Seven Elements of a Perfect Landing Page

Landing pages are an integral part of your marketing these days, for the main reason that they finish the communication once started by your catalog, postcard or e-mail.

No longer is it in vogue to direct a prospect directly to your Website to get lost in all the different services you offer trying to navigate to find the answer to what you are specifically promoting to them. To help you understand the key elements you need on your landing page, here are the seven key tips.

Every landing page should have:

1. A design and color scheme that matches the marketing piece that brought them there.
You don’t want people to think they ended up in the wrong place. You are communicating a particular service or product, and you want to make sure that your landing page has the same look and feel as the ad that directed them there for further information.

2. Additional information about the topic in the ad that brought them there.
Since you are continuing the communication with a landing page, you want to ensure that you do just that. If there is nothing new in the landing page, your prospects will wonder why they visited your landing page. If users already have all the data, they are going to leave your landing page.

That is not what you want them to do. You want to give them some more information that is new data, such as more information on the offer, links to get more information, or even a giveaway. But don’t give it all away there either. You are warming them up and want them to keep reaching.

3. Make sure there is a good reason for them to go to your landing page (e.g. coupons, reports, additional access to information, free consultation, free samples)
More people are going be interested in getting something or learning something rather than being sent a sales pitch. So offer something of perceived value for free – like a white paper or informational report or additional access to information or even coupons, etc. –that position you or your company as the experts in the field.

4. A fill in form to capture data.
Don’t just give the stuff away that I mentioned above without getting something in return. Make them fill out the form so you can collect their contact information. That is the exchange.

The reasoning is this. You are moving people through the sales process: You don’t only want the people who are ready for more information—which are your hottest leads. You want everyone, so you need to find ways to get their information. Then you can continue to work them through to the point where they are interested in getting more information about your service or product.

5. Add ‘Trust Logos’… online security, BBB, affiliations, etc. Anything you have to build credibility.
The more things people see that they are familiar with, the more they are going to trust something. Position your site with identities people already trust and are familiar with to increase your own credibility. You are basically saying, “These people trust me, why don’t you?”

6. All your company’s contact information so that your prospect can take the next step in whatever way they feel is necessary (e-mail, phone, address, etc.).
There are a lot of people that are further along in the sales process than the barely-warm or lukewarm lead. Those that are hot will want to contact you, so you need to have the information visible for them to do so easily. Make sure you have all your contact information on your landing page.

7. A dedicated phone number.
In order to track reaches that find your landing page you could have a dedicated phone number just for that page. That way you can see who is calling because of the data on the page. Using a service that also records the incoming calls to that number can help you on the sales end too.

Joy Gendusa is founder/CEO of PostCardMania.