In digital marketing, conversion optimization, or conversion rate optimization (CRO) is the art and science of combining technical and design elements that persuades visitors to become paying customers.
In digital marketing, conversion optimization, or conversion rate optimization (CRO) is the art and science of combining technical and design elements that persuades visitors to become paying customers.
We analyze the cost of acquisition on a campaign or channel basis, while working out all the attributions with A/B or multi-variate testing. We split each campaign into the costs that went towards attracting new and returning customers to determine the cost of acquisition.
Optimization specialists from our team craft strategies to convert the right users, at the right time. Every visual and design element is geared towards an analytical approach. A cohesive content, SEO, UX and performance recommendations are taken into account. We validate these by tracking user intent and experimentation.
After we reach your immediate business objectives, we continue to discover newer opportunities’ to continue monitoring your site and making refinements.
By enablement of higher conversions, you can generate higher revenues and engaging more audiences, while reducing cost per acquisition through macro conversions.
Enabling for smarter engagement reveals data points on what drives the customer. This helps to eliminate consumer friction across their journey.
CRO delves deeper into simplifying engagements, improving navigation, reducing barriers and adding valuable experiences for customers.
Increased user engagement can be achieved without adding up on resources, processes or employing more marketing channels.
Increased user engagement can be achieved without adding up on resources, processes or employing more marketing channels.
The cost of customer acquisition is one of the greatest startup killers after a wrong product/market fit.
What companies don’t know is that the cost of acquiring customers can turn out to be higher than expected, and cull the ability to monetize those customers.
For example, if a company spent $100 on digital marketing in a year and acquired 100 customers in the same year, their cost of acquisition (CAC) is $1.00. If your store needs to make money, you need to analyze your CAC along with the lifetime value of a customer to determine whether you’ll by getting a viable return on your investment.