landing pages – Fly High Media https://www.flyhighmedia.co.uk Mon, 17 Jul 2023 09:18:52 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 How to Write Landing Page Copy that Converts https://www.flyhighmedia.co.uk/write-landing-page-copy-that-converts/ https://www.flyhighmedia.co.uk/write-landing-page-copy-that-converts/#respond Tue, 20 Apr 2021 13:18:00 +0000 https://www.flyhighmedia.co.uk/?p=25794

How to Write Landing Page Copy that Converts

Looking to write a landing page that converts into sales or leads?

This is called conversion copywriting. It’s the art (and science) of writing copy that increases conversions. The right headline can send sales through the roof. The right call-to-action button can generate more leads than you can shake a stick at.

But how do you do it?

Truth is, it can take years to master. And hiring a conversion copywriter can cost thousands. But you can utilise some of their techniques to increase the conversion rate on your landing page. Follow this guide and there’s a good chance you can increase the conversion rate of your landing page. Here’s how to do it:

#1 Do your customer research

Ask any conversion copywriter where to start and they’ll all tell you the same thing – CUSTOMER RESEARCH.

You need to understand the person visiting your website before you write to them. And if you think you know your customer pretty well, think again! There’s always something to be learned from customer research.

But how do you do customer research?

Here are three ways you can learn more about your customers:

Surveys

Got an email list? Create a survey asking your customers open-ended questions about your business. For example:

  • Why did they choose you over other brands?
  • What do they like about your product?
  • What could be improved about the service?

User testing

User testing tools – like Hotjar – are gold dust for marketers. They tell you exactly how people interact with your website. You can see heat maps, user recordings and instant feedback from real people. If your landing page isn’t converting, this is a crucial step.

Message mining

This method basically involves browsing the web and seeing what customers are saying about your product (or your competitors). Selling on Amazon? Read the reviews. Is your product or service talked about on forums? Check them out. You can learn a lot from being a fly on the wall.

#2 Learn how to use customer research

Now you’re armed with customer information, learn how to use it. Conversion copywriting is all about using the customer’s language. Here’s an example.

The original conversion copywriter, Joanna Weibe, wrote this headline for a rehab centre –

“If you think you need rehab, you do”

This headline generated a 400% increase in click-throughs on the website. That means a lot more business generated.

But here’s the thing – she didn’t actually write it at all. She borrowed it from an Amazon review on a book about addiction.

Use the language that your customers use. This is the most important step in writing copy that converts.

#3 Add social proof

To create a landing page that converts, you need to build trust.

Your customers need to trust you, or they’re not going to buy your product or service. How do you get them to trust you? One way is to showcase your other happy customer. This is called social proof.

Look how Airbnb uses social proof to sell its Hosting service –

hot jar image

According to a survey by Nielsen, 70% of people will trust a review from someone they’ve never met.

#4 Focus on benefits (not features)

One of the biggest mistakes we see on landing pages is tons of features and no benefits. Customers want to know why they should pick your product or service.

Benefits let the customer know what’s in it for them. Let’s use a health supplement as an example:

Feature: Contains Vitamin D

Benefit: Keeps your bones, teeth and muscles healthy

Feature: Contains Peppermint extract

Benefit: Improves your bowel health

Feature: Extra-large bottle

Benefit: Over 1 year’s supply

It’s good to have features on your landing page but NEVER put them above the benefits. Let the customer know what’s in it for them.

If you’re struggling, look at a feature and ask – ‘So what?’

#5 Nail the headline

The headline is the first thing people will read when they visit your landing page.

So you’ve got to get it right. Writing a perfect landing page headline isn’t easy but here are a few rules to follow:

  • Make it about your customer. Ask why they are coming to your landing page and attempt to answer their problem.
  • Make it clear. Don’t be ambiguous and don’t attempt to list everything you do.
  • Make it relevant. If customers aren’t reassured that you can solve their problem, they’re going to leave pretty sharpish.

#6 Make it easy to read

Landing page copy should ALWAYS be easy to read.

Noone’s expecting you to write like Hemingway. But they are expecting to be able to read the copy on your website. Use short sentences, break the copy up into small paragraphs and use bullet points.

After you’ve finished writing, read it out loud to check the grammar and spelling. And if you’re not sure if it’s easy to read, get someone else to check it.

#7 Use numbers and percentages

Everyone loves a quick stat.

  • A ⅓ of adults sleep with a comfort object (like a teddy).
  • Only 19% of people wash their hands after using the toilet.
  • Five nations make up 60% of the worldwide military

Numbers and percentages are powerful. Think about that second statistic – it makes you want to avoid handshakes for the rest of your life.

Your business is full of potential opportunities to use numbers and percentages. Do you have a 100% satisfaction rate with customers? Have you sold to over 1 million people? Have you been in business since 1912?

Use the numbers and percentages in your business to create high-converting copy.

#8 Give the reader something to click

You need a strong call-to-action on your landing page.

Ask yourself – What am I trying to get the reader to do with this landing page?

If you want them to contact you, add a button that says “Get in touch”. If you want them to download an app, add a button that says “Download the app”.

This isn’t rocket science but it’s amazing how many people get it wrong. Your call-to-action should be above the fold (so they don’t have to scroll down) and there should be secondary call-to-action buttons further down the page.

#9 A/B test your landing page

Now, you’ve finished writing the copy for your landing page. That’s all the hard work done, right?

Wrong.

Now you need to A/B test it. This means making small changes to your landing page and testing it against your original (or control) landing page. Run equal amounts of traffic to each and see which one converts better.

Do you need to improve your website’s copy to generate more business? Contact us today.

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How to Promote An Event on Facebook https://www.flyhighmedia.co.uk/how-to-promote-an-event-on-facebook/ https://www.flyhighmedia.co.uk/how-to-promote-an-event-on-facebook/#respond Wed, 15 Aug 2018 09:28:00 +0000 https://www.flyhighmedia.co.uk/?p=23305

In the following blog, you will learn how to promote an event on Facebook organically and using Facebook advertising to push your event to a wider audience.

We will start with organic promotion and then talk about running paid ads to your event.

Click here to skip to paid advertising.

How To Promote An Event on Facebook Organically

Facebook gives you the ability to be able to share an event with thousands of people at the touch of a button, which sounds fantastic, but it also means that there are thousands of events circulating. Here we are going to tell you some simple tips to follow to get the most out of promoting your Facebook event.

Set up the Event Page Effectively. 

You want to ensure that you set up the page for the event effectively, an appealing looking page allows for you to stand out from the other badly formatted events and highlights you as a professional company and event.

Firstly you need to ensure that the images that you have chosen are appealing and reflect well on the event that you are advertising. That might seem obvious, however when it comes to formatting the cover image you should ensure that you choose a photo that fits the recommended dimensions. To have an image that fits the space perfectly it should be 1920 x 1080 pixels, while this is only a small detail it shows an attention to detail whilst also making your event look professional.

Next, it is important to take note of the information that you are giving, your title should be short and memorable and then any other information that you give can be left in the info area of the event. Having the correct; date, time and location is vital as this is used in the Facebook algorithm to promote to people in the surrounding area, on the right day etc.

While these are only minor details they become important in the promotion of the event. Similarly, it would be beneficial for you to take the time to fill in the categories and tags section available, this is used by Facebook for promoting to people. All of these minor details become much more important when trying to reach a broader audience which is the overall aim.

Add the tickets URL. This is actually where you can get people to buy your tickets online. Another interesting feature that can be used is adding a date that states when your event’s tickets are actually available to purchase. This can build up tension and once the tickets are release it can cause a surge in sales if there is some hype around the event.

Optimising Company Facebook Pages.

Set up the tabs on your page correctly. This varies depending on your selected page layout when you first created your page. Most page layouts include Events. If they don’t then try and find another layout that is similar to your existing layout that includes events.

It doesn’t hurt to mention the event in the cover image of your Facebook page so that people see it when they visit your page. Look at how Manchester Arena has added a featured event into their cover photo.

Posting good content organically should always be one of your main priorities, even more so when trying to get people interested in your event. Getting people to engage with your content when you are trying to get people interested in an event can be key. Once they are engaged you are much more likely to stay on their radar, they might tag their friends or ideally even l share the post. Any kind of organic promotion is the best type of promotion and therefore posting good engaging content will benefit you enormously. Remember, social proofing is a very valuable asset.

Facebook Live is a perfect way to get people interested in your event. Live streaming is ideal for getting people interested in your event as they can see things that they never thought they would: Impromptu interviews, behind the scenes, the possibilities are endless and giving these kinds of bonus features to fans are exactly what they want to be involved. Something else that’s a bonus with going live is that it means you are at the top of the Facebook page with a big circle that says live, and even if it is just that, that will draw the audience’s attention.

Be creative in how you advertise your event organically, instead of uploading a photo to the image page maybe add a video instead.

Facebook Groups

You should post your event into local/national groups within your niche. Be very cautious of the group rules and do not be spammy. Do not post from your business account. The event organiser should post in the group to give the event a face to the event.

This is probably the best option for you to sell tickets. The fees are low and the process is smooth. Further to that, events on Eventbrite show up in Google or when people are looking for things to do in the area while on their website. For free events, Eventbrite does not charge at all! Which means you can get attendees completely for free and once attendees are at the event, upsell them food, drinks, etc. Remember, people are more likely to go to events with people so offering an event for free may be a good option depending on the event.

Facebook’s organic reach is not that great anymore. BUT you can do simple paid ads in which you can reach all of your existing fans. It is a simple and cheap option to reach your current fanbase. Follow the screenshot below to see how you can do this.

his approach is a much more aggressive approach and you can get results a lot faster from a wider audience.

This requires a more strategic approach and you have to think much more ahead of time and know when to release certain information.

There are different sales funnels for different campaigns, we will explain a 3 step funnel and where to use them.

Step 1 – Awareness

This phase is when somebody does not know about your event. You must spend a considerable amount of money on the awareness phase because initially, a lot of people will drop out because they either don’t know enough about your event or they aren’t in the space to visit an event like yours. Focus on things like explainer videos or long-form text to tell a story. This is your chance to make a good first impression. The goal of this phase is to interest people enough to get people further down the funnel. People at this stage are normally called cold prospects.

Step 2 – Consideration

Here, you start to provide a call to action and try to push the sale of products. Again at this stage, keep pushing good quality ads. You need around 7 touch points before a consumer properly trusts you enough to buy. People who have made it here are known as warm traffic. They will have seen your awareness ads and will have either clicked on the link to your website, viewed a certain amount on your video or liked/commented on a post.

Step 3 – Action

Heavily focus on sales. People at this stage are hot traffic. Which means they are the most likely to buy as they have engaged with you multiple time, they just need an extra push. You can do this through scarcity offers, which work well!

There are a lot of formats to the Facebook Ads and how to maximise their use:

  • Photo – The photo Ad is the simplest to use and probably something that almost everyone understands how to do. Posting an image can be used to draw attention to your event, give people information or even be the poster. Whatever it is, as mentioned previously, good content draws people in and people like to look at images.

Official image dimensions.

  • Video – Video Ads are being heavily invested in and is the fastest growing ad format now accounting for 35% of all spend going on display advertisingand is something that you should be heading towards when trying to promote anything.

Official video dimensions.

  • Copy – You must write high-quality, compelling copy that retains attention after the initial contact from a video or an image has been seen.

Suggested Post: 9 Quick Tips on Writing Quality Facebook Ads

If you are new to Facebook event marketing and don’t have an existing customer database this is your best option. The example below is perfect if you are running a local event.

  • Age
  • Location
  • Gender
  • Interests related to the event

As a business owner and event organiser, you should have a reasonable idea of who should be attending your event. For example, if you are a local men’s football team in Manchester advertising for trials then, you will not be targeting 55-year-old women who live in Newcastle.

Do your research. Make the interest’s location specific like the example. Make sure if it is a local event that the radius isn’t too high.

These are for more established event Facebook advertisers. You may have run events before or have a larger asset library.

Here are some assets that will be helpful to find some warm customers and run the initial ads to:

  • Existing Facebook fans
  • Website traffic
  • Current customers/past attendees
  • All web traffic in the past 30 days (exclude people who have converted)

Retargeting

Once you are running ads to your warm traffic, you will be able to use retargeting ads. Create the following audiences:

  • People who watch 25% or more of your video
  • Landing page view but no conversion
  • People who have engaged with your Facebook/Instagram accounts in the past 30 day

Follow this short tutorial to learn how to install the Facebook Pixel:

If you are not very technical and you have a WordPress website, then use the plugin Headers and Footers and paste the Pixel code in the plugin as instructed, email your developer or email us hello@flyhighmedia.co.uk and someone from the team will happily do it for you at no cost.

Your landing page must be built to do one thing and one thing only. CONVERT. You do this by providing high-value content.

Here are some key components to a successful landing page:

  • Add a timer for scarcity – this is especially good for when you are trying to sell early bird tickets.
  • Leveraging testimonies – adding social proof is a good way to let people know that you are the real deal and you have a quality event coming up. Use screenshots of tweets from past events or short interview clips from people who visited the event last time.
  • Event details – this is obvious but make a special effort to include the correct details. Add a feature on that page where it shows directions or maybe even include local hotels nearby.
  • Never be far from a call-to-action button – always make sure that there is a “Book Now” or “Register Now” button wherever you are on the page. On the menu at the top usually works well.
  • Be mobile optimised – the user experience must be flawless and work with every mobile device. You should make sure that the page speed is fast and the cache settings are on.

Suggested Post: On-Page SEO Tutorial.

Further down you will learn more about the strategy but email is great as it can serve as reminders for people leading up to the event.

On your landing page, you can add a form for people where they can register their interest. They would then go into a sequence leading up to the ticket sales launch.

Eventbrite has lots of integrations and one with MailChimp. You can export previous event attendees, and put them into a MailChimp list and you can either send them emails or you can create a custom audience on Facebook.

To import previous event attendees on Eventbrite to MailChimp follow these steps:

  1. Go to Manage events in Eventbrite and then to “Extensions
  2. Click “MailChimp Sync
  3. Connect your account
  4. Create a new list on MailChimp of your new event
  5. Click the past event you wish to import contacts into
  6. Follow strategy later in this blog

If you wish to create a form for people so they can register their interest, we suggest you read: How to Integrate Contact Form 7 and MailChimp.

You can integrate the Facebook Pixel with Eventbrite. This is very useful for tracking conversions. You can also see how much it cost you for that conversion to happen.

Are you ready? We will presume that you have the Facebook Pixel installed if you haven’t tested it then install the Facebook Pixel Helper extension for Google Chrome.

You will also need to create a thank you page on your website for tracking purposes. Open Ads Manager & go to Pixels.

Click “Details” -> “Setup”

Click Use integration or tag manager and select Eventbrite.

Head back to Eventbrite and go to Manage Events.

On your dashboard go to the left sidebar and click Analyse -> Tracking Pixels -> Click Facebook Pixel.

Paste in your Pixel code, which you will find back on Facebook.

Go to Order Options -> Order Confirmation on your Eventbrite Dashboard type in the URL for your thank you page.

Go back to Facebook Ads Manager and click Custom Conversions -> Create Custom Conversion.

Add the URL of your thank you page

Name your conversion Event Registration & choose the category Complete Registration.

You can add a value but in this example, we are going to be talking about early bird prices too. So we are going to keep this simple.

It may seem like a long process but it can be done!It may seem like a long process but it can be done!

Planning is key. We plan things a month ahead of events actually going live so that we have a solid 4 weeks build up to the event itself. In this, we will talk about the outlining strategy but then also talk about the fierce tactics to implement.

Week 1 – Announce event organically and push ads out promoting an informational landing page where users can sign up for more information. The idea of this is to gain some interest but it is ultimately to gain more data. Note: the tickets are not actually available yet.

Campaign Type: Video Views, Traffic & Engagement

Audiences to target:

  • Past event attendees –  upload your email database either from Eventbrite or MailChimp and create a custom audience
  • Email list – target any email address that you have in your system. These may be any people who are past customers or have opted into your newsletter or downloaded an ebook or something.
  • Researched audiences – target interests and expanded interested when going through detailed targeting.
  • All website traffic – take pixel data of “All Traffic” in the last 30 days and run ads to these people
  • Anyone who has engaged with Facebook/Instagram business page in past 30 days
  • Current Facebook/Instagram fans and followers

Elements to Ad:

  • Build up event
  • Talk about the event specifics, who will be there? what will attendees learn? will there be free food and drink?

Landing Page:

  • Include event information
  • Opt-in form – offer an incentive that these people will be the first to hear that they will be the first people to find out about the early bird offer tickets for sale on week 2
  • Create a Thank You page for after people have typed in their details (e.g. www.domain.com/pre-early-bird-thank-you)

Email:

Build an email sequence on MailChimp and send down countdown emails to:

  • Current email database
  • Email addresses gained from the landing page
  • Past event attendees

IMPORTANT:

  • Exclude people who have already registered pre-early bird tickets

Week 2 –  Run paid ads offering early bird tickets to a specific landing page. This time-sensitive offer is great for scarcity and sales but it is also another opportunity to gather data for those who didn’t convert.

Campaign Type: Conversion

Include the following in ad sets:

  • Current email database
  • Past event attendees
  • People who have engaged with Facebook/Instagram pages
  • Anyone who viewed your video 25% or more
  • People who viewed the original landing page but did/didn’t
  1. Create a thank you page on your website make the URL similar to this –  www.domain.com/thank-you/
  2. Head over to your Eventbrite dashboard and go to “Order Options” -> “Order Confirmation”
  3. In the “Message for Order Confirmation Page” box type in the thank you page URL

Conversion tracking setup:

  1. Click create a new ad
  2. Select the Conversion you made earlier called “Event Registration”
  3. Build your ad sets using the suggested audiences above

IMPORTANT:

  • NoIndex thank you page – so that there is not any false data coming into the pixel, install the NoIndex plugin on WordPress.
  • Exclude people who bought tickets.
  • Exclude people who have got signed up for pre-early bird tickets and who have bought tickets (see how to do this below)

Add this custom audience to your ad set, this will ensure that people who have purchased tickets will not see ads again.

Week 3 – Release tickets at normal price. Use all of your data you have to push sales, you must exclude anyone who has previously converted to avoid repeated ads. In this week, use all retarget data as this is warm traffic. As warm traffic has an interest in what you are offering, they may need something to push them over the edge. Use scarcity saying that tickets are selling fast.

Campaign Type: Conversion

Run Ads to:

  • Event page viewers but no conversion
  • People who opted-in too pre-early bird offers
  • People who have engaged with Facebook/Instagram pages
  • Anyone who viewed your video 25% or more

IMPORTANT:

  • Exclude people who bought tickets. Follow the screenshot below on Ads Manager.
  • Exclude people who have got signed up for pre-early bird tickets and who have bought tickets. Follow instructions above.

Week 4 – Let’s say the event is on a Saturday, from Monday – Friday you should sell heavily discounted tickets on websites like Groupon.

Continue to push Conversion Ads.

How much should you spend on your campaign?

Here is an example of how much you should be spending on your campaigns

a) Total number of tickets available =  250

b)  Sales Revenue From Tickets Sold = £11,000

c)  Event running costs = £2,570

d)  Average Attendee Value = (b) / (a) = £44

e)  Cost Percentage = (c) / (b) x 100 = 23.4%

f)  Profit Margin = 100 – (e) = 76.6%

g)  Average Profit Per Customer = (d) * (f) = £33.70

So to Break Even and Sell Out a 250 Capacity Event the potential Ad spend could be £33.70 x 250 = £ 8,425

This number is the absolute maximum to spend on advertising.

Scaling up

  • Split test – test different images, videos, copy, ad placements (Facebook/Instagram)
  • Cold traffic interests – test different areas of interests
  • Lookalike audiences – Once you have conversion audience data from the Facebook Pixel, build a lookalike audience and run ads to cold traffic. See below for how you do this step-by-step.

And there you go! Our complete guide to event marketing, both organically and paid!

Good luck with any future events, if you have any questions do not hesitate to leave a comment below or get in touch.

If you liked this blog so much, you can download it through Facebook Messenger click here.

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