Your homepage is the single most important aspect of your entire website. Arguably, the pages describing your product or service come in a very close second. With all the attention you devote to your homepages, how do you ensure your product pages resonate with the potential buyer?
The answer - tell a story with your product that is relevant to the buyer. That seems simple, but not all visitors are the same. This post will walk through how you can dynamically change your product pages and improve conversions using smart content. Let's dive in.
At the center of every good story is at least one person. Like a good story, you need to first start with people and more specifically the Lists app in HubSpot.
The lifecycle stages of contacts tracked within your HubSpot account are a wealth of information. But a prospect that has viewed your website once, versus a prospect that has viewed your website five times could be very different. In fact, it's likely the more a contact visits your website (up until they become a customer), the more qualified they likely are.
So take the concept of Lifecycle Stage and Pageviews, both of which are built-in to HubSpot, and use them to tell your story.
In order to tell this story, start by building a list.
Each of your lists represents a micro-persona. It's likely on the first visit that the potential buyer is looking at high-level information, and then progressively looking for deeper stories about how your solution works. You can also duplicate the lists above for each of your key lifecycle stages to ensure the entire journey your buyers go through is customized to them.
Note: The Smart Content functionality described in this post is available to Professional and Enterprise customers. Try out Hubspot Professional free for 30-days.
Now that you've created your lists, it's time to actually create your story and change the page! To start, choose one product page within HubSpot and add Smart Content to the page.
Once done creating your content, just click "Add smart rule" as shown in the bottom of the screenshot above, and select your next list. If you followed the previous example, you would have four customized versions of the page, a default which will be read by all search engines and visitors that don't meet the smart criteria, and the three versions based on each of the lists.
Each of these page versions helps tell more of the story and helps give the visitor more information to move further down the funnel. If your visitors become more qualified the more they see specific pages, you could also create a workflow that transitions these contacts between lifecycle stages.
Based on the above, you can measure results and iterate your story or lists accordingly. This strategy does not end after you make the content more relevant, after that's done it's time to fine-tune your product pages and lists.
Have you used Smart Content on your product pages? If so, let us know what you think and how it's worked in the comments.
Originally published Nov 30, 2015 3:00:00 PM, updated November 30 2017