Conversion insights | WebManics

Lead Gen Landing Page Checklist | WebManics

Written by Amit Rai | May 20, 2026 12:14:34 PM

What is a lead generation landing page?

A lead generation landing page (sometimes called a “squeeze page”) is a focused page designed to capture a visitor’s details, usually an email address, in exchange for something valuable (a checklist, template, webinar, or consultation).

The goal is not “get an email”. The goal is to start a relationship and move the lead into a marketing funnel you can nurture over time. (What is a marketing funnel?)

How do you measure a landing page’s success?

The primary metric is conversion rate: percentage of visitors who complete the action (submit the form, request the demo, book the call).

Benchmarks are useful for context, but they’re not a target. According to Hostinger, the average landing page conversion rate across industries is 4.3%. (Landing page stats)

If you want a deeper breakdown by industry and page type, Unbounce’s benchmark report is one of the more practical references. (Unbounce conversion benchmark report)

What types of lead generation landing pages convert best?

The offer type matters more than most people admit. A “free ebook” is not inherently valuable. A checklist that saves someone 30 minutes today often is.

Below is a common set of lead gen offers and their average conversion rates (via Leadpages):

  1. Cheat sheet: 34%
  2. Checklist: 27%
  3. Ebook: 24%
  4. Mini-course: 22%
  5. Coupon: 20%
  6. Quiz: 18%
  7. Webinar: 17%
  8. Template: 15%
  9. Case study: 12%
  10. Free consultation: 9%

Source: Leadpages

What makes a lead gen page successful?

A good landing page does three things quickly:

  1. Explains the offer (what it is, who it’s for, what problem it solves)
  2. Reduces risk (proof, reassurance, privacy, legitimacy)
  3. Reduces friction (simple form, clear CTA, fast load, mobile-ready)

The 8-point landing page optimisation checklist

1) Distraction-free design

If something on the page doesn’t support the conversion goal, remove it. That usually means:

  • No top navigation
  • No competing CTAs
  • No popups fighting the form

2) Prioritise above-the-fold clarity

“Above the fold” is what people see without scrolling. It needs to answer, instantly:

  • What is this?
  • Who is it for?
  • Why should I care?
  • What do I do next?

Above the fold example

Nielsen Norman Group’s research is still the best shorthand for why this matters: users spend a disproportionate amount of attention above the fold. (Scrolling and attention)

3) Streamline and optimise form fields

Long forms kill conversion. Ask for the minimum you need.

Rules that hold up:

  • Start with name + email unless you have a strong reason not to
  • If you need more, use a multi-step form
  • Prefer single-column layouts for readability and completion

A useful reference on single vs multi-column forms: (Single-column beats multi-column forms)

4) Social proof

If you want someone to trust you with their details, you need proof you’re real.

High-impact proof:

  • Named testimonials with role and company
  • Logos of customers or partners (if you have permission)
  • Trust badges (security, certification, media mentions)
  • Specific numbers (only if true), e.g. “Used by 120+ teams”

VWO has a helpful roundup of A/B testing examples across industries, including social proof experiments. (A/B testing examples)

5) Strong, benefit-driven copy

Avoid generic copy like “Download our ebook”. Instead, make the outcome obvious.

Example patterns:

  • “Get the checklist we use to…”
  • “Fix [problem] in [time]”
  • “Steal the template for…”

6) Clear, compelling CTAs

CTAs should be specific and action-led.

Better:

  • “Get the checklist”
  • “Send me the template”
  • “Book my audit”

Worse:

  • “Submit”
  • “Click here”

7) Mobile optimisation

Most landing page traffic is mobile. Statista reports that a majority of global web traffic comes from mobile devices. (Mobile traffic share)

Mobile requirements:

  • Large tap targets
  • Short paragraphs
  • Fast load
  • No layout shift

Think With Google’s page speed research is still a useful reminder: slow pages bleed conversions. (Mobile page speed benchmarks)

8) High-quality visuals (that do not slow the page)

Visuals should clarify the offer (mockups, previews, short demos), not act as decoration.

Rules:

  • Compress images (WebP where possible)
  • Lazy-load below-the-fold media
  • Avoid heavy video backgrounds unless you’ve measured impact

Conclusion

A lead generation landing page is a focused trade: value in, contact details out. The pages that convert best are clear above the fold, frictionless on mobile, and honest about the outcome.

Treat it like a system:

  • Start with the offer
  • Reduce friction
  • Add proof
  • Measure, then iterate

If you’re rebuilding or optimising a landing page, run the 8-point checklist above, fix the biggest conversion leaks first, and only then start experimenting.