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Posted by christinew603
As marketers, we can’t turn a corner without hearing about how to generate leads with existing content. But CRO [Conversion Rate Optimization] is about so much more than just leveraging content in different ways; optimization is really the process of finding out and testing how to convert people on your site pages, landing pages, blog posts, and marketing efforts.
Don’t know where to start? Listen to these five actionable talks from a few of today’s top conversion experts. Hear directly from the landing page, copywriting, mobile, and conversion design experts on how to optimize your marketing for lead conversion. (And save your spot in a live Google Hangout with these experts and HubSpot on June 1st!)
As ConversionXL founder, Peep is an entrepreneur and conversion optimization expert with 10+ years of global experience. He has extensive experience across verticals: in the past he’s run a software company in Europe, an SEO agency in Panama, a real estate portal in Dubai, and worked for an international non-profit.
In this talk from TractionConf, Peep covers:
Unbounce’s legendary Oli Gardner has seen more landing pages than anyone on the planet. His disdain for marketers who send campaign traffic to their homepage is legendary. He is a prolific webinar guest and writer, and speaks internationally about conversion-centered design where he is consistently ranked as the top speaker.
In this presentation from INBOUND15, you’ll learn:
As copywriter and creator of Copy Hackers, Joanna helps startups use their words so people fall in love with them, flood them in cash, tell all their friends about them, and name their firstborn after them. ("Buffer Anastasia McGillicuddy. That's got a nice ring to it.")
In this particular talk from CallToAction Conference 2014, she covers:
Tim Ash is the author of the bestselling book, Landing Page Optimization, and CEO of SiteTuners. A computer scientist and cognitive scientist by education (his PhD studies were in Neural Networks and Artificial Intelligence), Tim has developed an expertise in user-centered design, persuasion and understanding online behavior, and landing page testing. In the mid-1990s he became one of the early pioneers in the discipline of website conversion rate optimization.
At INBOUND15, Tim covered:
Angie is an inbound marketing thought leader skilled at wielding magnetic content optimized for search, social, conversion, and mobile. With over seventeen years in multichannel B2B and B2C experience in both agency and corporation settings leading successful marketing technology projects for brands like Nestle USA, Gerber, Red Wing Shoes, Andersen Windows, The Home Depot, and more, she’s adept at harnessing online and emerging technologies to drive tangible results for improving business — social engagement, lead generation, sales conversion, customer loyalty, and brand advocacy.
At Conversionista Conference, Angie talks about:
Want to see some of these experts in action? Learn all about how to increase your lead conversion in a live Google Hangout on June 1st!
Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!
Posted by Isla_McKetta
You know you're supposed to write scannable copy. But do you know why?
On the average Web page, users have time to read at most 28% of the words during an average visit; 20% is more likely.
– Jakob Nielsen
Nope, it's not just that. Although the tiny fraction of attention readers have for your content is always important to keep in mind. But instead of another "write for the F-pattern reader" article, let's dig into the psychological underpinnings of how readers process information. You'll learn ways to make your content more memorable and how not to disenfranchise any audience members who struggle with legibility, however unintentional.
Don't worry; you don't have to immerse yourself in academic theories for the next three weeks. I've waded through those dusty tomes for you, and I'm here to report back on how readability actually works. I'll also suggest some implications for your content. This'll get a little wonky at times, but I hope you'll learn something from my research. I know I did.
These are the concepts I'll cover and where they fall on the legibility, readability, and comprehension spectrum:
In the field of user-experience design, ‘chunking’ usually refers to breaking up content into small, distinct units of information (or ‘chunks’), as opposed to presenting an undifferentiated mess of atomic information items.
– Kate Meyer
Chunking was first identified by George A. Miller in "The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information." While the article focuses on how many items we can hold in our memory, Miller goes on to suggest that we can remember more items if that information is properly separated out for us. For example, this string of numbers (even though it only contains eight digits):
is harder to understand or remember than this unforgettable number:
Those slashes help us parse the numbers into shorter (and more recognizable) units, which makes it easier to understand and remember the information.
The span of immediate memory impose severe limitations on the amount of information that we are able to receive, process, and remember. By organizing the stimulus input simultaneously into several dimensions and successively into a sequence of chunks, we manage to break (or at least stretch) this informational bottleneck.
– George A. Miller
So when you're dividing up your web content with headers, images, bulleted lists, and short paragraphs, consider how those chunks of information are working for you. A listicle of the 100 greatest things about summer might be a lot more memorable if you subdivide that list with headers every 5–9 items. Likewise, if you write single-line-paragraph after single-line paragraph, your reader might get lost on the screen and miss something important. Instead, improve the readability of your content by varying the length of those paragraphs every so often.
That wasn't too painful, was it? This next concept, an area of research into psycholinguistics called the "cohort model," is a little harder to wade through, but since it speaks to our ability to comprehend information, I'm going to do my best to model that.
First, though, you might be thinking "psycho....what?" That's exactly the point. We're going to look at some incomprehensible content and then delve into how that affects readers. Then we'll consider how we can convey whatever information we need to and still keep people reading.
Faced with a paragraph like this:
The cohort model relies on a number of concepts in the theory of lexical retrieval. The lexicon is the store of words in a person's mind; it contains a person's vocabulary and is similar to a mental dictionary. A lexical entry is all the information about a word and the lexical storage is the way the items are stored for peak retrieval. Lexical access is the way that an individual accesses the information in the mental lexicon. A word's cohort is composed of all the lexical items that share an initial sequence of phonemes, and is the set of words activated by the initial phonemes of the word.
– Wikipedia
All but the most dedicated linguistics nerd would be lost inside that mouthful of incomprehensible information. I know I was. Not only were the concepts foreign, but I hadn't seen a lot of those words since college. So let me try to capture the gist:
The cohort model looks at the way we connect a spoken (or in the case of web content, written) word with meaning. The potential meanings for a word start out broad, based on the initial sound/letter. As we see or hear more of the word, the potential meanings narrow down until we can choose which word we are seeing or hearing.
We read so quickly that it's difficult to even recognize how our own reading happens. It's easier to think about a word we don't encounter every day like "psycholinguistics." The cohort model suggests our brains first pull out a list of words that start with "psy" and begin to narrow down what word we might be looking at:
As we read further into the word so that our brains have processed "psycho," the options narrow:
Note that although "psycho" could have been one of the words we initially thought of, by this point in our attempt to comprehend this word, we've likely also taken in the fact that the word is well over five letters.
As we process letters and sounds in reading "psycholinguistics," most of us will find that this is an unfamiliar word — that it does not match up to any word already in our lexicon — and so our brains look for alternate ways to comprehend its meaning. In this case, we'd likely break it down into the most familiar component parts: "psycho" and "linguistics." We might still not fully comprehend the word, but we have two possible meanings: 1. something related to both psychology and linguistics, or 2. the linguistics of a psychopath. One of these is more likely than the other...
So why do you care?
In this case, it's easy to see how using unfamiliar terminology (or overly jargon-y terms like "terminology" when I mean "words") slows the reader down. Using these kinds of stop words might even stop a reader entirely and lead them to close your tab and move on to the next site.
Ambiguous words, or those with more than one meaning, might be expected to cause difficulties in lexical processing.
– Treiman et al.
That's just another way of saying that you can slow a reader down by using words that have more than one meaning.
Even very short words can be ambiguous.
Context clues do help with comprehension, but if your goal is to convert a reader to a customer, there's no reason to make them think harder than they have to about your copy. So unless you have the linguistic command of a poet and are slowing readers down on purpose, think carefully about possible misunderstandings when you use ambiguous words.
Processing a polysemous word in one of its senses can make it harder to subsequently comprehend the word in another of its senses.
– Treiman et al.
"Polysemous" simply means "having multiple meanings" and it can contribute to the ambiguity we just discussed. But the point here is that if you first use a polysemous word like "bank" in one context, you should carefully consider whether and how to use that word again.
Because we all want to be able to bank on our bank, but sometimes customers would rather throw it over a bank.
Have trouble moving from one meaning to the next in that last sentence? Me too, and I wrote it.
Legibility can feel like the one aspect of intelligibility that we writers have the least control over (at least on the web). It's rare for us to get asked what font to use or how the color of our text should contrast with the background.
But legibility is important to accessibility. To borrow the universal design principle from architecture, if we design our sites (and our content) to be legible by all, we're removing potential blockers for all readers. Felicia, the tireless editor of the Moz Blog, is in talks with our UX crew about making our blog more accessible overall. Having worked at an organization that loved the look of light blue links against grey (and tiny) text, it's something I wish more sites thought about.
I'm only picking on AIA Seattle because I was party to some of the website redesign discussions there where members mentioned this very issue. Not only is there very little contrast in color between the links and text, but the links in the left nav are gray while those on the rest of the page are blue. I'd show you their redesigned page, but now you have to hover over text to even see if it's a link. Instead, take a quick look at the page for the national AIA:
Writers can help! As Laura Lippay wrote last week for the Moz Blog, by creating and implementing effective title tags, we can improve navigation for people with vision, memory, and mobility impairments. Properly structured headings, something we're using for readability anyway, also help with navigation.
Having recently had a baby, I'm finally starting to empathize with readers who are sleep-deprived, having trouble seeing, reading in a second (or third) language, or in a screaming rush. Not to mention people who are dyslexic, grew up in crappy school districts, or are naturally much more gifted in some other area of life than reading.
I hope these investigations into readability, comprehension, and legibility can help you create better copy. Your audience is counting on you. And by creating easily intelligible content, you just might keep them around long enough to convert.
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