Friday, February 7, 2020

150 Experiments on the Call-to-Action: Six psychological conditions that hinder our results (Part 2)

“Marketers, in their role as philosopher, must keep management from gaining internal clarity at the expense of external clarity. It is dangerous to succumb to the illusion that the prospect sees our company the way we see it.”

— Flint McGlaughlin, Managing Director & CEO, MECLABS Institute

(This article was originally published in the MarketingExperiments email newsletter.)

This is part two in our series about effective call-to-action strategies that increase your webpage’s performance. You can view part one here.

We did a meta-analysis of 150 of our experiments to determine six common cognitive conditions in the minds of webpage visitors regarding the call-to-action that hurt conversion.

  1. Internal Detachment
  2. Transitional Vertigo
  3. Compositional paralysis
  4. Elemental paralysis
  5. Terminal anxiety
  6. Transitional vertigo

In this session, Flint McGlaughlin, CEO and Managing Director, MECLABS Institute, shows you how to improve your call-to-action by mitigating these negative responses with strategic overcorrection methods.

Key points in the video:

  • 2:38 Cognitive Condition #4: Paralysis and its root causes.
  • 5:24 Live Optimization: Audience-submitted CTA from a medical provider
  • 8:47 Condition #4’s solution can be found in these case studies …
  • 13:35 A checklist you can use on your webpages with criteria for a good CTA, also Condition #4 is introduced.
  • 13:51 Cognitive Condition #5: Decision hesitation and its root causes.
  • 15:12 Condition #5’s solution can be found in these case studies …
  • 20:10 Cognitive Condition #6: Mismatched expectations and its root causes.
  • 21:10 Live Optimization: Audience-submitted CTA from a Pet supplies provider
  • 22:00 Condition #6’s solution can be found in these case studies …

(If you would like your marketing to be considered for live optimization in a future session, just send it to us at info@meclabs.com)

Related Resources

If you’d like hands-on help improving your calls-to-action, you might want to consider a Quick Win Intensive for your company.

The Power of Perceived Value: Discover how a well-marketed banana & roll of tape produced a windfall

Conversion Lifts in 10 Words or Less

Adding Content Before Subscription Checkout Increases Product Revenue 38%

The post 150 Experiments on the Call-to-Action: Six psychological conditions that hinder our results (Part 2) appeared first on MarketingExperiments.



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