Nathaniel Ward

Are you using A/​B testing in your fundraising campaigns?

Brian Christian explains how firms are using A/​B testing to improve their online marketing:

Over the past decade, the power of A/​B testing has become an open secret of high-​​stakes web development. It’s now the standard (but seldom advertised) means through which Silicon Valley improves its online products. Using A/​B, new ideas can be essentially focus-​​group tested in real time: Without being told, a fraction of users are diverted to a slightly different version of a given web page and their behavior compared against the mass of users on the standard site. If the new version proves superior—gaining more clicks, longer visits, more purchases—it will displace the original; if the new version is inferior, it’s quietly phased out without most users ever seeing it. A/​B allows seemingly subjective questions of design—color, layout, image selection, text—to become incontrovertible matters of data-​​driven social science.

Continue reading »

& filed under Marketing.

Three articles fundraisers and other authors should read to improve their writing

Clarity trumps persuasion,” MECLABS president Flint McGlaughlin reminds audiences at his seminars.

Yet too often, writing lacks any clarity at all, and we find ourselves unable to comprehend an author’s point–in no small part because of his impenetrable jargon and (perhaps inadvertent) obfuscation.

During one recent lecture I attended, the speaker went on at length about his firm’s “overseas entities” and how his customers “leveraged” this or that. Even the business school students he was addressing had a hard time puzzling out his real meaning.

This problem is particularly acute in non-​​profit writing. Those who market non-​​profits to the wider world, including fundraisers, often fall into the trap of writing material their audiences fail to understand.

Fortunately, the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation has assembled an insightful and highly amusing series of three articles by Tony Proscio to help non-​​profit writers (and anyone else) identify and root out jargon and improve clarity.

In the third and final booklet (link in PDF), Proscio synthesizes his argument:

Whenever I set out to write anything—and almost anytime I start to read anything more demanding than a cereal box—I find myself asking the two questions I’ve described here: Who’s supposed to do what to whom with how much? and What are we against? These are not the kinds of questions taught in great writing courses. They do not necessarily lead to more beautiful writing, if that is judged by aesthetic standards alone. But they have one overwhelming virtue that too much of today’s public-​​interest writing sorely lacks: They lead to the kind of information that nearly everyone wants and needs to know.

What techniques do you use to maintain clarity in your writing?

& filed under Marketing.

Why long sales copy works online

Brian Clark at Copyblogger has the scoop:

Long copy works, because people want as much benefit-​​oriented information as they personally need to make the purchase.

Some won’t read much of it before buying. Others will read every word.

The key is to make the presentation of this information — your copy and the visual elements of the page — context appropriate. It needs to look and feel like your audience expects content from you to look and feel…

If you try to throw garish colors, exclamation points, and yellow highlighter at your audience when that’s not what they expect to see, you lose. In more ways than one.

 

& filed under Marketing.

Friday links: D.C. Council needs to hear conservative policy voices

D.C. flag

Photo: Flickr/​Tony

See A/​B testing in action on Barack Obama’s reelection website

It’s always interesting to see A/​B testing in action.

In 2008, the Obama campaign tested the creative used on its website splash pages to maximize e-​​mail sign-​​ups and donations.

President Obama’s reelection campaign is doing the same thing. When you visit BarackObama​.com today, you are automatically redirected to one of several splash pages, each of which has a different layout or call to action. Continue reading »

& filed under Marketing.

Wednesday links: Rule of law and the zoning code

Georgetown from the air. Photo: Flickr/lynx81

Photo: Flickr/​lynx81

Good snark about federal regulations

Kevin Williamson wades into Regulations​.gov and delivers up this commentary:

The Federal Register, within living memory about the size of a family Bible, today takes up about 30 feet of shelf space.

Out of these millions of words of small-​​print lawyerese, Obama’s regulatory czar, Cass Sunstein, has identified about 30 regulations he’d like to see repealed, as part of a review of regulations mandated by an executive order. That’s nice.

Two articles about conversion optimization that every online marketer should read

1. How the 2008 Obama campaign used A/​B testing to optimize their splash page

Obama campaign winning splash page.

The winning splash page variant. Photo: Optimizely

President Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign ran an excellent online operation. Much of their success derived from their successful use of A/​B testing.

In an article on Optimizely, Dan Siroker explains a test the Obama campaign ran on the website’s splash page. They tested both the content of the page–pictures and video–and the wording of the call to action. They used the winning variant through the rest of the campaign, driving increased signups and increased revenue.

Siroker also reminds us a marketer’s intuition isn’t necessarily right:

Before we ran the experiment, the campaign staff heavily favored “Sam’s Video” (the last one in the slideshow shown above). Had we not run this experiment, we would have very likely used that video on the splash page. That would have been a huge mistake since it turns out that all of the videos did worse than all of the images.

2. A few simple changes that can improve your e-​​commerce checkout page

In a post on Smashing Magazine, Christian Holst outlines 11 “fundamental guidelines” for e-​​commerce usability.

Perhaps the most universally relevant guideline is his suggestion to visually reinforce the security of credit card fields. This resolves an important issue that comes up with e-​​commerce forms of all sorts, including donation forms: “Customers might hesitate if credit card fields don’t appear secure (regardless of actual security).”

By adding visual cues (such as borders, background color, and security icons and badges) around the form fields for credit cards,” Holst argues, “you can increase their perceived security for non-​​technical customers.”

Other tips include:

  • Make the checkout process linear, without redirecting users to a previous step
  • Apply clear labels to form fields and buttons
  • Use shipping address as billing address by default
  • Allow users to complete the transaction without registering
  • Request only pertinent information

Implementing even some of these changes—testing, of course, to ensure they work—can result in large increases in conversion rate and revenue. Holst’s guide offers essential first steps for anyone looking to improve the effectiveness of their online transaction pages.

& filed under Marketing.

Friday links: Mysterious symbols explained

Interrobang tattoo

Photo: Flickr/​Emily Lewis

Wednesday Links: Is It Liveable If Nobody Wants to Live There?

New York City

More people would rather live here than anywhere “liveable.” Photo: Flickr/​Martin Haesemeyer