Why is My Conversion Rate Low? (Hint: It’s Not a Traffic Problem)

Picture of Deepti Jain

Deepti Jain

Reading Time: 18 minutes

You’re a marketing director for a thriving ecommerce store. You recently invested heavily in marketing strategies, SEO, PPC campaigns, and social media promotions. Your website traffic surges, yet your average conversion rate and sales remain stagnant. 

You increase your ad spend, believing more traffic will solve the problem. But that’s not the case—you still find yourself asking, “Why is my conversion rate low?” The real issue isn’t the quantity of visitors; it’s the quality of their experience on your site.

This scenario is all too common. Many businesses focus on driving traffic without optimizing their websites to convert visitors and the target audience into customers. 

To avoid this common scenario, we will explain in detail why your conversion rate may be low, what the real reason behind it could be, and how to fix it.

Why Traffic Isn’t the Problem (And Your Website Might Be)

It’s easy to assume that your low conversion rate means you’re getting the wrong kind of traffic, that your visitors aren’t “qualified enough.” But that’s often not true, and chasing more traffic or higher ad spend usually just burns money without fixing the real issue.

In most cases, your traffic isn’t broken—your website is underperforming.

Before you blame the top of the funnel, step back and ask: Are the people already visiting my site given the best possible experience to convert? If you don’t fix that first, sending more visitors will only pour water into a leaky bucket.

Here’s how you can determine whether traffic is the problem or if you have an on-site issue to solve.

How to Know if Your Website Traffic is Low Quality

You don’t need to be a data analyst to understand whether your traffic is good. You just need to check a few key metrics:

1. Check Your Bounce Rate

This tells you the percentage of people who landed on your site and left without doing anything. 

A bounce rate between 40% and 60% is standard for most industries. If your bounce rate is sky-high (like over 70%), especially on key landing pages, then yes, there might be a traffic mismatch or your landing page simply isn’t delivering what people expected.

2. Measure Session Duration and Pages per Visit

These metrics tell you how engaged your visitors are. 

If people spend at least 2 minutes viewing three or more pages on your site, your content is holding their attention. That’s a strong sign that your traffic is qualified, but your site might not be nudging them toward the next step.

3. Break Down Conversion Rate by Channel

Don’t just look at your overall conversion rate—break it down by source. For example:

  • Google Search Ads average around 4% conversion.
  • Facebook Ads average around 9%, depending on the industry.

If one channel performs drastically worse than others, your ad copy and landing page message are worth auditing. But if they’re all underperforming, it’s likely not the traffic—it’s what happens after they land.

So, When is Traffic the Problem?

While some website issues are usually the reason behind low conversion rates, there are a few valid cases where your traffic is the culprit. But these are edge cases, not the norm. 

Here are some ways to identify if your situation falls into this category:

You’re Attracting the Wrong Audience

If your ads or SEO target broad, misleading, or irrelevant terms, you might attract people who will never convert.

For example, if a startup sells $300 ergonomic office chairs and runs Google Ads on keywords like “cheap desk chair.” Tons of traffic might come in, but not many will convert. It’s simple: the ad brought in bargain hunters, while the product was premium.

This kind of message–market mismatch leads to inflated site visits and poor ROI.

Here’s what to do instead:

  • Audit your keyword intent. Not all search terms are created equal. Someone searching “how to organize a home office” is in research mode (informational), while “best ergonomic chair under $300” shows buying intent (commercial). If you’re spending money on informational keywords, don’t expect sales—tweak your strategy to focus on terms with transactional intent.
  • Align ad copy with landing page messaging—If your ad promises a “budget-friendly CRM,” but your landing page starts with “AI-powered enterprise solutions,” you’ve already lost the user. Be upfront about who your product is for, how much it costs, and what it solves before the user has to scroll or guess.

Viral Traffic That’s Not Ready to Buy

Sometimes, a blog post, press mention, or social media moment goes viral, flooding your site with visitors. Sounds great, right? Not always.

These users often visit out of curiosity, not intent. They aren’t in research or purchase mode, they’re just browsing.

Here’s what you can do at this point to engage website visitors who are not ready to buy yet: 

  • Segment that traffic and treat it differently (e.g., offer newsletter signups, soft CTAs).
  • Don’t panic if conversion rates dip after viral hits—it’s not your site, it’s the context.

Bot Traffic or Click-Farm Spam

You might be looking at fake traffic if your analytics show thousands of sessions but no engagement, low bounce rates, and zero conversions.

This is especially common with:

  • Low-cost ad platforms
    Shady traffic vendors
  • Unfiltered affiliate campaigns

But these cases are the exception, not the norm.

Here are some steps you can take if you suspect traffic is the problem:

  • Use tools like Cloudflare or BotGuard to filter traffic. These tools help block suspicious IPs, bots, and automated crawlers before they reach your site. If your traffic suddenly spikes but conversion flatlines, running it through a filter like this can separate the real users from fake ones.
  • Cross-check sessions with engagement metrics. Don’t just look at the number of sessions—check if people are engaging. Metrics like scroll depth, time on site, and click activity paint a clearer picture. For example, tools like FigPii’s scroll heatmaps help you see how far users are getting and whether they’re interacting with your content at all.

For example, this scrollmap from FigPii shows how far users are scrolling on the pricing page. You can see most of them drop off when key features and guarantees appear—those blue and green zones? Almost no one sees them. If your firmest value props are buried that low, they’re not helping you convert.

FigPii scroll map example

This FigPii scroll map shows users dropping off quickly—most never reach the bottom, where key pricing details are placed. Keep your value props higher to boost visibility and conversions (Source)

  • Avoid buying traffic from unverified or “cheap impression” sources. It probably is if an offer sounds too good to be true, like 50,000 visits for $100. These sources often use bots or click farms that bloat your numbers without bringing in real people. Stick to trusted organic ways or paid ads to boost traffic rates rather than unethical shortcuts. 

How to Confirm If Traffic Is the Issue

TL;DR? Run this 3-point test to determine whether traffic is the problem regarding low conversion rates, or perhaps the problem lies somewhere in your website. 

TestWhat to Look ForWhat It Tells You
Bounce rate > 80% and avg. time < 10sVisitors are leaving immediatelyLikely irrelevant or low-quality traffic
Conversion rate < 0.1% across all channelsNo one is buying or signing upEither site is broken, or traffic is totally mismatched
Unusual spikes in traffic without source contextSudden PR hit or bot activityPossibly viral or fake traffic

Core On‑Site Conversion Killers: Top Reasons Website Visitors Don’t Convert

If your traffic is decent but conversions are still low, the problem lies with your site. Here are the most significant reasons users don’t take action:

1. Your Value Proposition Doesn’t Match Visitor Intent

If people are landing on your site but not converting, one of the biggest culprits is this: your message doesn’t match what they came looking for.

This mismatch happens when the promise in your ad, email, or search result doesn’t match the first thing a visitor sees on your page.

For example:

  • Your Google Ad says “Free CRM for Startups” — but your homepage headline says “Next-Gen Business Management Suite.”
  • The user searched “best budget sandals for summer,”  but your product category page is filled with $250 heels and zero filters.

They came for one thing. You showed them another, hence “value proposition and intent mismatch.”

Many brands fall into the trap of discussing themselves first instead of addressing user intent. This often happens because:

  • Marketing and product teams create messaging in silos. The product team might focus on technical features, while marketing talks benefits or emotion, but if those messages never sync up, the result confuses the user. The page might say one thing, and the ad might say another.
  • Homepage or landing page templates aren’t updated when campaigns change. You might launch new ads, targeting a different audience or value prop, but forget to update the landing page. That disconnect creates friction: visitors don’t see what they were promised, so they leave.
  • There’s a push to be “clever” instead of clear. Brands sometimes prioritize witty taglines or creative headlines that sound cool but don’t explain what the product does. That might win awards, but it won’t win conversions if users don’t “get it” in 5 seconds.

Take Loom as an example. When someone searches for a “video messaging tool,” they’re likely looking for something fast, simple, and work-friendly.

Here’s what shows up in the paid ad:


Headline: “Loom: Video Messaging For Work | Say More With Video”
Description: “Instantly Record & Share Videos. Watch Them Anywhere. Share Them Anytime. Try Loom Today.”

Loom landing page messaging example

Now compare that to the landing page:

  • Headline: “Video Screen Capture and Recorder”
  • Subhead: “Discover Loom, a free video screen capture tool and screen recorder… Quick to install, user-friendly, and trusted by millions.”
  • CTA: “Download to Chrome” and “Signup for Free”
Loom value proposition example

Everything lines up. The ad sets specific user expectations, and the landing page immediately reinforces it with matching language, a focused message, and frictionless calls to action.

That’s what good conversion copy does: it mirrors the user’s mindset and nudges them forward without confusion.

2. Poor UX: Your Site Makes It Hard to Take Action

Let’s say someone lands on your website. They’re interested. Your product caught their attention in an ad or search result. But then… they leave. It’s tempting to assume they weren’t ready to convert, but the real problem is often simpler: your site just made it too hard.

User experience (UX) is one of the most underestimated conversion factors. It’s not just about aesthetics. It’s about how easily someone can navigate your site, understand what to do next, and feel confident taking that next step.

And the truth is, many websites unknowingly make that experience frustrating. Here are some common UX issues that might be pervading your site (and how to fix them): 

Slow Page Loads (Especially on Mobile)

Most users expect a page to load within seconds. Anything slower, and they leave before seeing your offer, especially on mobile devices, where data speeds vary.

Here’s how you can ensure your pages load quickly both on the mobile site and the desktop:

  • Run your site through Google PageSpeed Insights. This tool shows you exactly what’s slowing down your site—like large images, render-blocking scripts, or server response times—so you know what to fix first. And the best part is that the tool evaluates your desktop and mobile site. 
Google PageSpeed Insights

Google PageSpeed dashboard 

  • Compress large images with TinyPNG or ShortPixel. Oversized images are one of the biggest causes of slow load times. These tools reduce file size without hurting quality, which speeds up page loads (especially on mobile).
  • Use lazy loading for images and videos. Loading everything upfront, especially large media, slows your page dramatically. Lazy loading keeps things fast by only loading images/videos when users scroll. Here’s how to do it:
    • If using plain HTML: Add loading=”lazy” to your <img> and <iframe> tags
    • If using WordPress, use a plugin like WP Rocket or Smush, which both offer one-click lazy loading.
    • If using Webflow, Shopify, or other builders: Look for “lazy load” options in image settings or performance plugins.
  • Remove unused scripts, third-party widgets, or unnecessary animations. Extra scripts (like old A/B testing tools, unused analytics, or third-party chatbots) load on every page and slow everything down, even if you don’t see them. 
  • Switch to a fast hosting provider. Your server plays a big role in how quickly your site loads, especially during traffic spikes. Upgrade from shared hosting (where multiple sites compete for the same resources) to cloud-based or dedicated hosting, which offers faster response times, better caching, and more reliable performance.

Cluttered Layouts That Overwhelm Users: 

A web page with multiple buttons, conflicting calls to action, sticky banners, and pop-ups can overwhelm visitors. This cognitive overload creates decision fatigue, a state in which users are faced with too many choices and end up making none.

Think of it like walking into a store where salespeople are shouting different offers at you from every corner. It doesn’t motivate you—it paralyzes you. Online, the same thing happens. If users don’t know the most important next step, they’ll scroll aimlessly or bounce entirely.

Take a look at this website below (from the infamous Arngren.net homepage):

Cluttered Layout example

Example of a cluttered website causing decision fatigue (Source)

This is a classic example of decision fatigue in action. There are:

  • Dozens of product photos competing for attention
  • Multiple fonts, colors, and highlight styles
  • Zero clear CTA or hierarchy
  • No whitespace, no visual breathing room

The result? Total overwhelm. Users don’t know what to click, what the site sells, or where to begin. If your landing page looks even a little like this—cluttered, noisy, chaotic—you’re likely losing conversions before your offer registers.

Now contrast that with the homepage of Invesp—a conversion optimization agency. The homepage shows precisely how to eliminate noise and focus user attention:

Invesp value proposition example

Here’s why this works (and what you can learn from it):

  • Use a visual hierarchy tool like Visily or Figma’s Contrast Plugin. These tools help you prioritize what the user should notice first, like your headline, CTA button, or product benefit. They simulate how attention flows on a page, so you can spot if the wrong element is stealing the spotlight.
  • Remove non-essential elements above the fold and stick to one clear CTA. The area users see first (without scrolling) should be clean and focused. Avoid cluttering it with multiple links, offers, or sliders. If everything is competing for attention, nothing wins.
  • Space out content with generous padding and clean line breaks. Don’t cram content together. White space helps guide the eye and makes reading feel effortless. It also makes your CTA stand out without needing flashing buttons or arrows.
  • A strong, single headline that delivers a clear promise: “You’re Already Sitting on 35–45% More Revenue. We Help Unlock It.” This headline is outcome-focused. It tells the visitor exactly what they stand to gain without jargon or fluff. It speaks directly to business pain points and promises a clear benefit, crucial for grabbing attention within the first 5 seconds. 

Non-Intuitive Navigation (Users Can’t Find What They Came For)

Even if your layout looks clean, confusing navigation can stop users from taking action. They’ll bounce if people can’t quickly find your product, pricing, or support pages. 

H&M’s website shows how to strike that balance. 

H&M intuitive navigation example

At first glance, the top navigation is minimal:

  • Clear, recognizable categories: Women, Men, Kids, Home, Beauty
  • A search icon that’s easy to spot
  • Simple icons for account, wishlist, and cart—familiar and unobtrusive

This keeps the main interface clean and distraction-free. But H&M also accounts for users who want more:

Clicking the hamburger menu (top-left) reveals a well-structured, detailed navigation:

  • Logical subcategories like Clothing, Swimwear, Shoes, Sale, and Sustainability
  • A clean, vertical layout with room to browse
  • Helpful visuals for featured collections like The Occasion Shop
H&M intuitive nav bar example

What’s smart is the category-level hierarchy. You’re not locked into just one section. If you’re browsing “Women,” you can instantly switch to “Men,” “Kids,” “Home,” or “Beauty” and see their subcategories without navigating away or restarting your session.

H&M nails this by combining a clean top nav with expandable depth, but you don’t need to be a global retailer to get it right.

Here’s how to simplify and structure your navigation for better conversions:

  • Keep the top menu limited to 5–7 clearly labeled items. Avoid overwhelming users. Focus on key sections that match your visitor’s intent—like “Shop,” “Pricing,” “Features,” or “Support.”
  • Use simple, direct labels. Skip clever phrasing—instead, use recognisable labels like “Contact,” “Login,” or “FAQ” to reduce friction.
  • Add a visible search bar with autocomplete. Add a visible search bar with autocomplete (you can leverage tools like Algolia or Search.io for that)
  • Place key utility links in both the header and footer. Users expect to find support links like “Returns,” “Contact,” or “Size Guide” in the footer, too. Don’t hide them in dropdowns.

Poor Mobile Optimization (Small Buttons, Cut-Off Text):

Today, 60 %+ of all traffic is mobile (Statista, 2024). 

Most users will never see your offer if your site doesn’t work smoothly on a phone. Tiny buttons, overlapping text, or horizontal scrolling create instant friction; people will drop off without hesitation.

How to fix it:

  • Run a mobile audit with Google Lighthouse (via Chrome DevTools) or PageSpeed Insights. These tools flag mobile usability issues like small tap targets, overlapping text, and layout shifts, and give the website’s performance scores tailored for mobile users.
  • Use tap-friendly buttons (minimum 44x44px, per Apple guidelines). Make sure buttons are big enough to tap easily without zooming. Here’s how it looks in action—small, cramped buttons versus the recommended size and spacing for clean, accurate tapping:
tap-friendly buttons for mobile devices

Cramped vs. recommended button size for easier tapping (Source)

  • Build on mobile-responsive frameworks. If you don’t code, you can leverage Tailwind CSS, Bootstrap, or Webflow. These tools automatically adapt layouts based on screen size, saving time and assuring consistency across devices.
  • Ditch pop-ups that hijack the screen. Full-screen interstitials on mobile frustrate users and can lead to Google SEO penalties. Use slide-ins or toast-style notifications instead.

Forms That Ask for Too Much Information Upfront:

Long forms feel like work. Unless users apply for something serious (like a credit card or government ID), they’ll abandon the process if it looks time-consuming. Especially on mobile, people expect speed and ease. Even asking for a phone number too early can cause drop-off.

Here’s what to do instead:

  • Use multi-step forms. Use tools like Typeform or Tally.so to create multi-step forms with 2–3 short steps and make it appear more manageable. Each screen has fewer fields, so users don’t get overwhelmed immediately.
  • Remove non-essential fields. Ask only for the minimum info you need to move the user forward. If you don’t need their company size, phone number, or job title upfront, don’t ask.
  • Enable autofill and real-time validation. Use tools like Formspree or Jotform to automatically fill in known user information—like name, email, or address—using browser or device memory. This saves time and reduces effort, especially on mobile. Real-time validation alerts users if they’ve entered something incorrectly (like a wrong email format), helping them correct errors without starting over. 

Look at this example, where the form flags an incomplete email address before hitting submit. This helps users fix mistakes early, reducing friction and form abandonment.

Real-time form validation example

Real-time form validation example (Source)

  • Use dropdowns, sliders, or radio buttons instead of blank fields. These options reduce thinking and typing effort. If there’s a fixed set of answers, don’t make users guess—let them select.

3. Trust gaps: Visitors Don’t Trust Your Website Enough to Convert

According to a 2025 report by Baymard Institute, 19% of US online shoppers abandoned a checkout because they didn’t trust the site with their credit card information.

reasons for abandonment during checkout

The lesson? Even if your product is excellent, people won’t convert unless they feel safe, informed, and in control.

Here’s everything that causes trust gaps: 

  • No visible contact info or team behind the brand
  • Missing return/refund policy or unclear pricing
  • No social proof (reviews, testimonials, client logos)
  • Outdated or overly generic design
  • Security concerns, especially on checkout or sign-up forms
  • Sketchy URLs or unsecured (non-HTTPS) checkout pages
  • Pop-ups or tactics that feel manipulative (e.g., false urgency, fake scarcity)

And sometimes, it’s cultural. After major data breaches (think: Target, Equifax, Facebook), users have grown more skeptical. Now, they expect signs of credibility—SSL certificates, visible privacy policies, and a transparent copy.

Adding customer reviews is an important trust tactic. But how and where you add them matters.

At Invesp, we ran a test for a client. 87% of users on the product detail page weren’t adding to the cart. Scroll and session recordings showed users glancing at the reviews section and immediately scrolling back up, suggesting the content wasn’t earning attention or trust.

We tested two variants:

  • V1: Moved review stars and quotes below product details
  • V2: Inserted reviews directly into the price box, where buying decisions are made

The result? Conversion rate increased by 6.12% in V2, and the add-to-cart rate jumped 9.78%. 

Placing reviews directly inside the price box (V2) increased trust and lifted conversions, proving that timing and placement of social proof matter more than just presence.

The takeaway? 

Trust signals like reviews only work when they’re placed where users make decisions. In our test, just moving review stars up into the pricing box—right next to the “Add to Cart” button—increased conversions by over 6%.

So, don’t just have reviews. Place them where they reduce doubt. If users can’t see reassurance when they’re about to click, it won’t help them convert.

Put social proof directly beside pricing, CTAs, or form fields, where trust wobbles tend to happen.

If that small placement change lifted conversions by 6%, imagine what a few well-placed trust signals could do for your site. Start by fixing the basics like: 

  • Show reviews where decisions happen, not buried at the bottom
  • Use real faces and names in testimonials, not just star icons
  • Make return and refund policies clear—don’t bury them in fine print
  • Display security markers (SSL, payment logos, privacy badges) near form fields
  • Offer a visible way to reach support—live chat, email, or phone

4. Your Pricing or Offer Doesn’t Match Perceived Value

Sometimes people simply bounce because they believe your offering isn’t worth what you’re charging.

This isn’t just about being “too expensive.” Even affordable products can fail if the perceived value doesn’t match the price. Visitors ask themselves:

“Is this worth it?”
“Can I trust that I’ll get what I pay for?”
“Why this price, and not lower?”

If your page doesn’t answer those unspoken questions, visitors might exit and look for something that matches their perceived value.

What is “Perceived Value,” exactly?

It’s a user’s mental trade-off between what they’re paying and what they think they’ll get in return.

Here are some things that shape the perception: 

  • Your visuals and layout
  • The clarity of your messaging
  • Trust signals (reviews, guarantees)
  • Comparison to alternatives
  • Bonuses, guarantees, or delivery promises

You might think your product is a great deal. But users will hesitate if the site design feels clunky, the copy is vague, or your competitor promises more for the same price.

Take Mejuri, a direct-to-consumer fine jewelry brand. Although its pieces are relatively affordable compared to traditional luxury, it still charges over $100 for its jewelry pieces. 

Why do people buy it? Because their entire experience is designed to amplify perceived value:

  • Minimalist, high-end visuals that mimic luxury branding
  • Sharp product storytelling (“fine jewelry for every day”)
  • Social proof from influencers and thousands of UGC posts
  • Clean pricing with no surprise markups
  • Explicit guarantees and sustainable sourcing claims

Now imagine that same ring listed on a cluttered Shopify template with a blurry photo and no context. Suddenly, even $20 feels expensive.

Aside from the aesthetics, how else do you fix the perceived price mismatch? Here are some quick tips: 

  • Spell out what they get for the price. Provide a detailed breakdown of features, benefits, and outcomes associated with each pricing tier. Use bullet points, icons, or checkmarks to list features and benefits. This visual clarity helps customers quickly understand the value they’re receiving.

For example, at FigPii—our proprietary CRO tool—we utilize checkmarks to highlight the features included in each plan, including unlimited A/B tests, heatmaps, session recordings, and polls. This helps our potential customers easily grasp each pricing tier’s value without having to do the heavy lifting themselves. 

  • Show how your offering stacks up against competitors. Create a comparison chart highlighting the advantages of your product or service. This context helps customers see the value in choosing you over others.
  • Place testimonials, star ratings, or client logos close to the price. This builds trust and reassures potential customers at the decision-making point. Seeing that others have had positive experiences can tip the scales in your favor.
  • Offer multiple pricing tiers (e.g., Basic, Standard, Premium). Position your ideal or most popular plan in the middle. This “anchoring” technique helps customers perceive the middle option as offering the best value.
  • Be upfront about all costs, including taxes and shipping. Unexpected charges at checkout or during the checkout process can lead to cart abandonment. Clearly display the total cost early in the process to maintain transparency and trust.

As Ayat Shukairy, co-founder of Invesp and co-author of the best-selling CRO book Conversion Optimization: The Art and Science of Converting Prospects to Customers, recently noted:

“Pricing can be a silent killer. If visitors don’t understand the value behind the number, or if your plans are confusing or misaligned with their needs, they won’t reach out, they’ll walk away. It’s not just about what you charge; it’s how you position it.”

5. Post-Click Doubts Stop People from Finishing the Journey

When someone clicks your ad or link, they’re showing interest. But what happens next can make or break the conversion. Post-click doubts—those hesitations that arise after the initial click—are often the culprits behind lost conversions. 

One big reason could be mismatched messaging, that is, when your ad and landing page tell different stories.

Why does it matter? 

  • Breaks trust: When the landing page doesn’t deliver on the ad’s promise, it creates skepticism.
  • Increases bounce rates: Visitors are more likely to leave if they don’t immediately see what they expected.
  • Reduces conversions: Confused visitors are more likely to leave your site without taking any action.

Marketing expert Alexa Kilroy highlighted a scenario where an ad offered a “free trial,” but the landing page required users to enter payment information upfront. This inconsistency naturally led to user frustration and decreased conversions. 

As Kilroy points out, “Forcing high-intent shoppers to go on a treasure hunt for the product YOU advertised to them is a waste of ad spend, period.”

How do you avoid turning away high-intent shoppers with this messaging mismatch? Here’s how to fix it: 

  • Ensure consistency: Your ad copy and landing page should tell the same story. If your ad promises a free trial, the landing page should deliver just that, without hidden catches.
  • Audit your campaigns regularly: Set a monthly reminder to review your active ads and their corresponding landing pages. Ensure that the messaging, offers, and visuals are consistent across both.
  • Use clear CTAs: Make sure your call-to-action buttons accurately reflect the offer. For example, “Start Your Free Trial” should lead to a page where users can begin without unexpected hurdles.
  • Use A/B resting: Implement A/B tests to compare different headlines, images, and calls-to-action on your landing pages. Analyze which combinations yield the highest conversion rates and apply those insights to future campaigns.

Pro tip: Put yourself in the customer’s shoes. Click through your own ads and critically assess whether the landing page meets the expectations set by the ad.

But that’s not all. Aside from the messaging mismatch, here are some other post-click doubts that might make the visitor turn away from your site. 

  • Lack of trust signals like trust badges, customer testimonials, and clear return policies.
  • Long or complex forms that deter users from completing them. 
  • Slow-loading pages that frustrate users and increase bounce rates.
  • A busy or confusing layout that distracts users from the main action.
  • Lack of social proof—When potential customers don’t see evidence that others have purchased and appreciated a product, they may hesitate to buy. 

I recently encountered this myself—chanced upon a product on Instagram I was eager to buy but turns out the site lacked any customer reviews and, on top of that, had no option for Cash on Delivery (COD). 

This absence of social proof and familiar payment methods made me question the brand’s credibility, ultimately leading me to abandon the purchase.

The solution? Include customer reviews, testimonials, and user-generated content. Don’t forget to showcase the number of customers or users to build credibility.

Unlocking Higher Conversion Rates Through Strategic Optimization

Now you don’t have to ask yourself, “Why is my conversion rate low?”

Sure, low conversion rates often stem from overlooked aspects of your website’s user experience rather than the volume of traffic. You may think that your traffic is the issue, but the culprits could be unclear calls-to-action, poor user experience, complicated navigation, or lack of trust signals that are deterring potential customers from completing a purchase.

To address these issues and fix the low website conversion rate, you need to adopt a structured approach to Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO). This involves analyzing user behavior, conducting A/B testing, and implementing data-driven changes to improve the customer journey.

Ready to take your conversion strategy to the next level? Let’s explore how Invesp can help optimize your approach and turn traffic into paying customers. Reach out and fix low conversion rates today

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Deepti Jain

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