What is marketing without conversion rate optimization? 

One could argue it’s still marketing—but are you really getting the most out of it? If you’ve caught up like the rest of us, you’d know that CRO (conversion rate optimization) is the next step for your marketing. And to use CRO to your benefit, you’re gonna need some CRO tools on your roster. 

So to paraphrase Becca Kufrin, the former Bachelorette—and underrated conversion rate optimization expert—let’s do the damn thing.

The Bachelorette of CRO tools

What is CRO?

CRO (conversion rate optimization) is about increasing the number of leads you get and making your website more effective at turning visitors into valuable leads. It’s about improving your results. It’s about convincing people to take action—whether it be signing up for your webinar or newsletter, creating an account, downloading a mobile app, or buying your product or service. CRO helps you increase the number of people who take those actions (convert) based on analysis, testing, and feedback.

But let’s take a step back for a second. To know CRO (and eventually some CRO tools that can help you out) you need to know some concepts that are pretty directly tied to it. Let’s get into some of ‘em below.

Why is CRO important?

Imagine, if you will, your conversions right now sit at 10%—for every 10 visitors to your website, one of them makes a purchase. And let’s say that every sale is an average of $50. That means, for every 100 visitors to your site, you make $500. (Cha-ching.)

What if you could make a small tweak that increased your conversions from 10% to 20%? Now, for every 100 visitors, 20 of them are buying, resulting in $1000 in sales. (Well done!) Wouldn’t it be worth it?

That’s what CRO does: improve your ROI (return on investment). And there isn’t a single brand in the world that doesn’t want that. No, seriously. Can you think of one? We’ll wait…

Which leads us to our point: there’s always room for improvement. No website or landing page is ever perfect, which means there’s something that can (and probably should) be tweaked to get you those clicks.

We live in a digital world which affords us marketers the luxury of being able to run tests and optimize for results while campaigns are still in progress. You can be testing Facebook and Google ads while they’re running, or test different elements on your product pages while conducting business as usual. Your sales don’t stop just because you’re optimizing—in fact, your sales continue and grow because you’re optimizing.

CRO also helps to target more of your ideal customers, while lowering your customer acquisition cost (CAC). Because if you’re spending too much on finding the wrong types of customers, you’re wasting valuable resources: time and money. Targeting and converting the best-fit customers means you can spend your resources on other parts of your work.