3 Parts Of A Complete B2B Search Landing Page

The ellipsis, or “…” is a written construct that means “you fill in the missing part.” In a quote, it means “something is missing here.” The Chicago Manual of Style states, “Ellipsis points suggest faltering or fragmented speech accompanied by confusion, insecurity, distress, or uncertainty.” Compare this to the period, or “.”. A period says, […]

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The ellipsis, or “…” is a written construct that means “you fill in the missing part.” In a quote, it means “something is missing here.”

The Chicago Manual of Style states, “Ellipsis points suggest faltering or fragmented speech accompanied by confusion, insecurity, distress, or uncertainty.”

Compare this to the period, or “.”.

A period says, “This thought is complete.” It is the sign of a complete sentence. There is a subject, a predicate containing a verb and an object. All appropriate adjectives, adverbs and participles have been included. Nothing more is needed.

Are you sending your hard-won search traffic to a …com or a .com?

A Landing Page Is A Complete Sentence

Your B2B search traffic should not be asked to fill in the blanks like a sentence that ends in an ellipsis. You may introduce confusion, insecurity, distress, or uncertainty.

Your home page is often guilty of asking the visitor to figure out what lies between their search and your solution.

A landing page or microsite offers a complete sentence.

There are three main parts to a sentence,and your landing pages should contain them all. Every sentence should have the following form:

You should do a specific thing to get an answer to your immediate questions.

You Are Not The Subject

The first part of your .com sentence is the subject. You are not the subject, your visiting searcher is.

Do your pages start with your company name, your product, or the pronoun “We”? If so, I suspect your page is about you. It’s hard to complete a sentence when you’re talking about yourself.

We are…

If so, you have taken your searchers to a www.oursite…com.

Xerox

A search for “enterprise business planning” brings us to this page. We learn a lot about Xerox from Xerox on their landing page, but what about my enterprise business planning questions?

The Verb Is The Action

Just because our visitors are the action, doesn’t mean we don’t want them to do something that helps our business. Your call to action should be clear and obvious.

Of course, this can be a problem when we expect searchers in all parts of the sales funnel.

Oracle

Oracle responds to my “enterprise business planning” query with a lot of features and benefits. Their calls to action are muted, however. If I’m not determined to find the next step toward my questions, I’ll miss the payoff.

DataClarity

A search for “Cognos 10” brings me to this landing page. DataClarity has three verbs in their landing sentence: request a demo, get a quote, or read a 572-page eBook. Their sentence is

You should do this or that or the other to answer your immediate questions.

This is a page with a period.

You Are Not The Object

The object of your sentence is the goal of the searcher. It is your offer. Your destination, whether a landing page or microsite should focus on the offer, not your business or products.

This may be surprising. It’s hard not to talk about yourself when marketing. It is a waste of pixels for a searcher trying to understand their problem.

If you find yourself with a high bounce rate from your search traffic, you are probably putting desires ahead of your visitor’s questions.

SAP

In response to my query “enterprise business planning,” SAP offers a list of resources that could answer my questions. However, clicking on any of them opens a onerous form. It makes me wonder what I’m getting myself into.

You should do a specific thing to get an answer to our immediate questions, and then…

The few leads this experience might generate may be highly motivated, if they are willing to give you their address, phone number, title and more without knowing what they are getting. Those early in their research will be missed.

Are You Completing Your Sentences?

Integrate a subject, action and object into the experiences you create for your search traffic and you will empower your visitors with a complete thought. This is important for business-to-business prospects, who are not looking to save money or get the next cool thing. They are interested in keeping their jobs and careers safe while making difficult decisions.

If you don’t offer a complete sentence…

Thanks to the Grammar Girl for educating me on the ellipsis.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Brian Massey
Contributor
Brian Massey is the Conversion Scientist at Conversion Sciences and author of Your Customer Creation Equation: Unexpected Website Forumulas of The Conversion Scientist. Follow Brian at The Conversion Scientist blog and on Twitter @bmassey

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