I'm building an e-learning website like Udemy but for Arabic speakers: https://www.nahda.io/. I built an MVP and landing page and started running targeted ads to validate and I noticed the following numbers after 5 days of advertising ($5 per day budget):
35k impressions 1.29k clicks 6 signups.
Which puts my conversion rate at 0.47% and my CTR at around 3.6%.
Does anyone here have experience with product validation that can tell me if these numbers are a sign of a bad idea/unwanted product?
Thanks and appreciate the help!
Also, how good web or search ads are really depends on the economics of your product. If your customers will be paying $60 per year then paying 5$ to acquire them is pretty damn good.
For the moment though, I would focus on getting into real conversations(phone or video) with your customers to understand what they want, how much they’d pay, etc. With so much competition for attention, the days of validating with a landing page may be over.
But when we did ads, it was practically 0 out of 1000.
I wouldn't pay too much attention to CTR. CTR can mean a range of things. The best way to have a high CTR is pornography, and people who optimize solely for CTR often end up with ads that are borderline porn. The next best are trypophobia triggering images, or something like a celebrity promising a miracle weight loss. That doesn't mean they'll buy, their lizard brain just clicks the button.
One way to think of it is like fishing. If you go to the ocean, you have a very large net and basically don't need to target anyone. The majority won't care about your product, but you'll have a huge, scalable market to advertise to. Leave it for over 3 months or so, they'll come.
Or you can do targeted fishing in a small pond (aka sales). You won't catch very much fish, but you'll end up with a very high conversion rate and most of the people you get are already interested. In my experience with sales, about 1 in 2 will respond to an email if it's targeted enough and if you follow up, so it's basically a 50% CTR?
You don't necessarily want to do sales, not for courses, so you might opt for something in the middle, like using influencers (aka KOL).
Mass marketing is effective if you can get it from multiple angles. There's a saying that someone has to see the product 8 times before they click. So they go to your Udemy, it shows up thrice on Facebook, a friend talks about it, they see it on a billboard, then on a car, and then their spouse mentions it, and finally they buy. This works better for shampoo brands and such.
- What’s the pricing of the courses?
- What’s the promised outcome for completing the courses? E.g make more sales in their business? Get a better job? Get healthier?
- What kind of ads? Google search? Facebook?
- What counts as a conversion? Subscription? One off purchase?
- Have you asked the buyers what they want / why they bought?
If your 6 signups are paying anything, I would continue iterating ads and working on the product.
If those 6 signups are unpaid, and just people who signed up after viewing the site, I would stop spending and reassess the product and marketing. I'd expect only a small fraction of those people to ever pay anything, with many never returning to the site at all.
Also I wouldn't focus too much on the CTR or CVR - you are getting dirt cheap (likely untargeted) visitors ($0.019/each) so you should expect low rates. What matters is your ROAS (return on ad spend). You should be tracking that obsessively.