Do you understand who your customers are? Do you know what problems you’re solving for your users?
User testing can help you determine exactly who your website is for and what communication they’ll respond to.
You can find out how much they know and what they think about your website and competitors. And you can use that knowledge to improve your website’s SEO approach and content strategy.
User testing lets you get inside your customers’ shoes. Start by finding out about the experience of using your product or site from their perspective.
Sample questions to ask:
See how your users’ answers compare to your assumptions. From there, you can follow up on more specific aspects of the experience and get perspectives from other types of users.
Read through your content like your users and make sure your site meets user intent. This can help you improve engagement, bounce and conversion rate.
Bonus: Answering user questions well could help you appear in People Also Ask.
When you run a user test, pay attention to the phrases your customers use and search for. You could find new keyword synonyms or learn your users have very different understandings of common phrases.
Plug these words into a keyword research tool like Ahrefs or Semrush to find any keyword gaps or synonyms you could be missing out on ranking for.
You might also discover new content ideas to build up your library to be more comprehensive.
Users will leave a site that’s frustrating, slow or unhelpful. Identifying users’ emotions and reducing friction points can help you improve site bounce and engagement.
Get users to browse your website and ask specific questions about their experience.
When a user is frustrated, you might see signs like:
When a user is confused, you might see:
You can also ask users direct questions about their feelings during your user test. Then, see if their answers match their mouse’s “body language.”
Sample user questions:
Apply your user test learnings to develop an empathy map for your users at each stage of the buying process.
Consider what your user wants to accomplish, what they’re thinking about and how they feel. You can also split this out into different types of users or products.
Then, you can create targeted content for your buyer personas to address their main concerns and emotions.
For example, let’s say you run a gardening shop. After user testing, you might develop a basic user map like this:
This is a great exercise to pair with your keyword research, so you’re creating the most helpful content possible. And helpful sites can rank better.
Keywords with “what/is” are likely in the learning stage, so help these users learn the basics.
Include lots of beginner details, pictures, links and definitions so this user can indulge their curiosity.
Keywords with “cost/how” probably fall under comparison. This user needs help narrowing down their choices. Make sure you demonstrate E-E-A-T to help them feel confident about their decisions.
Don’t make the mistake of naming user emotions directly in copy. For example:
This kind of statement is obvious and can come across as inauthentic. Instead, talk about what the user gets out of it and how you can help address a specific concern or risk.
You’re offering the solution the user wants with a clear reason to choose your company. You’re demonstrating you understand how they feel and what they want without spending precious space talking about it.
Refocusing CTA language on the user can increase your leads or conversion rate.
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Your users’ reading comprehension skills are probably lower than you expect.
Half of Americans can’t read at a 6th-grade reading level and struggle to read an 8th-grade book. And almost a quarter of the population includes non-native English speakers.
User testing can help reveal how much your users know about common vocabulary and jargon. It can also help you understand how much they know about your site or product.
Sample questions to ask users:
To improve your content, clean up any jargon and insider language. Use a free reading-level plugin or website to check how well users will understand your site and compare it to competitors’ content.
You might also need to change the reading level of your content for your specific users.
For example, for a website with articles about driving schools for international students, you may be writing for non-native English speakers.
That means writing to a high school reading level or lower. Avoid phrases that don’t translate well, like idioms, puns and regional expressions.
You’re also speaking to someone who might not be familiar with the basic rules of the road. Lean towards over-explaining and summarizing and include lots of links to informational articles.
You might also test out your site UX with a feature like Google Translate turned on.
You can start user testing today without a lot of effort.
Don’t make reading your website feel like homework or a puzzle where users must guess what you can do for them.
Ask users questions to understand what they need, and then make sure your content delivers. That will help boost your site’s engagement and conversion stats and improve your rankings.
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