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A**S
Great for any level of marketing professional or designer.
I really enjoyed the book by Chris Goward. It is a great insight into how the Widerfunnel team performs conversion optimization and ab testing. The book was a really easy to read. Following the steps and case studies gave me some great ideas to start testing my sites right away.I also really like the sections on creating hypothesis using the LIFT model. Then the sections of optimizing for value, relevance and clarity were also well written. This book would be great for anyone interesting in learning conversion optimization or advanced ab testing practices.
R**S
Great for newbies and exprienced conversion optimizers
This book is great for anyone involved in conversion optimization. If you are just starting out this book will give you a great foundation. If you already have an optimization program in place, this book will give you tools to make it better. There is lots of great info that you can implement quickly for quick wins. Its a fun book that's enjoyable to read too. Definitely a book to start or add to your collection!
D**N
Finally! A book that puts it all together.
I've been scouring the web for blogs on conversion optimization and website testing. It was frustrating trying to piece it all together. Don't take that route. This book is all you need to build a framework for building and testing pages. It was like the clouds were parting as I read each chapter. I've got like 20 sticky notes sticking out of this book. It's really great stuff.I love how Chris Goward writes as well. It's light and entertaining. There are lots of case studies along the way that really drive home his methodology with real world examples.Total 5-star recommendation.
S**R
Half sales job, half book
Content marketing is the act of offering up content that is of use to the reader but who's primary purpose is to drive traffic and sales to the author's business.Like so many books on popular business topics, this is a work of content marketing, intending to drive you to use the author's business's services.In years past, it would be common practice for businesses to write white papers explaining their service's value proposition and to describe the basis upon which a customer should evaluate competitive offerings. These whitepapers would be posted to the company's web page. But nowadays, this text is published in book format so as to reach a wider audience and simultaneously adopt an aura of greater objectivity, and get the reader to pay for it, no less.Many books are written by authors who have a business interests in a book's topic area. There is nothing wrong with this, and its natural since that's where the domain knowledge is. But they can often be counted on to write books that are overwhelmingly focused on educating the reader in the subject matter with little concession to the writer's commercial interests. This is not the case for this book.All that said, there are several valuable nuggets of good information, insight, wisdom, and guidance in this flow of a sales pitch. But its expensive in time and effort to ferret them out of this stream of persuasion trying to sweep you into the author's sales funnel.To be fair, most other books on this topic are even more sales-y and offer less actual value. I wish this were not a point of merit but this is the state of affairs presently.
R**I
Many great gems, fun to read; math/stats slightly misleading
I have been running controlled experiments for over 12 years now, at Microsoft, Amazon, and Blue Martini software, and have been involved in thousands of A/B tests. Hundreds of experiments run on our experimentation system at Microsoft on any given day, and I have written multiple peer-reviewed papers on online controlled experiments, available at exp-platform.Chris Goward's book was a pleasure to read, containing many gems, fun quotations, and cartoons, making what could have been a boring read into something enjoyable.It is clear that Chris and team at WiderFunnel have been involved in a lot of real scenarios, and share many real useful examples. They also give good references to resources. I enjoyed reading the book, and learned many new things.Why four and not five stars? Here are some downsides- The math/stats is not just lightly covered, but wrong in a few places. For example, "Data is collected until statistical significance is achieved" is a common theme throughout the book, which is misleading. An example from Section 5.1 (False Positives) of the paper "Online Controlled Experiments at Large Scale" shows that running five variants and testing them six times (e.g., each day the of the week the experiment runs as suggested) will result in over 50% chance of getting a stat-sig positive result with 95% conf intervals (1-0.975)^30 on an A/A test (when there is no true difference).Statements like "reached statistical significance" imply that once it is achieved, you remain stat-sig, which is not true.- The discussion of metrics is superficial and unclear. For example, "If you were to include multiple visits and pageviews for the same people, the conversion rate reported could be skewed too low." It depends what you are optimizing for and why. Are you looking to reduce the variance? Is it really the metric the business is optimizing?- Some statements are extreme, such as "Surveys and studies should never use percentages as findings unless their results arestatistically significant." The percentages with confidence intervals could be informative.- The selling of WiderFunnel to the reader could have been avoided and left as implied. For example, "If I were Walmart, I would hire WiderFunnel to test..."- The LIFT model is a nice conceptual model, but making claims like "Each person has a conversion tipping point, and the six conversion factors are both independent and cumulative" is much too strong. Do we now have a perfect six-factor linear separator for human decision making in the context of conversions?- No discussion on protecting the live site from egregious errors due to bad experiments. Chris writes"Once you’ve launched your test, do yourself a favor and take a break from watching the results for a few days."We operate in the opposite way: we watch the first hours of anexperiment carefully to detect egregious errors that hurt users in order to abort those experiments.If you're thinking about doing A/B testing and want some motivating examples, this is a great book to read.
A**R
Chris goes beyond talking about websites; he goes into everything required for CRO success.
I've read every CRO-related book that is sold on Amazon. Until I picked up You Should Test That, all prior CRO books had to do with landing pages and how to improve them. While Chris does cover websites extensively in YSTT, he details the entire process of choosing what pages to test in the first place, what elements to test on those pages, and how to convince your superiors that CRO is a worthwhile activity. He makes a comprehensive business case for CRO, going beyond the usual ROI calculation, which is invaluable to the everyday Enterprise Marketer.
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