You’ve built your website. You’ve done your SEO homework. You’re even starting to get traffic and some sales.

For most website owners, hitting this achievement shows that their site has truly “made it” and is starting to gain fans, followers and loyal customers.

But what if you could do even better?

Would you want to know how?

A conversion audit can help. A conversion audit looks at your site from the perspective of a potential customer and identifies all the areas of friction that could cause a user to leave the site, abandon their shopping cart, or otherwise be confused or hesitant.

You can choose to hire a skilled conversion expert to do your audit for you, and in doing so, they’ll typically look at the following areas for improvement, using the following questions to create a sort of checklist as they go through your pages.

Your website’s design is the very first thing that greets a visitor when they land on your page. In addition, how you’ve chosen to lay out the various sections of your site, and the tone and style of your design all reinforce the brand’s overall appeal and its connection to customers.

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These days, social media optimization has become just as important as optimizing your site for the search engines (if not more-so). Google and many other search engines take social media signals into account when ranking pages. This is particularly true of YouTube (owned by Google), where videos can easily appear as the very first piece of content to a search query.

E-commerce pages span a variety of uses to not only inform and educate the prospective customer, but also entice them to take the next step toward a completed order.

How easy this process is often depends upon the choice of shopping cart and finding a single cart that’s made for conversion optimization while fulfilling your needs and those of your customers can be tricky. At the very least, you’ll want to answer the following questions:

It can be difficult to review a website’s content unless you know precisely what to look for, since the tone and style of the writing will vary. At the very least, you’ll want to scrutinize your website’s content carefully and ask the following:

As you can see, there’s a great deal of scrutiny and analysis that goes into a conversion audit. That being said, it isn’t done purely to be critical, but rather to plug any leaky holes that could be causing visitors or customers to leave your pages.

What’s more, this is by no means an exhaustive list of all the possible questions that can be asked during a conversion audit. A professional conversion optimization specialist will custom tailor your audit to reflect your site’s goals accordingly, and there’s no “one size fits all” approach to doing such a review.

By asking these questions, you’ll not only have a greater sense of how your website is displaying and reading to customers, but you’ll also be able to see what areas of which pages are causing them concern and making them hesitate.

And the sooner you can smooth out those bumps in the road to a conversion, the sooner you’ll be well on your way to increasing your sales and improving the overall customer experience. Good luck!

Bio

Sherice Jacob helps business owners improve conversion rates through best practices in design, analytics and copywriting. To learn more, visit iElectrify.com and download your free website tune-up and conversion checklist.