You’ve Probably Annoyed Your Visitors
Sometimes, you might be hurting the feelings of your potential readers one way or the other through the content you’ve published so far on your site or elsewhere.
For example, some part of your content might somehow sound negative or annoying to the users while reading and this may prompt many of them to click away from your site never to return. If this continues to happen, you won’t be able to convert the hundreds of traffic hits you generate every day into real customers.
What you can simply do to get rid of this is trying to be positive while writing blog posts as well as saying lots of encouraging words to your potential readers. This is simply how you can successfully convert traffic into real customers.
Sometimes, you would notice a higher bounce rate in Analytics. This is one of the root causes and it can be remedied easily by following the suggestions given above.
Other things you can do to remedy the problems include conducting visitor surveys through which you can figure out what is really wrong with your site for not being able to convert.
You can also check to find out whether visitors are getting annoyed with the numerous in-article Ads displayed around your posts or not.
By making your visitors feel at home with instinctive designs and all of that, your site could start converting with ease.
You Don’t Have Sufficient Value
You don’t just get conversions like that but people give that to you in exchange for something worthwhile. If you’re getting a lot of email subscriptions on your blog either through a lead magnet opt-in form or other ways, people are giving that information to you in exchange for a useful eBook or content.
If you’re getting a lot of sales on your site, people are giving their money to you in exchange for valuable and worthwhile products.
Once the potential customers cannot find anything valuable or worth the asking price, they wouldn’t hesitate to click away without buying anything.
Notes taken and changes to be made. Thank you.
Jennifer
The thing I need most, I think, is time, and keeping on keeping on. It will be 6 months right after Christmas, so I still have lots to learn. Every little bit helps, though, and you provide some illuminating insights.