Conversion · 8 min de lecture
High-Conversion Landing Pages: 12 Patterns That Actually Work
After auditing hundreds of B2B and SaaS landing pages, the pages that convert share the same twelve patterns. None of them are clever. All of them are deliberate.
Publié le 9 février 2026
High-conversion landing page design is not a creative problem. It is a constraint problem. The best pages obey the same patterns; the average pages try to be clever instead.
1. One page, one promise
If a landing page tries to sell two outcomes, it converts at half the rate. Pick one outcome and remove every word that does not defend it.
2. Hero copy that finishes the visitor's sentence
The hero promises the outcome the buyer is searching for. Not the product. Not the company. The outcome.
3. Proof above the fold
Logos, numbers, or a quote from a recognizable buyer. The visitor needs to believe the page before they read it.
4. CTAs that match the temperature
Cold traffic gets a soft CTA. Warm traffic gets a direct one. The same page can serve both with two CTAs in different sections.
5. Social proof spaced through the scroll
Testimonials clustered in one block read like a wall. Spread them through the page; each one closes a specific objection.
6. Sub-second LCP, every time
If the page does not paint in under a second on mid-range Android, the conversion ceiling is set by the loading spinner.
7. Forms with three fields, not seven
Every extra field cuts conversion. If sales needs the data, capture it after the meeting is booked, not before.
8. FAQ that handles the real objections
Read the last 50 sales emails. The five most common objections are your FAQ. Anything else is filler.
9. Visual hierarchy that survives a phone screen
Most landing page traffic is mobile. Design the mobile breakpoint first. Desktop is the easy version.
10. Motion that has a job
Animation that moves attention, not animation that decorates. If the visitor cannot tell what changed, the motion is noise.
11. A single trust seal, not five
The strongest credential beats the longest list. SOC 2, a real customer logo, or a precise number. Pick one and let it carry the section.
12. A footer that respects the visitor
Real contact information, real legal pages, no ten-column link sprawl. Trust is built in the small details.
If you want a free audit of an existing landing page against these patterns, send the URL and we will respond with a written breakdown within two days.