Forum Moderators: phranque
Has anyone tried both methods? Which generated the most enequiries?
I find it depends on the form. All I ever ask for is name, email addy, and question/comment. I get quite good success with inquiries.
If you have a massive form that asks for all that extra junk (gender, age, income, phone number etc) you're probably going to see less use.
I think I'll try stripping a couple of them down to name and email and see what happens.
I'm also thinking about trying a simple 'call me back' form which would just ask for name and phone no.
Imagine going into a shop and asking for a Mars Bar. "sure, what's your telephone number?"
Okay, there are certain enquiries which we need to ask specific questions in order to answer the query but at least let the visitor get through the door before netting him.
Advantages: (1) Some people don't have their browser set up properly to launch their default email program so this covers them, (2) losing the mailto link on your site will help minimize spam.
You have a travel site and generally people are making enquiries about destinations or whatever, clearly you need certain information in order to supply accurate information on the first response instead of going back and asking them information which they failed to provide.
It is the 'data capture' information such as 'gender'. 'evening phone number', 'screen resolution' ... yest I've had that one!
I want the price of widgets not join your club! ... not you travelsite :) that was just a spontaneous rant.
First, no offence taken :)
Second, I don't know the answer to - "Which generated the most enequiries?". I'd suspect that it may be emails - but I'm not sure, people are getting used to using forms. Given a choice between 50 emails and 10 form-requests however (using a well laid out form) I'd take the form requests - conversion rates (for us) are much higher with forms...and our staff aren't wasting most of their time chasing up users for more details.
But I agree that emails are better in some situations. If I'm doing link exchanges the last thing I want to do is to fill out a form! Also, forms use more advanced technology (!) than simply showing your email addresses - and as such aren't quite as robust. On a competition page for a very specialist market segment we identified this, and switched to email :)
...and if they aren't showing the price of blue widgets up front I'd complain! :)
Use our web form:
How we can contact you [....................] (email address, phone number, or postal address)
Your enquiry [................................]
Or email us at:
<mailto:>my@address
Or phone us:
+00 0123 456789
Or write to us at:
1 My Road, My Town, My County, My Country, MY-P OSTCODE