Using Google Website Optimizer to Increase Conversion Rates

Published November 4, 2008 by Mitchell Harper


Please note: The article below is republished from the Interspire newsletter. To read previous editions and subscribe, click here.

Introduction


As we gear up to launch Interspire Email Marketer 5.5 next week (a free upgrade for existing customers running v5 or above), I thought it would be a good time to talk about split testing.

Why? Well, Interspire Email Marketer 5.5 will include the ability to split test different email campaigns to your list (as well as many other features):



For example, if you have a list segment of 100 contacts you can send one campaign to 33% of your list, another to the next 33% and another to the final 33%. You can then see which had higher open/click rates and send that to your entire list.

Split tests are a great way to test multiple versions of an email and see which one gets the best response. In the above example, I might leave the email content identical in all 3 campaigns but just change the subject line in each to see which gets me the best open rate.

While we put the finishing touches on version 5.5, I wanted to talk about another way to do split testing - with your website using the free website optimizer tool from Google.

What is Google Website Optimizer?



Google website optimizer is a free marketing tool that allows you to perform two types of split tests on your website:

  1. A/B split testing - Choose 2 pages on your website to split test. 50% of your visitors will see page A. The other 50% will see page B.

  2. Multivariate testing - Allows you to break your web page up into blocks and show different content (in different combinations) for each block.
If you're new to split testing then make sure you watch this presentation from Google. It explains everything you'll want to know before reading the rest of this newsletter.

For most people A/B split testing is easy to understand - you might keep your current home page (which we'll call "page A") and create a new version of it with different header text and colors (which we'll call "page B"). A program such as Google website optimizer will show page A or page B randomly to visitors on your web site and when they buy from you a conversion will be recorded and it will contain a note about which home page the customer saw (page A or page B).

With A/B split testing the same visitor will always see the same page. For example if I came to your website today and saw page A, when I come back tomorrow I will still see page A. This is accomplished using a cookie to remember which page I saw the first time I came to your website.

Multivariate testing seems to confuse a lot of people but it's really just a way to test different combinations of content on a page and see which combination brings the most conversions. If you image a website as being nothing more than a group of blocks, it will start to make sense:



Assume each red block above is a piece of content (such as a paragraph of text, an image, a video, or even all 3 combined), using multivariate testing I can define different versions of content for each block. For example in the small red block on the left one version might have an image. Another version might have a paragraph of text with a thumbnail image instead, etc.

If I create different versions of content for each block on the page, I would then use multivariate testing to randomly show different combinations of content for each block and, based on conversions, determine which combination of blocks drove more sales on my website.

After the test period was over (generally anywhere from 1-8 weeks) Google website optimizer would give me a clear winner (through randomly showing different combinations to my website visitors and tracking which lead to sales). I can then stop the website optimizer campaign and show the winning combination on my website all the time.

Why Split Testing?

In marketing, anything that can be tested should. The layout of your website really is marketing - showing certain things about your products/services in certain ways to people that visit your website. Using split testing (either A/B or multivariate) you can maximize the conversion rate of your website which leads to more sales, newsletter subscribers, free trial sign ups, etc.

Consider this: I might think I've designed a better looking or better performing website than you, but we put them head-to-head via split testing and yours outperforms mine 10:1. Imagine if I'd just gone ahead and launched the site with my design? I would've had only 10% of the sales!

The only way to find out whether you or I designed the best website is with split testing.

Using Google Website Optimizer

Google Website Optimizer is free and is available when you sign up for a Google AdWords account. After signing up you don't actually have to pay to run any campaigns - just click the "Website Optimizer" link in the "Campaign Management" tab at the top of the page.

You'll then be able to setup a new split testing campaign. You will need to add some code to your website to run and track the split tests but it's only basic JavaScript code, so if you know some HTML and are familiar with an FTP program (such as FileZilla - free) then you should be fine.

Recommendations for an A/B split test

If your website only gets a few hundred visitors a day then I'd recommend starting with a simple A/B split test which would involve creating 2 pages on your website - generally you'd use your existing home page (or landing page) and create a new page containing one or more visual changes.

Here are some things you could change for page B:
  • Change the color of the main headline on your page. Try changing it from black to red.

  • If you have a large promotional-style image across the top of your page, try changing the image from a person to a picture of your product/service, or vice-versa.

  • Try replacing a few paragraphs of text with a few bullet points instead. People prefer to skim content instead of reading everything.

  • If your web page has a fixed width, try making it fluid (the whole width of the web browser's window) and vice-versa.

  • Change the font you use on your web page from Verdana to Arial or Times New Roman to Helvetica.
Of course these are only a few things you might change, but you get the idea. To make it easy to determine if the changes make a difference, only try changing 2-3 things at a time. Then give the split test time to do its thing (2-3 weeks).

Recommendations for a multivariate split test

Similar to an A/B split test, don't try testing more than 2-3 things at once. Also try not to create more than 3 variations of any one section of your website, otherwise you'll end up with hundreds of combinations to test. Try and keep the total number of combinations under 20. So you might test 3 different things, each with 2 variations.

Remember that even the slightest change can make a big difference in conversion rate. Instead of completely changing content, try subtle changes such as font size, style, color and spacing. Try re-arranging paragraphs of text and try testing with/without a prominent image on the page.

Finally keep in mind that having a beautiful website doesn't necessarily translate into more sales. I've tried combinations on certain areas of our website that made me second guess whether or not I should run the split test, and they've produced some really good results.

Remember that marketing (and this is marketing) is all about experimenting for the best result so the more tests you do, the higher you should be able to get your conversion rate over time.

Conclusion

I hope this newsletter has helped you understand what split testing is and how you can use it to improve the conversion rate of your website.

Keep an eye on our blog (RSS feed) next week as we announce the release of Interspire Email Marketer 5.5 which will include new features such as split testing, trigger emails, manual and automatic event logging, Google calendar integration, default custom fields and more!

Of course you can also visit Interspire.com in the meantime to learn about our products, watch videos, read articles (both technical and business focused) and more.

Talk to you soon!




3 Responses to "Using Google Website Optimizer to Increase Conversion Rates"

Fill in the form below to leave a comment and share your thoughts.

 
Douglas Lampi
said this on 06 Nov 2008 4:12:03 AM CST
This is a very nice explaination of Split-Testing that all website owners should read, especially if your webmaster does your website or email campaign for you. If your internet team are not including these split-testing strategies, you are throwing darts without first locating the dart board.

 
Phil Slorick
said this on 05 Nov 2008 4:35:14 PM CST
Hi guys,

Very exciting to hear that IEM 5.5 will include split testing. You kept that quiet - or have I just been walking around with my eyes shut?! Fantastic news. Now we'll be able to get those subject lines really earning their keep!

Phil

 
Mark
said this on 05 Nov 2008 4:38:43 PM CST
In my experience, while small changes like font size might work, they will only see fractional increases in performance, perhaps 1 or 2% (if that) and so unless you have a very high traffic site, your test will last months before reaching a statistically significant conclusion.

For low and medium traffic sites, more radical changes will have a much more measurable effect. Try radically changing the page headline. Totally restructure the page (move the call to action from the bottom to the top). Change the customer service phone number from 10 point to 18 point bold. Redesign your form to go from 10 fields to 5. Add call to action assurances. Do two or three of these big changes at once. I've seen 100+% performance improvements.

Remember the smaller the gain, the longer it takes to reach statistical significance. Also don't jump the gun - make sure your results do reach significance before drawing conclusions. It's quite common to see wild fluctuations in performance in a test which can be misleading until the final conclusion is reached.



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