Hello Indiana, I had a client come to me recently with a familiar problem. Their landing pages were converting at less than 1%, and the industry standard for their sector sits somewhere between 2% and 5%. Not great.
Their first instinct was to find someone who could sweep in, move some buttons around, tweak a few headlines, and magically fix everything. I've seen this expectation so many times now that I've lost count. And I understand the appeal. A quick fix sounds wonderful when your numbers look that bad.
But if you want serious improvements to your conversion rate, shuffling UI elements around will only scratch the surface. It's like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic while ignoring the rather sizeable hole in the hull.
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I think of effective conversion work as having three distinct layers, and UI changes sit right at the bottom.
Layer 1: User Interface
Yes, the order and presentation of information matters. Yes, you can make improvements here. But this level has the smallest overall impact on conversion. It's where most agencies focus because it's visible and easy to point to, but it rarely moves the needle in a meaningful way.
Layer 2: Content
This is where things start to get more substantial. You simply cannot improve conversion without addressing the content on your pages.
When I mention this to clients, I often hear, "But we don't produce the content. That's the content team." And therein lies the problem. Content teams are usually subject matter experts, not web writers. They understand their products inside out, but they don't necessarily understand how people scan web pages. They tend to focus on what the company wants to say rather than what the audience actually wants to know.
Good conversion-focused content needs to:
Address your users' pain points and the goals they want to achieve
Explain the benefits you provide and how your features deliver them
Handle objections before they become reasons to leave
Build trust through social proof, case studies, awards, and certifications
Without these elements, no amount of button-moving will save you.
Layer 3: Organizational Issues
This is the deepest and often most impactful layer, and it's also the hardest to fix because it goes beyond the website entirely.
Organizational constraints regularly damage conversion rates in ways that are invisible from the outside.
Legal requirements might force your copy to read like a compliance document.
Your forms might have twelve fields because someone in sales wants to "validate" every inquiry.
Your product offering might genuinely be wrong for your audience.
Or your advertising might be driving bottom-of-funnel users to top-of-funnel pages (or vice versa).
These are problems that no UI optimization can solve. They require conversations with stakeholders, changes to internal processes, and sometimes difficult decisions about how the business operates.
You Can't Just Set and Forget
Even after you've addressed all three layers, you cannot just design your landing pages and walk away. Effective conversion optimization requires an ongoing program of continuous A/B testing and user research.
And yet, I regularly encounter clients who want all of this but refuse to let me anywhere near their customers. Surveys? Too intrusive. User interviews? What if we upset someone? It's a bit like asking a doctor to diagnose you while refusing to let them take your temperature. If you want to understand what your users need, you have to actually talk to them. There's no way around it.
And yes, I know what you're thinking. Can't we just A/B test our way to better results? A/B testing matters, but it can only tell you what works and what doesn't. It gives you no insight into why. And it certainly doesn't give you inspiration for what's worth trying in the first place. You need to talk to actual humans to get that.
The vast majority of meaningful improvements come from continual testing and iteration, not from some expert arriving, waving a magic wand, and disappearing into the sunset. When clients come to me wanting a quick fix, what they actually need is a long-term commitment to understanding their users and optimizing systematically.
So if you're struggling with conversion, by all means start with the UI. But don't stop there. Look at your content. Look at your organization. And commit to the ongoing work of understanding what your users actually need.
Because moving buttons around might feel productive, but it's rarely where the real improvements are hiding.
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