Predictions for 2010: “2010 is the Year of Conversion Rate Optimization”
I am like most people when it comes to year-end predictions and horoscopes: I don’t believe in them but cannot help myself from checking them out to see if they say what I wish they did say.
So it was with great enjoyment that I read SEOmoz’ “8 Predictions for SEO in 2010” where one of their predictions is “2010 is the Year of Conversion Rate Optimization.”
SEOmoz, best known for their blog of the same name, is a very well-respected Seattle based search engine marketing company which provides SEO, SEM, website design and other consulting services. Last week, Rand Fishkin, their respected CEO & Co-Founder, wrote:
“If I were doing another startup today, it would focus on software for conversion rate optimization. I think this is still the most under-utilized and highest ROI activities in the marketing department, but more awareness is on its way. CRO isn’t just about testing; it’s about building a process for improving conversion over time. Online businesses can generate so much revenue from this, yet few invest. I think 2010 is the year, simply because it’s an inflection point for companies to assess their spend and where they derive value.”
Rand Fishkin then goes on to present a table describing three tiers of marketing channels and their scores for Average ROI, Average Effort and Average Cost. Conversion Optimization appears in the #1 placement for Tier 1.
Great news for our clients, since that is precisely where WiderFunnel Marketing Optimization plays.
We have been in this wonderful business space called Conversion Optimization since June 2007, as one of the very first companies in the world that identified conversion optimization as the emerging field that would deliver significantly high ROI to clients investing in the strategy, and that would prove to be counter-cyclical once marketing budgets stopped growing as they had been until then.
So, with two and a half years’ experience doing just one thing, conversion optimization tests for clients in all areas and delivering conversion rate lift of up to 290% for them, we have seen a lot of changes – and Rand Fishkin’s observations deserve some pondering and feedback.
• “If I were doing another startup today, it would focus on software for conversion rate optimization”
Rand, don’t do that.
Testing software choices available to businesses today are plentiful and the market is very well served. Robust options, ranging in capabilities and pricing (and even “free”), include Google Website Optimizer; Omniture Test & Target; Ion Interactive; Vertster; and others.
We at WiderFunnel work with clients using different tools and, as a technology-agnostic firm, are free and unbiased to recommend the right testing tool to the right client at the right stage of their company’s adoption of conversion optimization as a strategy.
At the end of the day, conversion optimization success is never about the testing tool: there are already many excellent tools available.
• “I think this is still the most under-utilized and highest ROI activities in the marketing department, but more awareness is on its way.”
Rand, on this one you are right.
When we first started WiderFunnel, we would spend a lot of time explaining what testing is all about, trying to cause an “Aha! Moment” where prospects would suddenly (well, after a one hour presentation) “discover” that it was dramatically cheaper and far less risky to run conversion optimization tests than to keep throwing marketing dollars at Search campaigns.
Things have changed.
We now get a steady stream of well-educated prospective clients who contact us knowing what conversion optimization is all about and asking how we work with clients.
Most importantly, we now get a very high percentage of prospective clients who have already dabbled at testing themselves (both with free and with paid testing tools) and have realized that conversion optimization isn’t just “one more thing” their in-house staff can do: they know they need experts to deliver a sustainable and scalable testing strategy for them if they are to optimize the complete site and stay ahead of the competition.
• “CRO isn’t just about testing; it’s about building a process for improving conversion over time.”
Rand, again, this one is bull’s eye!
After two and half years of running tests for clients, we have learned that conversion optimization success is NEVER about the testing tool they choose and ALWAYS about two factors:
1. The right test hypotheses (or “knowing what to test”)
2. The right (and scalable) process (as in “Can you execute properly in the areas of web analytics; conversion optimization strategy; test design; variable content placement; wireframing; graphic design; copy and modifications; layouts and mock-ups; technical installation; HTML; real-time results analysis…?”).
WiderFunnel Marketing Optimization does all that for clients, consistently.
• “Online businesses can generate so much revenue from this, yet few invest.”
Rand, again you are right here.
So many marketers still look for the silver bullet: that shiny new idea that pleases their eye and their ego and which can be done with relatively little work.
However, current economic conditions, where the CFO continues to cut the marketing budget and demands marketing actually increase its productivity and deliver even higher ROI, is changing all this.
And it is changing on a daily basis: we are seeing not only greater investment in conversion optimization but a greater realization on the part of marketers that this is a business-model changer for their companies, here to stay.
• “I think 2010 is the year, simply because it’s an inflection point for companies to assess their spend and where they derive value.”
Amen to that!






December 21st, 2009 at 11:59 am
I think what Rand meant in terms of software is CMS’s. In this arena, sadly, there is not perfect package. And frankly, this would have to be some HUGE system if you want to cover all possible avenues.
Just my 2cent’s worth.
December 22nd, 2009 at 3:01 am
I totally agree on that. I think that 2010 will be the year of conversion rate optimization. SEO has had its run, now, CRO will be the focus area which the e-commerce will work at.
- Nikolaj Bomann Mertz
December 23rd, 2009 at 11:41 pm
Raquel, all your links to testing software vendors are invalid. Try clicking them, it redirects to your own site with 404. You probably forgot to include ‘http://’ and our tool (Visual Website Optimizer) in the list of links
January 4th, 2010 at 3:28 am
2010 has to be the year for Conversion Rate Optimisation.So many website owners have now understand that having a successful website is not just about gaining high traffic levels & appearing on page 1 of Google.
The understanding that you have to convert that traffic into leads/sales is there now so surely CRO has to become a major consideration for any website owner.
January 7th, 2010 at 2:32 pm
@Paras: Thanks for pointing out the broken links! Fixed now.
January 15th, 2010 at 4:20 am
[...] Hirsch of WiderFunnel Marketing Optimization agrees with Rand. Raquel makes the following observations that I concur with: “Rand Fishkin then [...]
January 15th, 2010 at 3:08 pm
Raquel, I hadn’t actually read this one, but just linked to it from Bryan. Awesome post. Totally agree. Did I mention that I’m a sycophant?
March 16th, 2010 at 2:46 pm
I disagree with Nikolaj that SEO has had its run. I think SEO, along with improving conversion rates, are going to continue to be crucial factors in a businesses success. The expansion of search advertising has priced a lot of small companies out of ppc traffic. They need to get as much for free as possible, and be sure that it converts when they get it.
January 23rd, 2011 at 12:04 am
This is an excellent post extremely well put Stephen. Your post could easilty have been titled something like 'The business case for conversion rate optimisation'. At PRWD we too are hoping that 2011 will be the year that more companies start to recognise the importance and value of on-going conversion rate optimisation – and act on it.
You make some really interesting points from what Bryan Eisenberg said about how the rise of social media has perhaps distracted brands from the subject of conversion rate optimisation. On the surface, before you get down to hard numbers like sales performance, new customer conversion rates and average order values, social media is certainly more sexy and trendy than CRO!
To steal one of your phrases – let the optimizing begin…