Any idea why my bounce rate could be so high?
-
Hello Everyone,
I'm stumped.
My primary website has a horrendous bounce rate of around 75%
My domain is www.radicalmarketingsolutions.com
My home page has a bounce rate of around 68%.
The funny thing is, I have a page on Google Analytics basics for small business owners that is my 3rd top page for content, I have an average time on page of over 3 minutes yet my bounce rate is 90%.
I have another page on how to depersonalize your google searches in Chrome and Firefox that is a top page with a time on page over 5 minutes and this page has a bounce rate of 96%!
I felt that my old design was really hurting me so I changed the design in the beginning of this month and it does not look like it's helped much.
I really simplified the site, created a lot more white space and added some links to my other important pages in hopes to get more click throughs.
I would really love some honest "constructive" feed back on my site as to why the bounce rate could be so high.
I have a ton of content on my blog and I get a lot of positive feedback.
One thing I did not do was exclude my IP from Analytics so I could be influencing the numbers. I've added this filter and hoping this will help.
Another issue is I do email my list with each new blog post. This could mean those folks visit the post and then leave without reading anything else on my blog. So this could be hurting me as well.
Would love your suggestions.
Thanks,
Bill Parlaman
-
Glad to be of help
One of the things I worry about most in SEO is changing things for the sake of change ... I've learned the hard way to take a breath and think before reacting. It's a hard lesson to learn, but it can be really satisfying when you discover that you made the right decision.
-
Oh sure. Suppose I asked for feedback and then I argue with you? Not too smart. You learn the most from your mistakes. Thanks again for all of your help.
-
You've got a great attitude Bill! A while back I asked some peers for feedback on my website and they gently told me a few areas where it just didn't look professional. I ended up doing a site redesign and ended up tripling my traffic after a few months. It pays to be humble!
-
Hi Marie,
Thanks so much for your feedback. I am glad I posed this question as the ebook and look of my page has been mentioned so I got to get to work. Like I said above, I am changing my ebook offer in exchange for a 7 page video training course. This might change the look and feel of my page. Thanks so much.
-
Thank you Sha for your feed back. This was really helpful. I am working on a new lead gen give away and moving away from the ebook. I will be doing a video course. So maybe this will help. Most of my readers are direct response marketers so they would expect a two step lead gen offer. Thank you for your time.
-
Hi Bill,
I assume when you say "I do email my list with each new blog post" that you are bulk emailing your established readers, to let them know you have posted since I can't see an RSS subscribe button on the site.
The fact is that established readers for the most part don't need to read anything more than the post you are telling them about in your email. They have most likely already read any other material on your site that interests them.
It is well known that blogs with significant numbers of subscribers often have high Analytics bounce rates for this reason. The data to focus on is sources of your traffic. Do you have a large proportion of referral or direct (type-in) traffic?
The thing to remember is that the bounce rate reported in Analytics is not the same as "real bounce rate" determined independently by the engines. "Real bounce rate" takes into account time on page. I would think it most unlikely that you will see any negative impact in Google or Bing with the time on page numbers you are quoting.
My most constructive advice would be:
- Check to see exactly what percentage of your traffic is coming from search as opposed to referrals/type-ins
- Stop messing with things to try to fix what isn't really broken - sooner or later it will hurt you.
The other comments here about the "look" of the site are probably valid - the style does bear a resemblance to some "sales letter" type sites, but on the other hand, you do have a lot of content and it sounds like a good number of happy readers. I would think carefully about any changes you make.
Hope that helps,
Sha
-
No solutions here, but just a few thoughts. When I visit this page my first thought is, "Oh this is one of those sales letter pages that just exists to make me buy an ebook. I'm probably going to get trapped by javascript when I hit the back button." Personally I think this style of page may have worked well a few years ago, but it's become abused by too many people.
With that being said, I think bounce rate is a metric that's hard to compare. My top performing site has a bounce rate of 89%. This is because people visit the page, get the info they want and then move on. I've decreased it a bit by enticing users with tools they can use and similar pages they can visit. But I don't think my bounce rate will ever be 50% or lower.
If I had your site I may consider trying some A/B testing with totally different kinds of designs and see what attracts and keeps the visitors best.
-
Hey Bill, I don't know if this sounds like something too worrisome, but something you could potentially do is look through your analytics, match the keywords getting you traffic with the landing pages, and see if they're optimized. Are the pages answering the people's questions clearly? Is it giving them content that would lead them to want to read more?
For keywords that have high bounce rates (besides [tools] of course) you may want to make a page that specifically answers the searcher's questions, and perhaps end the article with a call to action to another page of your site, something that will intrigue them and get them to stick around longer. But at least make sure the landing pages are optimized for the keywords people are finding them from.
-
Well those keywords are kind of the low hanging fruit when you run an SEO consulting firm. Trying to rank for SEO, SEO consultant, SEO firm is tough.
Maybe I can try to soften up the content a bit. I'm also going to add a video this week.
I am on the first page for my keywords but my concern is Google knocking me down for my high bounce rate. My traffic is really increasing so I know I am doing some things right.
Thanks for your help
-
Well I guess that is good news, since tools is a keyword that was never going to convert anyhow.
Your heeading and side looks fine, nice and clean professional looking, but as i said below the actual main content looks a bit hard sell. But having said that 40% for your top keywords conflicks with the spammy idea.
as for radical marketing, well i can see that getting some wierd sorts of clicks, It may be you have nothing to worry about
-
In my top 10 this is what I found
For my main keywords like small business internet marketing and small business seo my bounce rate is in the 40% range.
funny thing is my most popular keyword the last 30 days is "tools" which has a 98% bounce but I do not see my site ranking for this. "tools" is in my top 10 for the past year with a 75% bounce rate.
86% for radical marketing
My bounce rate has always been in the 70% range. This is why I changed my design and home page layout. My home page used to be more of a squeeze/landing page. So I added more links to click and cleaned everything up.
I added a video training course with 10 videos you can access from my home page ( no optin required)
-
i have to agree, its not spammy in content, just seems to look like spammy sites from memory.
its in the main content area, cant put my finger on any one reason why, but maybe play with some fonts of stuf, tone it down a bit. It was my first impression also.
-
Happy to help. I think the problem might be, that it looks too much as a lead gen site, and too little as a site with great content / serious services.
-
The red title looks very aggressive and maybe can you can please a border around your content. When I visited your frontpage I saw a wall of text. :s
Start playing with your layout and track it with google website optimizer.
-
Thanks for your honesty. Spammy is the last thing I would have thought on this site. I have my phone number and contact information very visible. I am sharing my social networks with folks, I have a very active blog. I have real testimonials with photos and there is zero adsense or banner ads. I feel any good direct response website should have some sort of lead gen to capture names and emails.
You bring up a point I did not consider and I appreciate this.
-
What keywords are getting the high bounce rate?
Looking at your home page, its the sort of site after reading, you are either intrested or your not, unlike selling products where people may have a look at a few different pictures or products before making up their minds. I guess that does not explain a 90+ rate though
Has it always been so high, or is this a new thing?
-
Hi Bill,
I am sorry if this sounds a bit harsh - but I would not like to give any information to your website. Although the design is simple, it looks kinda spammy to me. It looks like a site that wants my email address and then sell it to other.
Good CRO starts with data collection. What I'd do if I was you is to ask a bunch of Amazon mTurkers some questions about your site. A good list of questions is the one Google uses - you can find it here.
Also, a small thing is the moving fav.ico - would definitely find a new, static one.
So the short answer to your question: invest in better design. But do it on the background of data.
Best,
Thomas
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Will Landing Page Design with Large Areas of White Background Enjoy a Higher Conversion Rate?
My designer has created a landing page with a dark background. Text is white and other colors. Does a dark background impact the conversion rate? Is it better to have a white background? I am concerned that a dark background may distract visitors. The landing page is: http://www.nyc-officespace-leader.com/MidtownLawOfficeSublet3300SFBelowMarket We plan on using this landing page for LinkedIn advertising. Thanks!!
Conversion Rate Optimization | | Kingalan10 -
When to determine that a change DIDN'T affect conversion rates
Hi everyone, Description of test: We're a lead gen site trying to add more value by providing users with real, live quotes after they submit a lead. However, we don't want showing the quotes to tank our lead conversion rates. So we're running a test where 50% of leads see quote results and 50% don't, and we compare the lead conversion rates for each. The best possible outcome is to show that showing the quotes DIDN'T negatively affect conversion rates. My issue: When do we conclude the test? In the end, we're hoping to see that the change didn't cause a statistically significant difference between the control and version B, which is the opposite of every other test I've ever run. So, at what point do we conclude that the changes in version B didn't have a significant effect on lead conversions? Currently the control is doing 5% better than the variation with a p-value of .379
Conversion Rate Optimization | | ted-zarceczny0 -
Are website optimization and conversion rate optimization roughly the same thing?
This is mostly a semantics question, but I also want to check that I have a basic understanding of the two concepts. Are the two terms more or less interchangeable or are there any crucial differences? I always thought of website optimization as the complementary partner to SEO. While the ultimate goal of SEO is getting people TO your website, website optimization is focused on refining your website so that those people STAY on your website. When I think of conversion rate optimization, I'd imagine that's pretty much the same goal. Refining a website so that more people stay and ultimately convert (buy something, subscribe to a newsletter, etc). Is my understanding of one (or both) of them flawed, or is it six of one, half a dozen of the other? Thanks!
Conversion Rate Optimization | | BrianAlpert780 -
Any General feedback or Experience on Page Titles and Click Through Rates ?
Moz, I have managed to climb onto page one for a couple of keywords i am really happy with, Just looking for any feedback on page titles and different effects on CTR The page i am working with is product pages I tried a simple headline which was a branded product keyword, this way when the keyword matches the user search it will stand out as the the majority of the title is bold because of this match,, Example below <title>Jeffs<strong> Lollipops</strong></title> and my other option is to look at testing a more descriptive title to fit the limit <title>A selection of sweet Strawberry and Cherry<strong> Lollipops</strong> from Jeff<//Title></p> <p>has anyone looked into this and tested for results in CTR ? i can see there being a youmoz about it somewhere?</p> <p>Alot of people i assume will just say test test test, but any feedback on how other moz users tackle title tags for CTR would be great,</p> <p>Thanks</p> <p>James</p> <p> </p> <p> </p></title>
Conversion Rate Optimization | | Antony_Towle0 -
Brand Name: Conversion Rate Optimizing: Eponymous VS Generic
Good day all, We are entertaining the idea of changing the Domain Name & Brand Name for straplessfashion.com. While still in development, the website sells women undergarments. We did some survey research and it seems that women (age 18-40) really liked either "Demi's Dream" or "Almost Skin" as a good name. More specifically, Almost Skin seems to be the more popular choice over "Demi's Dream". I think "Almost Skin" catches attention quicker and may work best in PPC. However, when personalizing a brand name is considered, "Demi's Dream" might be the best choice. Would you please offer your advise on which of these two names might be the best for a new Domain and Brand name for the website mentioned above? Which would convert better? Thank you for your help. Carlos
Conversion Rate Optimization | | 90miLLA0 -
Bounce Rates Impact on SEO?
What impact does bounce rate have on a websites rankings? What is an ideal bounce rate percentage to shoot for? What is the best way to reduce bounce rate on a site?
Conversion Rate Optimization | | bronxpad0 -
Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO): Best Approach/Plan Documentation
Hey Mozzers - First off, I am well aware of what CRO is, its benefits, and why it is essential for any inbound or performance marketing campaigns. However i am a total newbie at the actual planning and implementation of CRO, so any advice/feedback on the questions below are much appreciated! When planning a CRO experiment/test what is the best way to document it? Should i develop the full plan ahead of time laying out each element? If so, what elements should i include in this plan? What are the KPIs i should report on? What tools should i use for reporting (i was thinking a blend of Google and Clicktale)? Any lessons learned through out your campaigns? Thank you all so much for your input! Regards - Kyle
Conversion Rate Optimization | | kchandler0 -
Can fun, slightly unprofessional text be good for conversion rates?
I operate on a freemium model. The three plans are currently called "Free", "Gold" and "Platinum". Besides being incredibly square and boring, these titles are also meaningless. I'm doing a slight redesign of my site, and the new (unreleased) site has a very fun, playful feel. I'm also trying to make everything more streamlined and obvious. I'm considering renaming the three plans "Boring Amateur", "Kick-Ass Amateur" and "Bona Fide Professional" on the registration page and simply "Boring", "Kick-Ass" and "Professional" elsewhere. There are lots of places on the site where I have to refer to "amateurs" vs "professionals" - these tags would make that easier to explain. Easier = more sales. What do you think about using unprofessional text like this? Is it too risky, possibly offending too many people and losing sales? Or is it a good eye-catcher? I know the best answer is "test it." But this is one of those changes that I don't want to have to put my users through too many times. Thanks for any thoughts!
Conversion Rate Optimization | | PatrickGriffith0