What’s Hurting Your Conversion Rate (And What To Do About It)
If you're still obsessing over traffic but ignoring your conversion rate, you're solving the wrong problem—and probably lighting money on fire. 🔥
Matthew Stafford broke it down on The Longer Game:
“You get 100 people to your site. Two convert. That means 98 people showed up, raised their hand, and still left.”
And yet… the knee-jerk reaction?
 “Let’s spend more on ads.”
 Why? So 98 more people can leave?
That’s not growth. That’s hoping the hole in your bucket magically fixes itself.
So what actually works?
Here’s what Matthew recommends—and what brands winning in ecommerce actually do:
🎯 Audit your high-traffic pages
Look at your homepage, your product pages, even your Quick Ad buttons.
Ask yourself: Can someone confidently make a $100 decision right here?
Spoiler alert: "Buy Now" isn't the move if your customer’s still wondering about sizes, ingredients, or if they even like you.
🎯 Reduce friction, not just bounce rate
Is the value prop crystal clear above the fold?
Are you trying to be clever or persuasive—when you should just be clear?
Did you bury the benefits in a wall of text? (People don’t read. They scan.)
🎯 Fix the button, not just the color
Button copy drives action more than color ever will.
“Buy Now” might scare people. “Learn More” or “More Options” creates curiosity with less pressure.
💡 Ask the one question that changed everything
 Matthew’s highest-performing revenue-driving test of the last five years?
Ask this on your thank you page:
 “What almost made you not buy?”
 That one line reveals everything that’s broken—straight from the customer who just gave you money. They’re in the mood to help. Use it.
Still think it’s your ads?
If you’re getting good traffic and zero sales, your ads are working—your site isn’t.
 
Paid media agencies are often the first to spot this.
 They’re sending people in. If nobody’s buying, your site didn’t carry the baton across the finish line.
So before you beg for more impressions or blame your Agency, look at your storefront.
Fix that. Then scale.
That’s the formula. Everything else? Fluff.

