a prospect's time or interest is less effective than giving them something valuable. Emails that include a tangible offer (e.g., a benchmark, an audit, a unique insight) see a 28% higher reply rate. You get their time by not asking for it directly.

Despite being a foundational marketing principle, an astonishing 52% of B2B pay-per-click ads still link to a generic homepage. This common mistake creates a poor user experience and drastically reduces conversion rates for expensive, high-intent traffic.

Contrary to the common wisdom of using a single call-to-action, an A/B test revealed a newsletter version with five links generated a 152% higher click-through rate than a version with only three. Offering variety can turn passive readers into active clickers.