Post by huangshi715 on Feb 15, 2024 5:27:47 GMT
You don’t need to drown your visitors in content, as Glints demonstrates here. The company pares its copy down to just the essentials, then arranges the page in a way that doesn’t give visitors a claustrophobic panic attack. Use a hero image that reinforces your headline. Glints does a lot of messaging work above the fold. The top headline instantly identifies the target audience, which is backed up by the hero image. (We see what they did there.) The supporting copy speaks to the promise of finding a dream career. (Unbounce is hiring, by the way.) Then, the second heading quickly shows off some of the significant brands hiring through the platform.
An attention ratio of 1:1 is the golden standard, but you can include additional CATs if they all point in the same direction. Glints does that here, each with variant copy that prompts the UAE Email List visitor to convert. If the content above the fold doesn’t do it, maybe the logo spread of brands on the platform or the expanded benefits will. 3. Promo Mobile Landing Page Examples: Promo Image courtesy of Promo. (Click image to see the full page.) Promo are pros at using videos to drive conversions on their landing pages (as we highlighted in this post on high-converting pages). You could even call them… promo pros. (‘Kay, we’ll stop).
And they oughta be: the easy-to-use platform lets customers quickly build videos for sponsored social media posts. Promo not using videos in their marketing would be like Superman not using the power of flight in his marketing. (It’s a bird, it’s a plane? Ah, you’re too young.) But video content can be a big problem for mobile visitors. Deployed carelessly, it can dramatically increase a landing page’s weight and create grueling on-the-go load times. Poor page speed can cancel out any conversions you hoped to gain by including a video in the first place. Yael Miriam Klass, Promo’s Content Lead, described how the company uses video on mobile landing pages without sacrificing the overall experience: The best way to grab attention and keep visitors on your mobile landing for more than half a second is with a simple video.
An attention ratio of 1:1 is the golden standard, but you can include additional CATs if they all point in the same direction. Glints does that here, each with variant copy that prompts the UAE Email List visitor to convert. If the content above the fold doesn’t do it, maybe the logo spread of brands on the platform or the expanded benefits will. 3. Promo Mobile Landing Page Examples: Promo Image courtesy of Promo. (Click image to see the full page.) Promo are pros at using videos to drive conversions on their landing pages (as we highlighted in this post on high-converting pages). You could even call them… promo pros. (‘Kay, we’ll stop).
And they oughta be: the easy-to-use platform lets customers quickly build videos for sponsored social media posts. Promo not using videos in their marketing would be like Superman not using the power of flight in his marketing. (It’s a bird, it’s a plane? Ah, you’re too young.) But video content can be a big problem for mobile visitors. Deployed carelessly, it can dramatically increase a landing page’s weight and create grueling on-the-go load times. Poor page speed can cancel out any conversions you hoped to gain by including a video in the first place. Yael Miriam Klass, Promo’s Content Lead, described how the company uses video on mobile landing pages without sacrificing the overall experience: The best way to grab attention and keep visitors on your mobile landing for more than half a second is with a simple video.