Landing page mistakes are some of the most common and costly problems in paid advertising. They can also be incredibly frustrating, especially when so much work goes into the front end of a campaign, and the results still fall short. You might spend time refining your targeting, writing ad copy, setting bids, and defining your audience before launch, only to look at the conversion data and wonder why performance is underwhelming.
In many cases, the issue is not the ad itself but the landing page. The ad did its job by earning the click, but the landing page failed to turn that visitor into a lead or customer. That is not just a missed opportunity but rather an ongoing cost that can continue to drain your budget over time. Let’s look at some of the most common landing page mistakes and how to fix them to improve conversions.
The Page Does Not Match the Ad
This is the most fundamental landing page mistake, and it’s surprisingly common. A visitor clicks on an ad because something about it resonated with them, such as a compelling offer or an enticing headline. When they land on the page, however, they feel disconnected from what the ad promised. Trust drops significantly or evaporates altogether.
This disconnect can be subtle or dramatic. A dramatic version is running a highly specific ad about a particular service or promotion and sending the traffic to a generic homepage. A subtle version is using specific language in the ad and then landing on a page that speaks more in general terms. In both cases, the visitor experiences a moment of friction that makes them question whether they are in the right place.
Without question, every ad should have a corresponding landing page, or at the very least, a page that mirrors the specific message, offer, and audience of the ad closely enough that the transition from click to page feels seamless.
There Is No Clear Single Call to Action
Some landing pages try to do too many things at once. Unfortunately, this causes them to do none of them very well. When a page includes multiple calls to action, it becomes harder for visitors to decide what to do next. Those calls to action end up competing with one another, so even interested users may hesitate when they are being pulled in different directions by prompts like “Learn More” and “Click Here.”
An effective landing page for a paid campaign should have one primary objective and one primary call to action that everything on the page is working toward. Every element should be pulling in the same direction. Secondary options and navigation links that lead visitors away from that objective are distractions that reduce conversion rates.
This does not mean the call to action cannot appear multiple times on the page. In fact, it should be included several times depending on the length of the page. But you should always be using the same call to action with consistent messaging.
The Page Loads Too Slowly
Page speed is another common conversion issue. Research consistently shows that conversion rates drop with every additional second of load time. Keep in mind that first-time visitors are not yet loyal to your brand, so if they click on your ad and then have to wait several seconds for the page to load, they are much more likely to leave.
This problem is especially common on mobile devices, where limited processing power, lower bandwidth, and unoptimized content can all slow performance. Since most traffic now comes from mobile, it is important to test page speed and overall optimization across devices. Do not check it once and assume everything is fine, and do not rely only on the desktop experience.
The Page Asks for Too Much Too Soon
Forms can also be a conversion killer on landing pages. That’s not to say that forms are inherently problematic, but rather they are frequently designed with the business’s needs in mind rather than the visitor’s.
A visitor who has just clicked an ad and landed on your page for the first time is probably not ready to fill out a ten-field form asking for their name, phone number, company size, budget range, etc. The “ask” does not match the stage of the relationship, which can quickly lead to form abandonment and a wasted click.
Effective landing page forms ask for the minimum information needed to start a conversation. Name, email, and phone number is usually sufficient for a lead generation form. Additional questions can be gathered during the follow-up conversation. Remember, the goal of the landing page is to generate the lead, not to pre-qualify it.
The Value Proposition Is Unclear or Generic
Every landing page needs to answer one question clearly and quickly: why should I choose this business over every other option available to me? If the answer is not immediately apparent, the visitor has no compelling reason to stay.
A strong value proposition is specific, differentiated, and directly relevant to the visitor’s situation. It names a concrete benefit, addresses a real concern, or makes a promise that competitors are not making in the same way. It’s also supported by evidence, such as testimonials, credentials, and trust signals, which makes the claim credible rather than just asserted.
Businesses that lead with their differentiators (e.g., what they actually do better, faster, or differently than others) convert significantly better than those leading with generic statements that could apply to any competitor in the same space.
Social Proof Is Missing or Unconvincing
Social proof helps reduce the perceived risk of taking action with a business. Without it, a landing page is essentially asking visitors to take a leap of faith on their own. That is why reviews, testimonials, case studies, client logos, and ratings can be so valuable. People want reassurance that they are making the right choice.
The quality of that social proof matters just as much as its presence. A generic five-star rating is not nearly as persuasive as a specific testimonial from a named customer describing a real experience. Case studies can also be especially effective because they show the before-and-after picture of a client relationship and give potential customers a clearer sense of what results may look like.
The Mobile Experience Is an Afterthought
Designing a landing page for desktop and then checking whether it looks acceptable on mobile is not a mobile strategy. For most paid campaigns running on Google and Meta, mobile traffic represents the majority of clicks. A landing page that’s not optimized for the mobile experience is a page that’s underperforming.
Mobile optimization needs to be part of the landing page build from the beginning. Make sure your page includes thumb-friendly buttons, readable text without zooming, forms that are easy to complete on a small screen, and a click-to-call phone number.
The Landing Page Is Where Paid Campaigns Win or Lose
Most landing page problems share a common root: the page was built around what the business wanted to say rather than what the visitor needed to experience in order to feel confident taking the next step. Shifting that perspective is often where the best landing page improvements begin.
At WSI Internet Marketing, landing page performance is one of the first things we evaluate when a paid campaign is not delivering the results it should. The ads might be working perfectly, and the audience might be exactly right. But if the page is not converting, none of that matters. Fixing the page is almost always the fastest path to better campaign results.
Ready to find out what your landing pages might be costing you? Get in touch with WSI Internet Marketing today at 254-235-2452, and let’s take a look.

Aaron Braunstein is the President of WSI Internet Partners, a Waco-based digital marketing agency that helps local businesses grow through strategy-driven SEO, Google Ads, and AI-powered solutions. A long-time member of the Waco business community, Aaron brings global expertise and local insight to every project. Connect with him on LinkedIn or learn more at WSI Internet Partners.