Why Susan Boyle is like a good landing page
April 25, 2009 by Chris Mole
Filed under Internet Marketing
By Amanda MacArthur from Mequoda Daily
Test your landing pages, because 9 times out of 10, snap judgments will prove you wrong
In case you haven’t heard, Susan Boyle is the unlikely star of Britain’s Got Talent, a televised talent show over in the UK .
On April 11th, Susan Boyle’s audition was aired, a beautiful rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream” from the musical “Les Miserables”.
Since then, the video has been uploaded to YouTube and has been viewed over 42 million times.
The charm of Susan Boyle, next to her incredible voice, is her appearance. When Susan first walked on that stage, she was a little goofy, the judges didn’t take her seriously, and neither did the audience. But when she started singing, the laughter stopped. That’s what you call results.
Now, there’s been all kind of jabber in the blogs and on TV about Susan changing her look. As it turns out, her fans don’t want her to change. Susan has started getting her eyebrows done, and shopping for new outfits.
Not to say Susan is losing that special charm, but put simply, the audience liked the underdog.
This is what inspired me to write a post that compared the lovely Susan Boyle to—yes, a landing page.
Why? Because the underdog landing page surprises people too. You need to test a landing page in order to discover what results it will bring. You can’t give it to your best designer and say “make this look pretty”.
When we A/B split our landing pages, the “less pretty” version tends to win, almost every time.
Here’s where my Susan Boyle comparison to a landing page comes in.
1. Good landing pages captivate readers with a story
Great products seldom stand on their own or sell themselves without someone creating a story. A great landing page is a sales letter that begins with a story that heightens desire for the product and prompts a purchase decision.




'Scientific Advertising' - by Claude Hopkins
Ken Evoy's 'Make Your Site Sell' was first published in 1999 and revised in 2002. That's a long time ago in Internet terms but the fundamental principles in this book are just as relevant today.