11 Most Important Key Factors In Building Landing Pages for B2B Search Engine Marketing Initiatives
One of the most direct ways B2B marketers can improve SEO, PPC, and
ultimately lead generation initiatives is through the development of
landing pages, designed to showcase individual content marketing assets.
Basically, every content marketing asset can serve as an opportunity
to be found in search results. As such, they need a unique place online,
through the B2B organization’s website, to serve as a “home base” for
lead generation and search visibility.
Why build individual landing pages? Consider the following benefits (among others):
- An opportunity to define a unique keyword strategy for SEO, or support an existing strategy.
- A place to drive PPC, remarketing and / or social media advertising campaigns.
- A mechanism for collecting form submissions and / or nurturing existing prospects and customers.
With these reasons in mind, here are eleven key factors that help influence and improve landing page development for B2B online marketing campaigns. Landing page elements in summary:
- The Offer
- Call to Action / Action Words
- Forms (Contact, Registration, etc.)
- Sales Readiness
- Keyword Strategy
- Web Page Tagging
- Body Copy / Layout
- Use of Images
- Testimonials
- Social Media / User Sharing
- Conversion Tracking
In this post, we’ll go through each factor, explaining their
importance and influence on search engine marketing and lead generation
success.
The Offer
The hard part is finding (or creating) something at your company that
you can offer for free and/or that is truly compelling and valuable
(IE, the content marketing asset). While I recently wrote a post
detailing the type of conversion actions B2B marketers should consider,
here is a list revisiting potential options in offer development:
- White Paper Downloads / Requests
- Independent Research Reports
- Third Party Studies
- Analyst Reports / Collateral
- Webinar Registrations
- Podcast Subscriptions
- Email Newsletter Sign-Ups
- Traditional Newsletters
- Daily Blog Updates
- Company Updates
- “Premium” Content or Subscription Based Content
Don’t forget classic, more sales-oriented offer communication:
- Request a Quote
- Request a Demo
- Request an Evaluation
- Free Trial
- Free Download
- Free Evaluation
- Technical Specifications Requests
- Requests for Proposal
- Contact Sales
- General Contact Request
The offer is what leads visitors to provide key buyer-specific
details, by identifying information collected in form submissions (more
on that in a bit).
Call to Action Messaging and Verbiage
The Call To Action and the words associated with it will obviously be
closely tied to the “Offer” you have developed. This is the set of
actions that lead to form submission likelihood.
As a variable to test, consider rotating a number of the following
(as long as they are synonymous; this list is unformatted for
expediency):
- Achieve
- Ask
- Benefit
- Contact
- Discover
- Download
- Get
- Join
- Learn
- Participate
- Receive
- Request
- See
- Subscribe
- Try
- Uncover
- Understand
Don’t forget layering action words within buttons and other graphics.
Consider testing color, font, and size, among other characteristics,
when building your call to action messaging.
Contact & Registration Forms
Our experience has shown that a lead generation Landing Page always benefits from having a submission form on the page,
in the right margin, aligned to the top of the page’s heading. That
said, it’s always a good exercise to test position and form field
elements. That said, the form submission represents the key opportunity
to collect lead generation information.
Example of landing page experience via PPC ad |
You can experiment with the length of the forms / the number of form
fields to see what generates the best results. The “best results” do not
necessarily translate into the highest number of conversions; the
number of Quality/Qualified Leads is usually the key metric (though
there is something to be said for allowing more overall leads into the
system if you have a sophisticated lead nurturing program in place).
Sales Readiness
When it comes to establishing field requirements, the first step is
in determining how close the content marketing asset is towards driving a
sales discussion. The reason we ask this question is to determine the
requirements needed for a website visitor to access the content
marketing asset.
- Should a form submission be required?
- If so, how complex should the form submission be, in terms of field requirements and information requested?
While “Request a Quote” inquires certainly assume a close proximity
to sales, the objectives of a request for a content marketing asset can
be nebulous. Bottom-line, its important to send qualified leads to
sales. Otherwise, you risk frustration from both the sales team and
website visitors that aren’t ready to make sales decisions.
The team at Eloqua has a nice grid-like infographic
comparing buyer objectives and business objectives in relation to
content marketing assets types, which can be used for support and
reference.
Keyword Strategy
Having a keyword strategy in mind provides direction in on-page
optimization and cross-link development, ultimately supporting organic
and paid search engine marketing initiatives, .
We often consider the following questions when defining keyword strategy on a per asset basis:
- What core keyword themes does the content marketing asset support?
- Is there a viable long-tail keyword opportunity that can be implemented as well?
Ranking for an individual phrase, especially a highly competitive
one, can be difficult with one content marketing asset. Consider
focusing on supporting a competitive keyword theme by cross-linking
content marketing assets between core solutions and related landing
pages.
Web Page Tagging
Make sure basic review and keyword optimization strategies are
incorporated into the tagging structure of the landing page, since these
tags may have an impact on both SEO and PPC performance. A short list
of web page tagging elements include:
- HTML Titles
- Meta Descriptions
- REL Canonical Tagging
- Open Graph Tags (Title, Description, URL, Image)
- Image ALT Properties
- Schema Tagging for applicable assets and information
Recommendations for most of these SEO elements can be found within this recent post on our blog.
Body Copy
Keep it short. Use lists & bullets to emphasize key information
and takeaways, mixing in a variety of key points to see what resonates
the most.
When it pertains to headings, experiment with the size, color and
length of your headings. Test out punctuation – !, ?, etc. Use this as
an opportunity to take some risks. Test out something branded,
something generic, and something completely different.
Don’t forget integrating your keyword strategy in your heading when
possible, since this is another element that can associated with both
SEO and PPC program effectiveness.
Use of Images
Images are a key tool in Landing Pages design and usability, catching
the viewer’s eye and directing them where to go on the page. Consider
trying out images of:
- Products
- Research report covers
- Products in use
- People (happy people, professional people, different demographics, etc.)
- Awards received
- Employees
- Promotional bursts
- Diagrams
- Sample outputs (e.g. reports that your software produces, products that your equipment produces, products/services that your clients would typically produce, etc)
Testimonials and Client References
If you have customer quotes, stories, case studies, etc., consider
referencing these on landing pages, to improve trust and credibility.
Test out different looks using client logos, italicized quotes, key
metrics, etc.
Note that space on a Landing Page can get tight, so its east to find
Testimonials getting pushed to the bottom. That said, try testing how
the page performs when testimonials are at the top, in the middle, and
on the side of page layouts.
Social Media & User-Specific Share Functionality
While conversion opportunities are a first priority, don’t forget to
provide visitors with easy to use mechanisms to further share and
distribute high quality information.
Examples may include:
- Social sharing elements for popular social media platforms.
- Send / email to a friend functionality.
- Printer-friendly versions.
- Embed code, particularly for visual assets and presentations.
Conversion Tracking
Finally, do you have a mechanism in place to track leads and measure
conversion performance? If not, make sure to include conversion tracking
into the landing page development plan.
Google Analytics goal and event tracking are a start but more B2B
marketers are adopting marketing automation solutions that tie to their
CRM as well. As such, the opportunity to truly connect website visitors
to form submissions to sales quotes and closed wins becomes that much
easier and direct.
Final Thoughts
Once these factors are in place, don’t forget to consider a testing
plan for optimizing each element. The optimization of a landing page
happens over time, by measuring the impact changes in each factor has,
on overall conversion rates.
B2B marketers are investing significant time and resources in
developing quality content marketing assets for their target audiences.
Don’t forget to maximize this investment by ensuring there is a benefit
to SEO, PPC, and lead generation initiatives as well.
Source : customerthink
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