Choose another region to see content specific to your location

What is Bounce Rate? How to Reduce it?

Published Date: September 19, 2018
What is Bounce Rate? How to Reduce it?

Since the advent of digital marketing, we marketers come across tons of metrics on an everyday basis. Some are simpler to understand while others are confusing. Bounce rate is one of the most essential metrics in digital marketing which is confusing, especially for the newbies. Let us understand bounce rate from both layman’s & geek’s perspective.

What Is Bounce Rate

For a layman, bounce rate is the percentage of people who land on a website, do nothing on the page they entered and leave from that very page. For instance, you are looking for a pair of shoes, and you mistakenly enter a site that deals in refurbished mobiles, you are sure to bounce back. Still confused? Let us try to understand the same with the help of a diagram.

The above explanation is just a gist of what bounce rate means. Furthermore, it is not the only the reason for any website to have a high bounce rate. There are a number of reasons that affect the bounce rate of a site. Here are some of the few factors that increase the bounce rate of a website:

  • High page loading time
  • Misleading title and description
  • A blank page or a technical error
  • Low quality or under optimised content

 

How to Interpret Bounce Rate

Nevertheless, a high bounce rate is not always bad. Yes, you read it right, the good and bad of bounce rate entirely depends on the purpose of the website and its pages. If the primary motive of the page is to provide information, then a high bounce rate is not an issue. Why? Because the users visit the post or page to read or find information and once they get what they were looking for, they leave the website.

On the other hand, if the purpose of the page is to engage with the visitors actively, a high bounce rate becomes a problem. In such cases, the website owner might have to optimise the pages well. This can be achieved either by adding a CTA button (call to action) or having a better UI (user interface).

Traffic sources also impact the bounce rate differently. Let us understand this as well, search traffic is likely to produce a low bounce rate than display & social. The reason for this is simple, inbound channels like organic & paid search will have a low bounce rate. The users are actively searching for what we are promoting via organic & paid channels. We actively capture their attention during the buying journey.

However, this is not the case in display and social channels, where users see the banners on others website, they are hardly interested in the promotion. This, in return, results in a high bounce rate. This is the best possible way to approach or interpret the bounce rate.

 

How to Reduce Bounce Rate

Thankfully, there are many ways to lower the bounce rate and some of these include:

Effective Internal Linking: Try to interlink your content through relevant key phrases within the post. So, that it gives a reason to the users to stay engaged within the website. This is one of the best practices to reduce the bounce rate.


Compelling Title and Description: Try to have a compelling title and description. Both title and description should match with the copy of the content as they help in keeping the user engaged and eventually reduces the bounce rate.

Decrease the Page Load Time: Nobody likes to wait for more than three seconds for a webpage to load. Therefore, any website with a higher page load time can yield the visitors in the leaving the site. The lower the page load time, the lower the bounce rate.

Add Visual Infographics: Try to add visual infographic to your content, this increases the engagement rate and helps in reducing the bounce rate.

 

Conclusion

It can be intimidating to analyse and improve the bounce rate; however, an improved bounce rate means more conversions and increased engagement. Follow the steps outlined above, and the bounce rate will start decreasing in no time. Furthermore, for a better understanding, find out the top exit pages and check the page load timings and speed reports to narrow down the actual causes behind the higher bounce rate.

 

Get
in Touch

Contact AdLift for a 360-degree marketing plan

Get in touch icon