so i spent a month optimizing my landing page and the results are... well

so i spent a month optimizing my landing page and the results are... well

Bounty

New member
right, i need someone to explain this like i'm five. i ran a/b tests on my main finance offer landing page for four straight weeks. swapped hero images, button colors, copy length, the whole nine yards. the version with the ugly, text-heavy 2008-looking page is converting at 4.2%. the slick, modern one with animations and whitespace is sitting at 1.8%. lmao. back in the day, you just made it blue and put a big arrow. now i'm over here with hotjar recordings watching people get confused by a gradient cta. my am says 'trust the data' but the data is telling me to build a geocities page. genuinely confused if we've all over-engineered this. anyone else seeing their 'ugly' variants just... work better?
 
Data don't lie but sometimes user behavior is just.. weird. maybe folks trust the old school look more because it feels familiar even if it looks bad. modern design can sometimes overcomplicate what users actually want which is just quick answers and easy answers. test simple stuff like plain headline, clear CTA, no animations. sometimes less is more even if it looks ugly. remember, if it converts, it works. beauty is just skin deep in LPs.
 
Data don't lie but sometimes user behavior is
yeah but here's the thing, just because users are clicking the ugly version more doesn't mean it's actually better. It could be that the data is just capturing some initial curiosity or distraction. Who's actually converting after they land? Are they staying? Completing the flow? Or just bouncing faster? Just because users seem to trust an older look more, doesn't mean it's actually building trust in the offer. I've seen plenty of cases where shiny new designs get more clicks but the backend metrics tell a different story. So what's your true KPI? If it's installs or signups, I'd dig deeper than surface level CVR. Maybe the old school looks just happen to look more trustworthy even if they're ugly as hell. Would love to see the full funnel data before writing it off.
 
Let me compromise but I think you're overthinking this a bit If the ugly version converts better and it's backed by data I'd roll with that and optimize around what actually works because user trust is key and if they're clicking and converting more in the old school design then that's what matters forget the aesthetics for a sec sometimes simplicity wins over fancy visuals. I'd test further but don't dismiss what's working just because it looks outdated.
 
right, i need someone to explain this like i'm five. i ran a/b tests on my main finance offer landing page for four straight weeks. swapped hero images, button colors, copy length, the whole nine yards.
You say you ran four weeks of tests and swapped everything. Let's see the numbers. Changing one thing at a time helps isolate what actually moves the needle.
 
now i'm over here with hotjar recordings watching people get confused by a gradient cta
watching recordings and getting confused by a gradient CTA is a sign your tracking setup is probably off. Data doesn't lie but your pixel might be lying to you. People get confused by what they can't understand fast enough.
 
Look, the reality is sometimes the ugliest, simplest stuff just hits better cuz it cuts through the noise, especially in finance. People want clarity, not a fancy slideshow. The fancy design might look good in your head but if it confuses or slows them down, it kills conversions. You gotta remember, your real MOAT is trust and understanding, not chasing shiny. Keep it real, strip out the fluff, and don't overthink the art if the data shows the old school works.
 
Changing one thing at a time helps isolate what actually moves the needle
Yeah, I gotta agree with Renegade here. Four weeks of testing and swapping everything, that's a classic mistake I see a lot. People want to believe their entire page design is the reason for conversions but most of the time it's just a small tweak or a single element moving the needle. When you change everything at once, you lose the ability to pinpoint what's actually working. I've seen this movie before. If you want real clarity, do one change at a time. Track it carefully. It's boring but effective. Otherwise, you're just guessing and wasting ad spend. And don't forget, in finance, sometimes simple is king. Over-engineering the LP is a quick way to lose sight of what really matters. Keep it lean, test one thing, then move on.
 
the slick, modern one with animations and whitespa
Modern and slick doesn't mean better, data is the story. Sometimes people just want what they recognize, not a fancy gif or animation. Blacklists beat whitelists for scale, don't forget that.
 
yeah, sounds familiar. spent ages on LP tweaks only to find out the traffic is the real king here. long-term branding is a fairy tale for noobs anyway. just my 2 cents, focus on good vert, creatives and CTR. the rest is noise
 
man, i hear ya. spent weeks shaving my LP, making tiny tweaks, but in the end it's the traffic quality and offer match that kill or land. don't get me wrong, a clean LP helps but if your source is trash or off target you just chasing your tail. sometimes i feel like i'm just rearranging deck chairs on the titanic. focus on vert, creatives and CTR like bullion said and don't lose sleep over every pixel.
 
been there - LP is just a shiny object if your traffic is garbage. spent weeks tweaking landing pages only to watch the CTR and CVR stay dead. the source and offer match matter more. first-party data is overhyped for DR - focus on whitelists and good verticals. the LP is just the cherry on top but not the cake.
 
i get the traffic vs LP debate but in my humble experience the LP is still a big part of the puzzle. if you have solid traffic and offer match but your LP sucks you lose LTV, CTR drops and it all falls apart. not saying traffic is not king but a bad LP can kill your flow fast. you gotta keep both in check.
 
sounds like you're stuck in the trap of over-optimization. imo ppl get obsessed with the page and forget about the real deal which is traffic and offer match. just my two cents but if the traffic is trash or the offer isn't aligned, all that tweaking won't save you. focus on getting quality traffic first, then refine the LP if needed. not saying LP isn't important but it won't make up for bad traffic or a off-target offer. hang in there, just gotta find the right source. smh, sometimes the simplest approach is the best
 
spent weeks tweaking landing pages only to watch the CTR and CVR stay dead
Yeah, that resonates. Been there, done that. You tweak and tweak and then realize your traffic sucks or the offer isn't a good fit. The LP is just a tiny piece of the puzzle sometimes. I swear most people forget that and get sucked into over-optimization. It's like trying to polish a turd and hoping it turns into gold. In the end, if your traffic is dead or your offer is off, all the LP tweaks in the world won't save you.
 
focus on getting quality traffic first, then
RIP, Glide but if quality traffic was enough we'd all be rich by now. Back in the day I watched a guy get 10k a month with spammy traffic and a decent offer. His CTR was through the roof but ROI was trash. The thing is you can have perfect traffic and a perfect offer but if your link profile is a mess or the SERPs are shaking you gotta fix that too. No one thing saves you, especially in a volatile serp.
 
traffic quality, offer match
i call bullshit on that. traffic quality and offer match are just basics. if your landing page is trash or you not testing anything, all that traffic in the world won't save you. gotta optimize and test, not just rely on "good traffic". smh
 
you really think a month of tweaking a landing page can fix a broken traffic or offer match? isn't that just a placebo for laziness in fixing the real problem?
 
so i spent a month optimizing my landing page and the results are.
A month on a LP is just noise. The algo changes, the traffic quality is garbage, and you think that little tweak is gonna save you? Nah, it's always the same story.
 
if your landing page is trash or you not testing anything, all that traffic in the world won't save you
You're overcomplicating it. Testing a new color or headline on your LP once a week isn't enough if you haven't nailed your core offer and traffic quality. You gotta have a solid hypothesis for what's broken and test with discipline. A good landing page can boost EPC or CTR but if your traffic is bot traffic or completely off niche, all the tweaking won't matter. Campaign data without a hypothesis is just noise. Fix the root cause before you chase small gains.
 
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