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8 Comments

Picking an H1, sub-head, and CTA for your landing page

I wanted to get some insight into writing good content for hero sections.

So I did some research and looked at what the big sites (Apple, Microsoft, Shopify etc..) are using for their H1, sub-headings and CTAs (call-to-action).

I compiled them into a public spreadsheet:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1AjjyVuycceALclUxes14JgX5WDwYixpaVAl6PxdO-lw/edit?usp=sharing

(Figure above is a word cloud of the primary and secondary CTAs)

Key Learnings

I learned a few things:

  • The most common CTA is "Get started" or "Get started for free".
  • "Join" and "Buy" are popular words for CTAs too.
  • Established brands are more direct, for example Apple has "Buy Now" as a CTA on $1K+ product. Probably indie's would not be able to do that.
  • Some sites skip the sub-head altogether. Others have very long ones that are multiple sentences long.
  • It seems most headings are either descriptive (eg. "We are collaboration software") or discuss benefits (eg. "We make collaboration easy"). I didn't find any talking about pain (eg. "Stop wasting time on bad collaboration software")

Update: Andrew Kamphey from https://BetterSheets.co did a deeper analysis about this on YouTube. See https://youtu.be/QNfHHeUa9p8?si=42QgCN2EczyEKZEi&t=777

He found some interesting stuff:

  • H1 length is an average of 35.1 words
  • Subhead length is an average of 11.3 words
  • 31% of CTAs have the word "Free"
  • 9% of CTAs have the word "Sign"
  • 40% of CTAs have the word "Start"
  • 27% of CTAs have the word "Get"
  • 4.4% of CTAs have the word "Buy" or "Try"
  • Subheads have an average of 1.7 sentences.

His sheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1hqmydZvATbL_iU3fe-eQj7uX4eEEsvhzSMFn3wivub4/edit#gid=0

  1. 2

    That's some quality information you have shared. Highly appreciated man

    1. 1

      Welcome sir 🙇‍♂️

  2. 2

    Thanks a lot for your sharing. Btw I wonder if there are any websites that feature headings about pain, since the PAS content framework is quite well-known.

    1. 4

      It could be that I looked at very established brands. As @redona pointed out, more agitation might be needed for lesser known brands.

      It would be interesting to expand this research, and use the Wayback Machine to see how some sites grew their language.

      For example, take Drip

      • In 2017 "Email marketing automation that just works."
      • In 2017 "Drip outsmarts traditional email marketing to help you sell more online."
      • In 2020 "Turn customer data into customer loyalty."
    2. 2

      Take PAS with a pinch of salt (i.e. use it when you're highlighting a competitor's negative feature on a us vs them blog post)...When it comes to homepages, it makes more sense to create a positive frame around your businesses. Just be aware that PAS can result in prospects associating negative emotions around your brand

  3. 2

    That’s awesome I think big brands don’t need to explain what they do because they are very established. I think H1 paint points are great for those that are not very well known and need to get attention and drive an immediate value to the customer/user. :)

  4. 1

    whats the conversion rate of the people who click on CTA?

    1. 1

      probably no way to know without access to those companies private analytics

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