How To Improve Your CTA (Call To Action)
- By Omaro Ailoch
- Published April 14, 2008
- Internet
- Unrated
Omaro Ailoch
Omaro Ailoch is a senior software engineer, an internet marketing expert, and the founder of OC IT Services http://www.ocitservices.com/ a highly skilled California based web development, design, and search engine optimization firm. OC IT Services has successfully improved ROI for small to large businesses and corporations through the successful streamlining of core business practices and the implementation of SEO strategies.
View all articles by Omaro AilochAvoid Generic Text Links
You should determine the most accurate and beneficial CTA for each individual page. Using a generic CTA that is the same on every page will not give you the best results in most circumstances. This is because your readers are looking for something different on different pages. Your home page and other informational pages are unlikely to warrant a direct sale CTA, whereas the deep pages or product pages will require exactly that.
Provide The CTA Your Visitors Expect
Consider the people that most often visit a page. How did they arrive on that page and what are they looking for and expecting to find? Once you have answered these questions you will be in a stronger position to write better copy, provide improved page content, and direct visitors to the next logical step. You will be able to clearly identify the CTA that you should use on each page. The most effective way to optimize any page is to think about what your visitors want, as well as what you want them to do. At the very least you will
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Use Specific Content
Throw out the generic text links. Every page, or at least every group of pages, should have its own CTA button. Write short, accurate, and appealing copy for each of your CTA buttons. Two or three words is the optimum amount of content for a button because any more than this and it will become difficult to read on a reasonable sized button and with only one word (even with two words) it is very difficult to accurately convey a message.
Use Buttons Rather Than Text Links
Graphical buttons have proven to be more effective than static text links. In the same way that we suffer from advertising blindness we are beginning to ignore generic text links that appear at the foot of a page. We know these to be links and, with poor formatting, they can be difficult to spot at the best of times. A graphic button placed in a prominent and relevant position is more likely to provide the results you want.
Using An Effective CTA Button
Always ensure that content is relevant, especially your CTA. If visitors on a page are being led to navigate to a product information page, then the CTA button should lead them to that page. Conversely, if they have been sold on a product or service and are ready to make the purchase or begin the purchasing process in earnest then the CTA button should help them do exactly that. Buttons using relevant, concise, and accurate text typically prove more effective than generic, long-winded text links.

