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It’s Not You, It’s Your CTA: Call to Action Words That Cost You Conversions

by Fahad Muhammad in Conversion Optimization call-to-action-words

Your CTA button ultimately helps determine the fate of your landing page.

That’s because visitors who don’t click, don’t convert.

The call to action is the main point of action on your page (it’s in the name for goodness sakes). It’s the CTA button your visitors click to download your free ebook, request to see a free demo of your product, or start a free trial of your service.

Without an effective CTA button, your landing page gets no visitor love because no amount of compelling copy or enticing images could save your landing page if your call to action fails to impress.

When created effectively, a CTA button has the power to:

  • Direct visitors’ attention to the right spot
  • Get them to take your desired action
  • Improve overall conversion rates

So, with that said…

What makes an effective CTA button?

There are certain criteria involved to judge all Landing page elements.

Headlines are conversion worthy when they are clear and include your product or service’s unique value proposition. Images, on the other hand, must be relevant and enticing to make an impact.

An effective CTA button is essentially judged on the following four factors:

Color

Your button needs to be designed in an eye-catching color, something that contrasts with the rest of your page so you can direct your visitors’ attention toward the button.

Size

The button should be sized appropriately. If it’s too small, your visitors may not notice it, and if it’s too big it may ruin the overall aesthetics of the page.

Position

You need to place your button in the right spot to make an impact on your visitors. The “fold” concept is outdated so forget everything you know about the page fold. Your button should always be positioned after you have clearly explained your offer.

Copy

The call to action copy needs to be action oriented and personalized. The words you put on your button need to minimize landing page friction and initiate action.

Most marketers have embraced the size and contrast aspect of the call to action button. Most of them are even successful with positioning. But, a majority of marketers are still creating buttons with copy like this:

This picture shows how Sujan Patel and Rob Wormley use generic call to action words on their landing page.

The button copy is uninspiring, it’s not individual to this particular landing page — there’s nothing personalized about it. In fact, these call to action words could work on any ebook landing page, which makes the CTA button ordinary, rather than making it one of a kind.

The key to writing effective button copy lies in never using these two kinds of words:

  • Words that cause friction
  • Words that are not individual to your page

Don’t use words that cause friction

Words that cause friction are certainly not welcome on your CTA button. Avoid using words that suggest your visitors have to give something up to get something — whether that’s their time, money, or energy.

Words like “Submit,” “Buy,” “Sign Up,” and “Download” are high friction words when used by themselves. These words imply that the visitor has to perform chores, and who likes doing chores? Nobody I know.

Look at Applause’s call to action button copy as an example:

This picture shows how Applause uses call to action words to increase post-click landing page conversions.

It’s not just the form that’s intimidating, but the button copy “Submit” implies that you’re giving up something important. Just like a losing MMA fighter submits to the winner by tapping out, the service wants you to submit your information to them and walk away.

Although, as marketers, in a way your landing page acts as your “submission” move. Your headline and image draw your visitor in, your copy convinces them, and your form and CTA button are your finishing move where they say “Okay, you got me, here’s my email address.”

If you want to intimidate your visitors, then by all means keep using generic words that cause friction on your landing page.

If you don’t want to scare visitors away, start using call to action words that compliment your page by adding a personalized touch.

This brings us to our next point.

Don’t use words that are not personalized

What’s the first thing you do when you write your landing page headline?

Make it all about your offer, right? What about the images, the copy, the testimonials? Same answer? That’s what I thought.

So, why wouldn’t you take the same approach with your call to action words?
Instead of your ebook CTA button saying “Download,” why not make it personal to your visitor?

That’s what Kissmetrics does with their CTA copy, “Send me my PDF” for their eCommerce Marketing Guide:

This picture shows how Kissmetrics uses personalized CTA copy to increase post-click landing page conversions.

When iMPACT personalized their CTA button copy, they saw a 78.5% increase in conversions after only one month of A/B testing.

This was the original CTA button, “Free Download:”

This picture shows how IMPACT used generic CTA copy to generate post-click landing page conversions.

This was the variation with more personalized copy:

This picture shows how IMPACT increased post-click landing page conversions using personalized CTA copy.

Personalized CTA button copy does wonders for your page because the copy is individual to that page only. The button copy should mean something even if you look at it individually.

The variation button copy for the iMPACT landing page is a meaningful phrase. Even if you read the call to action words out of the context of the landing page, “show me how to attract more customers” is relevant to the service and it convinces me to click.

This was not true for the original CTA button copy which simply stated, “Free Download.”

Look at this Instapage CTA button copy as another example:

This image shows Instapage landing page builder product page

The phrase “Build My Page Now” is relevant to the offer and it reinforces the idea of publishing a lead generating page — as promised by the headline.

Personalized button copy that uses the words “I,” “me,” or “my” convert well because visitors like being talked to on landing pages.

Put yourself in your visitor’s shoes

Your button copy isn’t something you should write as an afterthought. Don’t just focus on the size and color of your CTA buttons, craft button copy that flows smoothly and talks to your customers on a personal level.

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Fahad Muhammad

by Fahad Muhammad

Fahad is a Content Writer at Instapage specializing in advertising platforms, industry trends, optimization best practices, marketing psychology, and SEO. He has been writing about landing pages, advertising trends, and personalization for 11+ years.

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