| name | Landing Page CRO |
| description | Improves landing page conversion rates through hypothesis-driven CRO — audit, prioritize, test, and iterate. Use before scaling paid spend, after a CVR drop, or during a growth sprint. |
Landing Page CRO
Conversion rate optimization is not about applying best practices — it is about forming specific hypotheses, testing them against real users, and iterating based on evidence. Generic fixes rarely move the needle; specific ones do.
Audit Before Hypothesizing
Before writing a single hypothesis, collect: (1) quantitative data — heatmaps, scroll maps, click maps, session recordings, and funnel drop-off data; (2) qualitative data — user surveys, live chat transcripts, and sales call notes. The audit should answer: where are users leaving, what are they clicking that does not help them convert, and what objections appear repeatedly in their own words. Spend at least one hour in session recordings before forming opinions.
Build Hypotheses with Structure
Every hypothesis follows this format: 'Because [observation from audit], changing [element] to [proposed change] will [expected outcome] for [audience].' A hypothesis without an observation is a guess. A hypothesis without a measurable expected outcome cannot be evaluated. Write hypotheses before mockups — the thinking matters more than the execution.
Prioritize with ICE
Score each hypothesis on Impact (how much will it move CVR if true), Confidence (how strong is the evidence), and Ease (how fast can it be built and tested). Multiply the three scores on a 1-10 scale. Run the top-scoring test first. Avoid running more than two tests simultaneously on the same page — it complicates interpretation.
The Five Highest-Leverage Elements
In order of typical impact: (1) headline — must match the ad's promise and speak to a specific pain; (2) primary CTA — text, position, and contrast matter; (3) social proof — specificity beats volume, a named customer quote outperforms a star rating; (4) above-the-fold visual — must show the outcome, not the product; (5) form or checkout friction — every unnecessary field reduces conversion. Fix these before testing background colors or font sizes.
Statistical Standards
Do not call a winner until reaching 95% statistical significance with at least 100 conversions per variant. For low-traffic pages, use Bayesian testing and set a 90% probability-to-beat threshold. Never end a test early because one variant looks better — regression to the mean is real. Document every test outcome, including losses — a failed hypothesis is still a learning.
Message Match
The single most common CRO failure is message mismatch: the ad makes a specific promise and the landing page delivers a generic brand statement. Every paid traffic source should land on a page where the headline directly echoes the ad's offer. If one page serves multiple campaigns, use dynamic text replacement or build dedicated landing pages per major campaign theme.