Article

13min read

Conversion in Social Media: Where Do People Land Afterwards

How to help brands carry social media visitors to conversion

How personalization and testing can support social media conversion

Fast loading and personally curated landing pages are key for social media conversion.

How testing, AI, and real-time personalization help businesses boost social media conversion

Your Social Media Shapes the Journey. Here’s How to Make It Count.

Breaking news that you probably already knew: influencers and social media reputation management are taking over the world. 

You’ve been there before. Late nights on TikTok, with a brand mentioning a product you might like – and suddenly, you find yourself doom-scrolling the comments, Googling the brand name, and landing on the website: all within mere minutes. 

It’s no wonder that over 90% of consumers consider a brand’s online reputation before buying.

This reveals the deeper truth: your social media presence doesn’t just build awareness: it actively shapes where people go next and what they do when they get there.

Social reputation isn’t just about damage control – but an opportunity for conversion. 

Brands may find it challenging to cover the gap between “I’ve heard of you” and “I trust you enough to buy” – a journey that lives after that first social touchpoint.

In this article, we’re going to walk through what happens after someone finds you on social – and how to make that journey work smarter, not harder.

Why Social Media Conversion Matters More Than Ever for Gen Z and Millennials

Social media reputation management is more important than ever before: as younger generations like Gen Z and Millennials are audiences bound to research brands on social media apps before they Google them.

In fact, TikTok and Instagram are now search engines – with 40% of Gen Z now using Tik-Tok over Google for basic searches, like, “best places to eat in Paris” or “best mascara for long lashes”. This is how many consumers have discovered a product unintentionally on social media apps.

Brands should think of social media as another homepage. That’s because what people say about you often outweighs what your brand says about itself. Remember, UGC (user generated content) is perceived as 2.4x more authentic than brand-created content. 

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The Moment After the Scroll: Where Do People Actually Land?

The Click-Through Moment

Getting someone to click is one thing. Getting them to stay, and convert, is another.

After discovering your brand on social, users typically land on one of these pages, each with different conversion potential:

Landing DestinationAvg. Conversion RateWhy It Matters
Homepage1–3%First touchpoint, but requires navigation to find the product
Product Detail Page (PDP)2–3.5%Direct from shoppable posts or link in bio
Campaign Landing Page4–7%Tailored experience = strongest conversion potential
Product List Page (PLP)Varies by brandCurated view, but less focused than a dedicated landing page

Each of these is a different experience — and a different opportunity to move someone from curious to converted.

The Expectation Gap

When users find your brand’s product or service on social media – what they saw in a reel or ad now sets an expectation that they expect to be met. 

If the landing page doesn’t match the energy, tone, or promise of the social content – it can result in instant drop-off. This is exactly where reputation management meets UX optimization. 

The journey from social engagement to customer conversion is not random, but a carefully crafted experience shaped by trust, messaging, usability, and consistency. Every touchpoint, from a social post to a landing page, influences perception and guides users toward confident purchasing decisions.

Why Most Brands Lose People Here

The flip cards below will reveal some of the most common reasons why brands lose people after they find them on social media:

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Slow Load Times

People scrolling on social media have little to no patience; they want to find what they’re looking for as fast as possible.

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Generic Landing Pages

Users need a flow that reflects the social context—the reel, ad, or image that interested them in the first place.

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No Continuity

Seamlessness is everything. A lack of continuity between the post and the page leads to instant drop-off.

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Lack of Social Proof

Without reviews, UGC, or trust signals on-site, new visitors arriving from social channels won’t feel confident enough to convert.

Reputation Signals That Actually Drive Clicks (and Which Ones Kill Them)

How UGC Content Helps to Build Trust for Social Media Conversion

When User-Generated Content (UGC) leads users to your webpages, you’re probably dealing with visitors who have yet to learn what your brand is all about. 

In these moments, being able to communicate who you are swiftly and authentically is crucial to quickly closing the potential trust gap.

There is a lot that brands can do to boost trust with potential customers via social media reputation management, such as:

  • Clear Messaging: Social media engagement is all about consistency. People want a reliable, human brand voice across platforms. This is why something that immediately strikes them as, “Hey, I know that brand!” is always best. 
  • Transparency: A whopping 65% of consumers trust brands that openly address mistakes on social media. Brands that aim to respond to negative comments honestly and follow through on promises to improve build trust immediately with consumers.
  • Active Community Engagement: Immediate replies, collaborations with influencers or celebrities, and reposting UGC all help people feel more engaged with your brand and validate your presence to new visitors.
  • Verified Profiles: That “little check” next to a social media profile goes a long way to first time visitors. It remains a powerful signal, verifying that the account is “the real thing” with up-to-date information.

Beyond the Click: Optimizing the On-Page Experience for Arrivals From Social Media 

When users land on your site from social media, the transition from a fleeting reel or ad to your webpage is arguably the most crucial part of the conversion funnel. To bridge the gap between their expectations and reality, your on-page experience must be curated to match the intent and energy of the social content that brought them there in the first place.

Curating the Journey with Message Alignment

Landing pages offer the unique ability to control exactly what a user sees based on their origin. While standard Product Detail Pages (PDPs) can be expensive and challenging to personalize, dedicated landing pages allow you to make your brand better known, such as with:

  • Align Messaging: If you are running a specific ad set, your landing page should reflect that exact message. Consistency between the ad group and the landing page is key to preventing instant drop-off.
  • Guide the Funnel: Unlike a broad homepage, a curated landing page helps “hand-hold” the user through a specific journey, reducing friction and helping them navigate toward checkout faster.

Unified Visuals and Unique Brand Voice

To look like a professional eCommerce business rather than a third-party marketplace, your site needs a cohesive visual and verbal identity:

  • Product Photography Style Guide: Each product should be shot with unified lighting, size ratios, and layouts. This prevents your categories from looking like a disjointed “eBay” or “Google Shopping” feed and helps customers compare items objectively.
  • The “I Know This Product” Effect: Use several images at multiple angles to give users a comprehensive view. This creates a sense of familiarity and confidence, or the feeling of “knowing” the product, before they’ve even bought it.
  • Unique Product Descriptions: Your copy should never be a copy-paste from a vendor. It requires a mix of solid brand identity and technical info, ensuring descriptions are unique to your brand’s voice.

Bridging the Trust Gap

Visitors arriving via User-Generated Content (UGC) often don’t know your brand yet. You have seconds to communicate who you are and why they should trust you.

Here are some ways that you can quickly and successfully secure a user’s trust:

  • The Power of Reviews: According to Market Watch, 90% of customers do not trust items that have no reviews.
  • Show Alternatives: If a specific product isn’t quite right, use optimization tools to show related alternatives, keeping the user within your ecosystem rather than bouncing back to social media.
  • Extensive Detail & Social Proof: Beyond displaying star ratings, it’s important to provide information that existing customers care about:
    • Sizing accuracy (does it run small or big?).
    • Quality and value ratings.
    • UGC in Action: Images of the product in real customer homes or offices.
    • Practical advice and reviews on how to use the product.

The Signals That Create Doubt

Brands should keep in mind the specific social media behaviors that can create doubt: 

  • Ghosting or Sketchy Comments: Negative reviews deter up to 94% of consumers. Unanswered complaints, deleted comments, or inconsistent messaging between social and website could deter users from converting later.
  • Outdated Content: Information that isn’t up-to-date, missing details about a new product or service, or even ghost accounts can have users question the legitimacy of the brand. 
  • Too-Perfect Brand Voice: Even in the age of AI, people still appreciate clever human voices. Anything overly polished or inauthentic could sway users the wrong way. 

The Speed Factor

Social media crises spread 1,200% faster than traditional news cycles. That’s why response time is a reputation signal in itself.

Slow replies on your brand’s social media accounts can signal indifference to user’s interaction or satisfaction with the product or service. 

If you want to come across as passionate about putting the customer first, setting up monitoring alerts can allow your team to respond before a thread spirals.

Stay one step ahead of the social media spiral can help brands to seem cool, calm, and collected – all of which can further interest users to buy after they leave the social media ad they initially found the product on.

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From Scroll to Site: Optimizing the Landing Experience

To get users who found you on a social media site like Instagram or Tik Tok to stay on your site, it’s important to align every step to make users feel the transition from social media to “add to cart” is seamless. 

Match the Message to the Moment

The page someone lands on should feel like a continuation of what they saw on social media. 

For example, if a TikTok video shows a product being used in a specific way, the landing page should lead with that same use case. This is better known as, “message match” – and it’s one of the highest-impact things you can test

Mobile-First Is Non-Negotiable

The vast majority of social traffic arrives on mobile. This is why slow pages, hard-to-tap CTAs, and cluttered layouts can kill conversions before they even start.

Here is where the opportunity lies for brands to check load speed, CTA placement, image sizing, and form length – as seamless experiences for all of these can encourage people to go from laughing on social media to pulling out their payment info after adding to cart.

Social Proof on the Page

Bringing the social world onto your website can help people remember that the two are one-and-the-same. 

Promoting things from social media like reviews, star ratings, UGC galleries, and influencer quotes can all help to boost trust and conversions – especially for users who already arrived at the site skeptical about the brand and what it has to offer. 

Brands can test this by running an experiment to discover if social proof above the fold performs better than below. 

Why “Best Practices” Aren’t Enough

What works for one brand’s audience won’t necessarily work for yours. 

Remember, best practices are a starting point. The real answer to your brand’s long-term success is your data – as it can reveal which areas are most successful and which still have room for improvement. 

This is where experimentation comes in. Testing can remove the guesswork and replace it with confidence.

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FAQs

Still have questions about conversion in social media? Here are the answers you need.

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