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?)
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)
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):
Source: Leadpages
A good landing page does three things quickly:
If something on the page doesn’t support the conversion goal, remove it. That usually means:
“Above the fold” is what people see without scrolling. It needs to answer, instantly:
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)
Long forms kill conversion. Ask for the minimum you need.
Rules that hold up:
A useful reference on single vs multi-column forms: (Single-column beats multi-column forms)
If you want someone to trust you with their details, you need proof you’re real.
High-impact proof:
VWO has a helpful roundup of A/B testing examples across industries, including social proof experiments. (A/B testing examples)
Avoid generic copy like “Download our ebook”. Instead, make the outcome obvious.
Example patterns:
CTAs should be specific and action-led.
Better:
Worse:
Most landing page traffic is mobile. Statista reports that a majority of global web traffic comes from mobile devices. (Mobile traffic share)
Mobile requirements:
Think With Google’s page speed research is still a useful reminder: slow pages bleed conversions. (Mobile page speed benchmarks)
Visuals should clarify the offer (mockups, previews, short demos), not act as decoration.
Rules:
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:
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.