All Latest 534 A/B Tests
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MOST RECENT TESTS
Test #562 on by Jakub Linowski Nov 13, 2024 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Jakub Linowski Tested Pattern #99: Progress Bar In Test #562
In this experiment, a 3 step progress bar was added starting on a checkout funnel (dedicated add-to-cart page, greeting card step and order summary). The progress bar also showed any completed steps as a "checked off" state. More so, users were able to use the progress bar as a navigation item to any previously completed and currently active steps. Impact on sales was measured.
Test #560 on Finn.com by Daria Kurchinskaia Oct 22, 2024 Mobile Desktop Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #46: Pay Later In Test #560 On Finn.com
The idea of this experiment was at least two fold. 1) the variation attempted to clarify that there is no payment today with the copy "Pay 0€ today" on the collapsed state of the payment amount. 2) clarify the payment terms with exact dates and amounts for future payments.
Test #553 on Online.metro-cc.ru by Andrey Andreev Sep 27, 2024 Mobile Desktop Checkout
Andrey Andreev Tested Pattern #69: Autodiscounting In Test #553 On Online.metro-cc.ru
In this experiment, a preset coupon code with -15% amount and an easy to "apply" button was shown to new users who have never made a purchase. In the variation, the an empty coupon field was shown. Impact and transactions and revenue was measured.
Test #538 on Volders.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Jun 20, 2024 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #77: Filled Or Ghost Buttons In Test #538 On Volders.de
In this experiment, a less visible (ghost button style) legal confirmation box, was tested against a more visible one (filled state with higher contrast). Impact on error rates (from submitting an incomplete form) and sales was measured.
Test #536 on by Jakub Linowski Jun 14, 2024 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Jakub Linowski Tested Pattern #28: Easiest Fields First In Test #536
In this experiment, the order of the checkout flow was rearranged. In the control the first step of the checkout flow started with the shipping information step, followed by greeting card selection. In the variation this was rearranged (hypothesis was that the greeting card step was easier). Impact on sales was measured.
Test #531 on Aboalarm.de by Katharina Lay May 03, 2024 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Katharina Lay Tested Pattern #128: Standard Or Superscript Price Format In Test #531 On Aboalarm.de
In this experiment, the font of the euro cents amount was made smaller. Additional copy was also added underneath the price reinforcing that tax was already included in the price. Impact on transactions was measured.
Test #519 on Volders.de by Katharina Lay Feb 23, 2024 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Katharina Lay Tested Pattern #134: Optional or Confident Recommendation In Test #519 On Volders.de
In this experiment, copy around an upsell was changed from using "optional" to "our recommendation for you". The idea was to recommend two upsells with more confidence. Impact on the two upsells (secure, and express) as well as overall transactions was measured.
Test #518 on by Jakub Linowski Feb 14, 2024 Mobile Checkout
Jakub Linowski Tested Pattern #64: Tunnel In Test #518
This was an experiment on the first checkout step where users would enter shipping information. The control had a longer footer with more additional sitewide links and a call to action to a newsletter. The variation removed these elements and kept the focus on the shipping information task. Impact on progression to next step and sales was measured.
Test #517 on Aboalarm.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Feb 12, 2024 Desktop Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #78: Tags, Badges And Structured Information In Test #517 On Aboalarm.de
In this experiment, a "most popular" badge ("am beliebsten") was appended to the middle plan of a contract cancellation service. Impact on overall purchases and revenue was measured.
Test #483 on Menufy.com by Aleksandr Elesev Jul 17, 2023 Desktop Checkout
Aleksandr Elesev Tested Pattern #124: Confirmed Selection In Test #483 On Menufy.com
In this experiment, a thanking confirmation message was appended at the top of the checkout screen of a local food delivery service. Impact on completed transactions was measured.
Test #481 on Backstage.com by Stanley Zuo Jul 14, 2023 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Stanley Zuo Tested Pattern #15: Bulleted Reassurances In Test #481 On Backstage.com
In this experiment, selling points and benefits of a subscription were placed as bullets at the top of a checkout page. The benefits highlighted things such as: unlimited applications, access to vetted jobs and the ability to cancel anytime. Impact on sales was measured.
Test #482 on by Jakub Linowski Jul 13, 2023 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Jakub Linowski Tested Pattern #124: Confirmed Selection In Test #482
In this experiment, the choice of adding a product to cart was confirmed with a further positive message in the header of the next step (on the add to cart page). Once users left the product detail page, instead of simply stating the product name, the title was rephrased as "Product [X] Makes a Great Gift. They'll Love It!". I view this as a higher "intensity" experiment, given that the add-to-cart page was in some way already confirming the choice. Impact on sales was measured.
Test #479 on Aboalarm.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Jun 15, 2023 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #15: Bulleted Reassurances In Test #479 On Aboalarm.de
In this experiment, a list of benefits were shown for each of the 3 plans on the last step of a contract cancelation service. Benefit items not included in the lower plans were also shown with grayed out styles (and an "x"). Clearly the higher paid plan had all the benefits listed. Impact on transactions was measured.
Test #480 on Aboalarm.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Jun 15, 2023 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #15: Bulleted Reassurances In Test #480 On Aboalarm.de
In this experiment, a list of benefits were shown for each of the 3 plans on the last step of a contract cancelation service. The lowest plan only had one benefit, whereas the highest plan had 3. Impact on transactions was measured.
Test #463 on Volders.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Mar 25, 2023 Desktop Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #115: Pricing Comparison Table In Test #463 On Volders.de
This experiment explored a pricing layout that enabled more feature comparisons. It also conveyed more clearly which features were missing between plans. The test has been inspired by this Netflix experiment. Impact on sales was measured.
Test #458 on Volders.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Feb 27, 2023 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #103: Money Back Guarantee In Test #458 On Volders.de
In this experiment, a cancelation guarantee was added believing it would make users feel safer while canceling their contracts with Volders (the paid service being offered). The variation appended a Guarantee in the headline as a hyperlink with an explanatory tooltip shown on hover. This variation change was added to multiple screens throughout the checkout flow (a 5 step process).
Test #452 on Volders.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Jan 30, 2023 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #62: Urgent Next Day Delivery In Test #452 On Volders.de
In this experiment, a count down timer was added near the top of a checkout page. The timer was only shown before 1pm and clarified that the serivce (contract cancellation) will be initiated on the same day if users act before a cut off time. Impact on completed payments was measured.
Test #435 on Volders.de by Daria Kurchinskaia Oct 17, 2022 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Daria Kurchinskaia Tested Pattern #9: Multiple Steps In Test #435 On Volders.de
In this experiment, a question about a customer's reason for purchase was broken out into a separate step and moved earlier in the process. In the control, this question was asked in the final checkout step along with a plan selection (Step 4 of 4). In the variation, this question was shifted as a standalone first step (Step 1 of 5). Impact on completed purchases was measured (for a contract cancellation service in this case).
Test #427 on Designlab.com by Daniel Shapiro Aug 10, 2022 Desktop Mobile Checkout
Daniel Shapiro Tested Pattern #28: Easiest Fields First In Test #427 On Designlab.com
In this experiment, the course enrollment start date was moved from step 2 to step 1 of an enrollment / checkout flow. The test was run by Designlab - that offers design courses and education with a strong element of mentorship. Impact on progression to next step and completed transactions were measured.
Test #415 on Learnwithhomer.com by Stanley Zuo Jun 09, 2022 Mobile Checkout
Stanley Zuo Tested Pattern #3: Fewer Form Fields In Test #415 On Learnwithhomer.com
Do fewer confirmation form fields matter? In this experiment, redundant password and email confirmation fields were removed during a signup / checkout funnel. Impact on signups was measured.