Thursday, September 15, 2016

Page Templates Tested: How a few UX tweaks to 45 template pages generated a 52% increase in leads

Does UX really make that much of a difference?


Besides being an important business question, there's an entire industry of UX professionals who count on it making a difference. Sure, intuitively, we think it will. And there's even survey data to support it.


But what about at the company-level?


Has anyone been able to measure the impact of UX on an actual company's bottom line?


Bryce Miller of MasterControl, an enterprise quality management software company, has measured it. It happened on a template for 45 of their product pages. The team at MasterControl working with MECLABS, found that using the MECLABS conversion heuristic and focusing on friction (the element that is most commonly associated with traditional UX) generated a 52% increase in leads and $1,543,320 in sales pipeline growth.


The reason Miller can be so sure about his increase? He ran a valid test.


Here's Miller's control. It's essentially a page template for content about their products. But it has a significant amount of friction in the process.


Control Sample: Standard Product Page Template


master control control


Treatment Sample: Updated UX and Reduced Friction


master control treatment


Results


By making these small UX tweaks, Miller was able to generate an additional $1.5 million in sales pipeline.


mastercontrol-results


What you need to understand


In this case, reducing friction with simple UX tweaks that helped users get to the right content on the page faster produced a significant result.


 


You May Also Like:


MarketingSherpa Summit 2017 Speakers – Miller will be talking about this and other tests he's run in-depth during his session at MarketingSherpa Summit 2017


Website Optimization: How MasterControl ran a 45-page test to achieve a 52% lift – The full MarketingSherpa Case Study for this test


How MasterControl got a 52% increase in leads From Key Pages in 3 months – Miller's first-hand account of this test on LinkedIn


The Web as a Living Laboratory – Learn How to Use the Web to Experiment Your Way Into a More Profound Understanding of Your Customer


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