Optimizing your website to generate leads is a no-brainer. However, it’s not as simple as throwing a “Click Here” button on your home page and watching the leads pour in.
Instead, marketers and designers need to take a more strategic approach. In this post, we’ll go over some quick ways that actually work to optimize your website for lead generation.
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How to Create a Lead Generation Website
To understand how to optimize our website, we’ll have to first gain a basic understanding of the lead generation process.
What components are at play when a casual website visitor turns into a lead?
The lead generation process typically starts when a website visitor clicks on a call-to-action (CTA) located on one of your site pages or blog posts. That CTA leads them to a landing page, which includes a form used to collect the visitor’s contact information.
Once the visitor fills out and submits the form, they are then led to a thank-you page. (Learn about this process in more detail in this post.)
Now that we’ve gone over the basics of lead generation, we can get down to the details. Here are the steps to follow to create a lead generation website from scratch.
1. Start with a goal.
Before you build your lead generation website, consider what your goal for it is. Your main goal is, of course, to generate leads, but get even more specific.
What do you want visitors to do on your website? Do you want to educate the buyer on your product or industry?
Then, you’ll probably want to create a free resource like an ebook or whitepaper that they can download by filling out a form and submitting their contact information.
Or perhaps you want to increase the number of people who sign up for your product. In this case, you’ll need to create compelling landing pages and sign-up forms with strong calls-to-action.
Consider what your lead generation goals are to better plan which elements to look for in your lead generation website.
2. Find a CMS tool.
When creating a lead generation website, you have a clear goal: increase leads to your business. That means you should look for a CMS tool that makes it easy to capture and convert leads.
The best CMS tool for lead generation is one that has built-in optimizations that are geared toward lead generation. It should have forms — sign-up forms, contact forms, and more — email marketing capabilities, live chat, and built-in analytics so you can track and measure your lead generation efforts.
And if you’re not a designer or don’t have access to one on your team, you’ll also want to look for a CMS tool that’s easy to use. Look for one with drag-and-drop capabilities or built-in themes.
These features will make it easy to put together a functional and attractive website without having any website development or coding experience.
3. Build a landing page.
Once you have your lead generation website set up, it’s time to build your first landing page. Your CMS tool should make it easy to set up and optimize a landing page that converts.
A few key elements your landing page must have include:
- Compelling headline
- A few sentences of copy
- Bullet points that outline the key benefits
- Product image
- A strong CTA button
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How to Increase Leads on Your Website
Now that you have your lead generation website set up, let’s unpack nine simple ways to increase leads on your website with these optimizations.
1. Add forms to the pages that get the most traffic.
Once you have a website, it’s important to benchmark your current state of lead generation before you begin so you can track your success and determine the areas where you most need improvement.
Some of your pages might make excellent lead generators, and you don’t even realize it.
To start, conduct an audit of where most of your online traffic and outreach comes from — your lead generators. Here are some common places a business might get visitors:
- Email marketing. Traffic might come from users who click through to your website from one of your emails.
- Social media. Traffic might come from users who engage in a campaign through one of your social media profiles.
- Live chat. Traffic might come in the form of users who reach out to your customer service team through a live chat window on your website.
- Blog posts. Traffic might come from your highest-performing blog posts.
Once you identify where your leads are coming from, you‘ll want to make sure the pages they’re landing on are doing everything they can to nurture a visitor’s interest.
For example, let’s say you use an analytics tool to track your leads.
If you realize most of your potential leads are clicking on inbound links to your website from your LinkedIn page, your next step is to update the pages they’re visiting with content that keeps them on and engaging with your website.
On your most visited website pages, add long-form content that visitors can access through forms that solicit their contact information.
2. Measure the performance of each lead generator.
Test how each of your existing lead generators is contributing to your business using a tool like Website Grader, which evaluates your lead generation sources (including landing pages and CTAs) and provides feedback on ways to improve your existing content.
You can also compare landing pages that are doing well with landing pages that aren’t doing as well.
For example, let’s say that you get 1,000 visits to Landing Page A, and 10 of those people filled out the form and converted into leads. For Landing Page A, you would have a 1% conversion rate.
Let’s say you have another landing page, Landing Page B, that gets 50 visitors to convert into leads for every 1,000 visits. That would be a 5% conversion rate — which is great.
Your next steps could be to see how Landing Page A differs from Landing Page B, and optimize Landing Page A accordingly.
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Finally, you could try running internal reports. Evaluate landing page visits, CTA clicks, and thank-you page shares to determine which offers are performing the best, and then create more like them.
3. Optimize each step of the lead generation process.
If your visitor searched “lawn care tips” and ended up on a blog post you published called “10 Ways To Improve Your Lawn Care Regimen,” you’d better not link that blog post to an offer for a snow-clearing consultation.
Make sure your offers are related to the page they‘re on so you can capitalize on visitors’ interest in a particular subject.
As soon as a visitor lands on your website, you can start learning about their conversion path. This path starts when a visitor visits your site and ends (hopefully) with them filling out a form and becoming a lead.
Sometimes, a visitor‘s path doesn’t end with the desired goal. In those cases, you can optimize the conversion path.
How? If you want to run an A/B test on a landing page, be sure to test four key pieces of the lead gen process:
The CTAs
Use contrasting colors from your site. Keep it simple — and try a tool like Canva to create images easily, quickly, and for free. Read this blog post for ideas for types of calls-to-action (CTAs) you can test on your blog.
The Landing Pages
Inbound traffic to landing pages still works. According to HubSpot’s State of Marketing Report, marketing teams saw inbound leads increase by 6.66% in 2022. For inspiration, here are 15 examples of well-designed landing pages you can learn from.
The Thank-You Pages
Oftentimes, it‘s the landing pages that get all the love in the lead generation process. But the thank-you page, where the visitor is led to once they submit a form on the landing page and convert into a lead, shouldn’t be overlooked.
In a HubSpot study on engagement rates of thank-you emails, these emails generated a 42% open rate and a 14% CTR.
Along with saying thank you, be sure to include a link for your new lead to actually download the offer on your thank-you page. You can also include social sharing buttons and even a form for another, related offer.
The Kickback Email
Once a visitor converts into a lead and their information enters your database, you have the opportunity to send them a kickback email, i.e., a “thank-you” email.
In the HubSpot email study referenced above, kickback emails doubled the engagement rates (opens and click-throughs) of standard marketing emails.
Use kickback emails as opportunities to include super-specific CTA and encourage sharing on email and social media.
4. Start with a basic CTA on your homepage.
If your homepage‘s design is what catches a person’s attention, the CTA is what keeps it. However, don’t bombard your visitors with an invitation to see the longest or most complex content you have.
Your homepage sits at the top of the marketing funnel and should, therefore, offer either a free trial or subscription to a recurring campaign. Consider including one of the following CTAs on the front of your website.
“Subscribe to Updates”
In general, consumers want their browsing experience to be as non-invasive as their buying experience. Oftentimes, they’re not ready to make a purchase when they first find your website.
To teach them about you with no effort or commitment on their part, invite them to subscribe to an email that notifies them of industry trends and product updates.
Personally follow up with the ones who opt to stay on this mailing list to gauge their interest and eventually turn them into marketing qualified leads (MQLs).
“Try Us for Free”
Free trials and demos are a growing company’s bread and butter. They allow you to generate demand in your business and create a contact list of leads who are currently piloting your product.
On your homepage, have your product available to try for free for a limited time using a CTA and form where you can collect their names and email addresses. At the end of each active product demo, follow up with the user to see what they thought of it.
5. Offer ebooks for download on specific blog posts.
Another non-invasive way to generate interest in your business is to create blog content that promotes an ebook or whitepaper, wherein your website visitors can learn more about the same topic they just read about on your blog.
This is where lead generation meets search engine optimization (SEO).
Blog content is your way of developing the page authority needed to rank your website on Google.
Organic visitors who come from Google are often more intent on finding solutions to a problem you can solve — making this form of lead generation quite valuable.
To start, conduct keyword research on a topic that’s relevant to your industry. Create a group of blog posts around this topic. Then, draft a report that delves much deeper into this topic.
Package this report into a PDF that your blog readers can download using their name, company, and email address.
Using the three-part conversion path described above, email each person their downloaded resource, following up with them through a kickback email that retains each lead‘s interest in the content you’ve provided them.
6. Develop a live chat service for your website.
Live chat services are increasing not just in their sophistication but in how many people expect them when learning about vendors they might want to buy from. This means you could be missing out on a major lead generator.
According to a recent HubSpot survey on live chat consumer behavior, 26% of respondents prefer using live chat over other customer service methods.
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To generate leads through live chat, audit your website to see which pages your visitors spend most of their time on.
With the right development resources, you can install a live chat tool on the pages where customers need the most assistance or information.
This allows you to casually collect and log insight into their product needs while answering their questions.
Depending on who starts the chat and the questions your visitors have, you can even integrate your customer service team with your live chat feature. This ensures every website visitor has their needs addressed no matter where the conversation goes.
7. Personalize your CTAs.
Dynamic content lets you cater the experience of visiting your website to each unique web visitor.
People who land on your site will see images, buttons, and product options that are specifically tailored to their interests, the pages they‘ve viewed, or items they’ve purchased before.
Better yet, personalized calls-to-action perform 202% better than basic calls-to-action. In other words, dynamic content and on-page personalization help you generate more leads.
How does it work? Here’s an example of what your homepage may look like to a stranger:
And here’s what it would look like to a customer:
Notice the “Welcome Back” header? Visitors who see website pages that remember them from an earlier date are more inclined to stick around and start a conversation with you.
To get dynamic content (or “smart content”) on your site, you’ll need to use a tool like CMS Hub.
8. Test, test, test.
We can’t stress this part of the process enough. A/B testing can do wonders for your click-through rates.
For example, when friendbuy tried a simple A/B test on their calls-to-action, they found a 211% improvement in click-throughs on those CTAs.
Something as simple as testing out the wording of your CTA, the layout of your landing page, or the images you’re using can have a huge impact, like the one friendbuy saw. (This free e-book has fantastic tips for getting started with A/B testing.)
9. Nurture your leads.
Remember: No lead is going to magically turn into a customer. Leads are only as good as your nurturing efforts.
Place leads into a workflow once they fill out a form on your landing page so they don’t forget about you, and deliver them valuable content that matches their interest.
Lead nurturing should start with relevant follow-up emails that include great content. As you nurture them, learn as much as you can about them — and then tailor all future sends accordingly.
Here’s an example of a lead nurturing email:
This email offers the recipient some great content, guides them down the funnel, and gets to the point.
Go Forth, and Capture Leads
You depend on leads to close sales and grow your business. Using the tips above, you can take advantage of every opportunity without letting unsatisfied website visitors slip away.
Editor’s note: This post was originally written in May 2018 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.
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