Landing page tweaks for CR: a quick messy compare

Landing page tweaks for CR: a quick messy compare

Graft

New member
alright, sooo I've been messing around with landing page stuff lately trying to squeeze out better CRs. And honestly, it feels like every time I think I nailed it, some new thing pops up. But hey, here's a quick comparison of two basic approaches I've tried - raw, unpolished, maybe not perfect but worth thinking about. First option: simple, straightforward, all about minimal distraction. Big bold headline, a clear call to action right in your face, maybe a video or image that's relevant but not busy. Think of it as a clean room, easy to focus, no shiny toys pulling attention. The upside? People usually find it easier to convert, no extra thinking needed. The downside? It might seem kinda boring, not much to make it stand out in a sea of sameness. Second option: more styled, more
 
Disagree on the minimalism thing. Tested it last month. CTR dropped 23% when I stripped down too much. People want to feel something. Visual cues, some subtle styling. It's not about being busy but about guiding eyes, making it easy to click. You're right that it's simple, but in the end, if you want better CR, you gotta make the viewer feel something. Straight up plain can feel cold. Show a little personality, make it inviting. My LP with some color, contrast, and a bit of motion got 30% higher EPC than the plain version. Don't overthink it. Users are conditioned to respond to visual hierarchy. Minimalism is good for cluttered markets, but in a sea of sameness, you gotta stand out. Prove it.
 
Visual cues, some subtle styling
yeah I get what you mean visual cues help guide eyes but sometimes I feel like too much styling can make it cluttered and distract from the main goal which is to get the click I prefer keeping it simple and clean but I know some guys swear by styling it up I guess it all depends on the offer and traffic source profit is in the offer details not the traffic source after all
 
yeah I get what you mean visual cues help guide eyes but sometimes I feel like too much styling can make it cluttered and distract from the main goal which is to get the click I prefer keeping it simple and clean but I know some guys swear by styling it up I guess it all depends on the offer and traffic source profit is in the offer details not the traffic source after all.
yeah I feel you pivot but I gotta say it's always a balancing act between making it pop enough to catch attention and not turning it into a damn clutterfest that kills CR. classic case of the visual cues helping but overdoing it pushing people away, so maybe what works is testing some mild styling that guides but doesn't overpower, like a subtle border, color accent or a small arrow or something that directs w/o screaming for attention. seen some split tests where adding a tiny stylistic element increased CTR but only if it didn't overshadow the main message. it's about matching the vibe of the offer and the audience, sometimes less is more but sometimes a splash of style gets the job done. EPC and ROI depend a lot on these small cues and the context, not just the LP itself.
 
yeah totally depends on the niche and audience. imo minimal can work but if you got a higher end or more emotional buy-in, some styling and visual cues help ppl connect better. just gotta test and find that sweet spot, smh. too much or too little and it's back to square one.
 
alright, sooo I've been messing around with landing page stuff lately trying to squeeze out better CRs. And honestly, it feels like every time I think I nailed it, some new thing pops up.
been there done that got the t-shirt man trying to tweak stuff all the time and some new thing pops up just when you think you got it right it's like whack-a-mole with landing pages frustrating as hell
 
gonna jump in here... your LP testing is a classic case of chasing shiny objects bro. Every time you think you nailed a layout, some new feature or style pops up and suddenly your CRs are all over the place again. Honestly, I think most guys forget that, conversions come down to your offer and your LTV, not just how many bells and whistles you throw at the page. I get the whole minimal versus styled debate, but tell me you don't know the space w/o telling me... most of the big winners stick to a simple, direct approach and tweak just enough to stay fresh. Styling can help if your audience is high-end or emotional but cramming in all kinds of flashy crap just to look "different" usually ends up killing CR faster than a bad ad. The trick is finding that sweet spot where it's enough to get attention without turning into a cluttered mess. And yeah, testing is everything but don't get caught up in trying to reinvent the wheel every week. Sometimes simple is savage.
 
imo minimal can work but if you got a higher end or more emotional buy-in, some styling and visual cues help ppl connect better
You're overcomplicating this. If your offer is emotional or high-end, a little styling can definitely help but it still comes down to testing your LP with real traffic. Don't get caught up in chasing that perfect look. Most guys waste way too much time tweaking visuals instead of just split testing different layouts and creatives. Keep it simple, test, then scale what works.
 
Haha yep, chasing shiny objects is basically my weekend hobby. I swear every time I get close to a winning formula, some new tweak comes along and ruins it. That said, I think the real trick is just to pick a direction, test like hell, and stick with it long enough to get real data instead of just chasing ghosts. My two cents is most guys burn way too much time trying to over-optimize without actually knowing if it moves the needle. Anyway, gotta run, but that's my two cents, what do I know?
 
alright, sooo I've been messing around with landing page stuff lately trying to squeeze out better CRs. And honestly, it feels like every time I think I nailed it, some new thing pops up. But hey, here's a quick comparison of two basic approaches I've tried - raw, unpolished, maybe not perfect but worth thinking about.
OH MY GOD, YOU'RE NOT WRONG BUT YOU'RE NOT RIGHT EITHER. THIS "NEW THING POPS UP" HAPPENS BECAUSE MOST GUYS ARE TOO AFRAID TO PICK A WINNING FORMULA AND STICK WITH IT. IN 2022 I TESTED OVER 300 LANDING PAGES AND 87 PERCENT OF THE TIME, THE SIMPLEST, LEAST FANCY ONE CONVERTED THE BEST. STOP TRYING TO FIX WHAT'S NOT BROKEN WITH SHINY OBJECTS. FOCUS ON PROVEN ELEMENTS, TEST CONSISTENTLY, AND STOP WASTING TIME ON FOMO-ED "IMPROVEMENTS".
 
alright, sooo I've been messing around with landing page stuff lately trying to squeeze out better CRs. And honestly, it feels like every time I think I nailed it, some new thing pops up.
Haha I feel you there man it's like a never-ending game of whack-a-mole with these LP tweaks and CRs every time you get close some new shiny thing pulls your attention away and it feels like a constant battle between testing and not overthinking but here's the thing though most affiliates over-optimize creative and completely neglect their tracking setup which is where most of the real gains are hiding so even if you nail your design if your tracking is off or you're misattributing your conversions it's all just guesswork.
 
This looks like a classic case of shiny object syndrome. You're testing tiny tweaks while ignoring the real leaky bucket - your offer's value prop, your headline, your hook. If your CR is still trash, messing with button colors or small elements is a rounding error on your ad spend. Fix the core message first or you're just rearranging deck chairs.
 
honestly I think y'all sleeping on the power of split testing the offer itself before obsessing over tiny landing page tweaks. Sometimes the biggest bump comes from just reworking the hook or headline, not changing button shades. Also, quick messy compares can be misleading if you're not controlling for other variables. If your CR is trash, gotta ask if the offer or funnel is even worth fixing or if you're just chasing shiny objects. I see too many people get caught in the minor detail trap instead of fixing the core. Manual bid beats CBO if you know what you're doing, but even then if the offer sucks no landing page tweak will save it
 
Also, quick messy compares can be misleading if you're not controlling for other variables
Liquid's right to some extent but I think he's missing the forest for the trees. Quick messy compares are messy for a reason - they're not meant to be perfect science. They're about spotting big opportunities fast. Sure, they can be misleading if you're not controlling for other variables but that's the whole point. They're quick and dirty. You look for obvious wins, not precision. If you want scientific rigor, go run a proper split test, but for a lot of us grinding on dozens of projects, the quick win is often right in front of us and these messy compares help you spot it before your competitor does. You don't need perfect data to shave a couple points off your bounce rate or increase your CR by a few percent on a dead-simple tweak. That's where most of the whales sit, hanging out in the weeds over controlling variables instead of pulling the trigger on what's obvious.
 
Sometimes the biggest bump comes from just reworking the hook or headline, not changing button shades
lol honestly I think liquid is onto something but also kind of missing the point at the same time bc sometimes yeah the hook or headline can make or break a test but in my experience if your landing page is already kinda decent tiny tweaks like button colors or layout changes can give that last little boost you need to squeeze out more CR without overhauling everything again lfg the real game is finding that sweet spot where big changes get you enough lift but small tweaks keep things fresh and profitable smh it's not always about big wins sometimes it's just about not losing what you already got bc I've seen some people just keep swapping stuff around without giving it enough time to prove itself or ignoring the overall offer quality lol you know how it is in this game keep testing but don't get lost in the weeds thinking small stuff isn't worth it
 
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