Article

8min read

Best Practices to Creating Pop-Ups that Convert

The internet has come a long way since we last saw flashy, super intrusive popping banners packed with sound that tried to convince us to download a dodgy software.

In fact, many users and marketers have forged pop-ups a bad reputation over the last 10 years, encouraged by new digital marketing trends that promote smoother, user-friendly funnels using Facebook Ads, content marketing or landing pages.

Over the years, pop-ups (that would typically open in a new window) have been largely replaced by “boxes” that open in the same window. In fact, it’s no surprise that pop-ups still work and deliver good results if they provide real value for users.

Here are our expert tips to create pop-ups that actually work. Interested in more conversion optimization tips? Read our complete guide to CRO.

Popups still work

Wait: should we still use pop-ups in 2020?

Over the last five years, internet users and web browsers have fought sketchy third-party banners that would basically ruin any website’s user experience.

Besides, ad blockers have emerged as a popular option to shield visitors from being overwhelmed by flashy, dodgy pop-ups: Business Insider reports that 30% of all internet users now use ad-blockers on a daily basis.

Pop up ad blocker

At this point, you may think that pop-ups have become irrelevant and that no one would click them in 2020.

But it’s not true.

In fact, BlogMarketingAcademy reports that pop-ups can deliver decent click-through-rates of around 2% if used correctly; which is above some of the most commonly used channels.

Whether or not your pop-ups campaign will succeed will depend on many factors including your website content and your personas.

If you also believe that pop-ups still deliver good results, check out these tips to implement a pop-up strategy that works.

Define your marketing objectives

Implementing pop-ups on your website has to fulfill a goal: otherwise it’s just pure unnecessary noise that will distract your visitors away from your content.

Depending on your website, pop-ups can be used to achieve a variety of goals.

Drive more sales

Pop-ups are a convenient tool to drive more sales using well-known marketing techniques such as up-selling, cross-selling and cart abandonment reduction.

For ecommerce websites, pop-ups can be timed around an “exit intent” (i.e they are triggered when a user wants to leave) in order to promote a last-second offer to re-engage your visitors.

Using pop-ups, you can offer your visitors a last chance and eventually convert them into additional customers, which is excellent news if you’re trying to increase your ecommerce conversion rate.

Harvest emails

Growing your email list is a tricky task that just became even harder under the European GDPR regulation that yielded unprecedented changes in the data privacy policies that websites now have to abide by.

Whether you have activities in Europe or not, collecting email addresses generally requires your visitors to opt-in, which can conveniently be achieved using pop-ups.

Sales pop-up

Made.com uses a central pop-up to grow their email list by offering 10£ in exchange for a newsletter subscription: this is a good incentive to grow your email list. Because you can easily click away, the pop-up doesn’t disturb visitors that much: they can simply close it and keep on shopping.

Generate leads

On that matter, pop-ups can be used as a complementary tool to your content marketing efforts, just like HubSpot does by displaying pop-ups in their articles.

Lead generation pop-up

While their visitors read, Hubspot displays a “fake” pop-up chat box that redirects you to an ebook landing page which ultimately asks for your email address: this is a smart strategy that provides value in exchange for an email address.

Lead generation form

Improve customer experience

Getting feedback and improving user experience is a major challenge faced by most serious ecommerce and lead generation websites.

Although they weren’t specifically created for that purpose, pop-ups can play a great role in harvesting feedback and improving user experience.

For instance, using AB Tasty’s Net Promoter Score tool (i.e how likely are your visitors to recommend you), you can instantly generate feedback for your ecommerce or services while analyzing real-time data in order to run further optimization tests based on your discoveries.

Net Promoter Score pop-up

Choose the right pop-ups for your audience

There are many types of pop-ups that are more or less efficient depending on your strategy. In fact, some industries require more aggressive practices than others: it all depends on your marketing personas and price range.

Here are the 5 main types of pop-ups that you could use:

Entry pop-ups

These are pop-ups that are triggered at the moment your visitors land on your website. Although they might work in some cases (language selection, age restriction, disclaimer, exceptional offer, major news…), they’re generally not happily welcomed by your visitors because of their intrusive nature.

Scroll-based pop-ups

Scroll-based pop-ups are typically activated after a visitor has scrolled to a certain depth (e.g 25% of the page for example). Because these pop-ups only activate after a proof of engagement, they tend to yield slightly better results and work particularly well on articles and blog posts although some ecommerce websites may use them as well.

Delayed pop-ups

Delayed pop-ups are triggered after a visitor has spent a certain amount of time on your website. Similarly to scroll-based pop-ups, they’re only activated after a proof of engagement.

Interaction-based pop-ups

These pop-ups come in handy for marketing teams interested in personalized experiences. Basically, interaction-based pop-ups are triggered once a visitor has clicked or hovered over a specific element. Contrary to delayed or entry pop-ups, they allow your team to create personalized experience based on your visitors’ behavior.

Exit intent pop-ups

Exit pop-ups are triggered once a visitor is about to leave your page. These pop-ups are famous in the ecommerce industry as an effective tool to reduce cart abandonment rate. They can also be used to generate leads or collect email addresses.

You can easily run all these pop-ups using a customer activation platform like AB Tasty. Our

Provide value to your audience

Perhaps the most important rule to bear in mind while implementing a pop-up strategy: always provide value to your audience. Creating and displaying pop-ups on your website that don’t deliver any kind of useful information or value to your visitors is extremely risky.

Backcountry – a famous outdoor equipment ecommerce – uses a large pop-up to indicate that their website isn’t available for European customers. It then redirects you to another website that is GDPR compliant.

Beware of your mobile experience

Based on Google latest mobile friendly guidelines, beware of full-screen pop-ups that could drastically hamper your mobile experience and significantly reduce your page loading time.

Remember: mobile users are extremely demanding when it comes to mobile experience.

Before launching any new pop-ups on your website, take some time to check your mobile version and see if anything could be improved.

Optimize your mobile pop-ups for SEO

After Google announced its mobile-first indexing, the firm also updated its algorithm to penalize intrusive mobile interstitials that would hide the main content on a mobile website.

As a rule of thumb, keep this in mind: do not display pop-ups that cover the main content or hamper the user experience.

Based on these guidelines, your mobile pop-ups should complement the user experience rather than restrain it.

Here’s a diagram from Google that summarizes it quite clearly:

Google's guidelines for SEO friendly popups

With that in mind, you have all the information to carefully run pop-up campaigns that will drive conversions without hurting user experience or your search rankings.

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Article

6min read

5 Examples of Personalization Done Right

2019 is officially a wrap. To get 2020 off to a good start, we wanted to highlight some of the best personalization campaigns we’ve seen over the past few years. Some are oldies but goodies, others hot off the press. From the travel to media industries and more, here are some great ideas to help you bring even more relevant experiences to your customers.

SaaS: Spotify Still at the Top

Spotify has gotten a reputation – like Netflix and Amazon – for being at the top of the personalization game, and with good reason. Their personalized lists of music, not to mention their hilarious ads, are savvy uses of consumer preferences and data.

In 2019, they didn’t disappoint. A nicely curated ‘Your Top Songs 2019’ list appeared at the end of the year on the app, to help ring in the New Year with just the right tunes.

Spotify Personalization

Travel: EasyJet Tells Personalized Client Stories 

2015 was a big year for the airline easyJet, as it marked their 20th anniversary. If you’d flown with the company, you may have received an email like the one below. It outlined all of the destinations easyJet had taken you to, and suggested some for the future, like a visual scrapbook:

easyjet personalization
Wishpond

 

We like this kind of personalization approach – it tells a pleasant story, reminds you of all the good times you had with the brand, and is very social media friendly.

Recently, easyJet announced more personalization plans for their new package holiday plan to be rolled out in 2020. 

Digital director for easyJet and easyJet Holidays, James Hardy, told Marketing Week, “We will also be launching a raft of new features over the next six months, with the aim to be the most personalised booking site in travel.” We can’t wait to see what they’ll be offering!

Media: The New York Times Perfects its Personalization

This past spring, according to Nieman Lab, the NYTimes went a step further than ever before in the name of personalizing the experience of their readership. The creation of their ‘For You’ section – at launch, only available on iOS – aimed to make it simple for readers to access more of the content they’re interested in. The benefits of this kind of personalization range from creating more engaged readers (which equals more subscriptions and sales), as well as potentially exposing them to a wider range of journalism. In other words, “consider For You one effort to widen the reader’s awareness of stories that would otherwise seem hidden…

What we like about this campaign is its conscious effort to avoid ‘filter-bubbles’, and the fact that it’s based on active personalization. The judgment of journalists is still taken into account, and the preferences of readers, used to determine the content shown in ‘For You’, is based for the most part on what they purposely choose: 

NYTimes personalizationFor You Personalization

Fashion: UNTUCKit Knows how to Customize

More of a product customization approach than a standard personalization campaign, the fashion brand UNTUCKit lets you build your own shirt on their site. With their simple sizing approach and online customer profile, the store already makes it easy to find exactly the right match for you. But if you want to go a step further and build a shirt to your particular specifications – from fabric to styling to pockets – they make this easy, too.

Customization Untuckit

Want to make that purchase extra special? The company even offered free (limited time) monogramming.  We like the simple, no-frills approach to customization from a brand that’s all about helping customers get the right look and feel for them.

untuckit monogramming

Social Media: Facebook Year in Review

Like the easyJet example above, Facebook has for a while now offered a nice overview of users’ top moments showcased on the platform, called the Year in Review. 

Facebook Year in Review

You can access a nice video of the highlights of the year that you can share on your wall if you like. With many people using Facebook and other social media sites as personal scrapbooks, this is a simple, feel-good way to round of the year that we can get into.

Takeaway

Personalization doesn’t have to be overly complex or ridiculously data heavy. Even simple ideas can go a long way in increasing brand awareness, loyalty, engagement and sales. It can also just be pure fun. Whatever your business, we’re sure you can find some inspiration in these examples and get your personalization strategy flowing in 2020.