All Latest 615 A/B Tests

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MOST RECENT TESTS

Test #612 on by Frazer MawsonFrazer Mawson Sep 28, 2025 Mobile Checkout

Frazer Tested Pattern #99: Progress Bar

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, a 3 step progress bar was added at the top of an ecommerce checkout funnel. Impact on checkout progression and completed sales was measured.

Test #608 on by Frazer MawsonFrazer Mawson Aug 28, 2025 Mobile Signup

Frazer Tested Pattern #99: Progress Bar

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, a 3 step progress bar was added at the top of a signup funnel. Impact on signups was measured.

Test #525 on by Jakub LinowskiJakub Linowski Mar 27, 2024 Desktop Mobile Product

Jakub Tested Pattern #119: Unselected Or Selected Defaults

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, a club subscription duration was preselected to 6 in the variation. The control had no club durations preselected. As a result of preselecting a club duration, a more visible price also appeared at the top (sooner in the variation). Impact on sales was measured.

Test #495 on Formelskin.de by Alexander KriegerAlexander Krieger Sep 25, 2023 Mobile Signup

Alexander Tested Pattern #9: Multiple Steps On Formelskin.de

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment two sections of a form on a single page (control) were broken out into 2 separate steps (variation). The two sections included personal details and shipping information. This step appeared after having received a product recommendation when filling out a questionnaire for a skin care product. Impact on next step progression and purchases was measured.

Test #490 on by Jakub LinowskiJakub Linowski Aug 17, 2023 Desktop Mobile

Jakub Tested Pattern #9: Multiple Steps

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, a section dedicated to choosing gift messages was taken out and separated into its own individial step. The change happened on the first step of a checkout flow and increased the flow by an additional step. Impact on checkouts and total sales was measured.

Test #427 on Designlab.com by Daniel ShapiroDaniel Shapiro Aug 10, 2022 Desktop Mobile Checkout

Daniel Tested Pattern #28: Easiest Fields First On Designlab.com

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, the course enrollment start date was moved from step 2 to step 1 of an enrollment / checkout flow. The test was run by Designlab - that offers design courses and education with a strong element of mentorship. Impact on progression to next step and completed transactions were measured.

Test #422 on Volders.de by Daria KurchinskaiaDaria Kurchinskaia Jul 22, 2022 Desktop Mobile Shopping Cart

Daria Tested Pattern #3: Fewer Form Fields On Volders.de

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

A birthdate field was removed during a signup process for a paid contract cancellation service. Impact on progression (next step) and sales (completed transactions) was measured.

Test #399 on by Jakub LinowskiJakub Linowski Feb 27, 2022 Desktop Mobile Checkout

Jakub Tested Pattern #35: Floating Labels

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, top-aligned field labels were tested against floating labels (with labels floating inside the form field itself).

Test #351 on Baremetrics.com by Brian SierakowskiBrian Sierakowski Apr 30, 2021 Desktop Mobile Home & Landing

Brian Tested Pattern #11: Gradual Reassurance On Baremetrics.com

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, static integration logos were replaced with selectable ones that reassured users to signup. After clicking an integration logo, a comparison chart would appear showing how Baremetrics improves upon a selected payment processor, along with a call to signup. Impact on signups was measured.

Test #312 on by Jakub LinowskiJakub Linowski Aug 14, 2020 Desktop Mobile Product

Jakub Tested Pattern #83: Progressive Fields

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, we tested a visible "Shipping Frequency" (A) option against a progressively displayed one (B) that would only appear after someone first chose a duration option. Thus in variation B, the buy box component would initially appear with fewer fields and smaller. The experiment measured initial progression and actual sales. 

Note on the data: the experiment was run a little shorter than usual, as one of the variations triggered a stop rule to protect losses (so the effect might be somewhat inflated from a lower power).

Test #305 on Volders.de by Michal FiechMichal Fiech Jun 30, 2020 Mobile Desktop Home & Landing

Michal Tested Pattern #94: Visible Search On Volders.de

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, a search input field (to look for companies) along with most popular links (also company names) were displayed on the homepage of a leading contract cancellation service. The control (A) version instead had a button that sent users to a next page where the same selection could be made - only later. The measurable success criteria were the number of paid cancellations - a few steps down the funnel.

Test #300 on Volders.de by Michal FiechMichal Fiech May 25, 2020 Desktop Mobile Signup

Michal Tested Pattern #3: Fewer Form Fields On Volders.de

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, a password field was removed on a contract cancellation form (Volders).

In the control version, users were required to enter their email address and a password. If the email address was associated with an existing account, then the password was used to authenticate the user (and validated). When users entered a new email address, then the password field was used to create a new account. 

In the variation, the password field was removed, as the authentication happened after the conversion itself using other backend mechanisms.

 

Test #286 on Volders.de by Alexander KriegerAlexander Krieger Feb 28, 2020 Desktop Mobile Home & Landing

Alexander Tested Pattern #9: Multiple Steps On Volders.de

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment, a long contract cancellation landing page (control) was broken down into 4 steps with 1 final summary step (variation).

Test #280 on Volders.de by Alexander KriegerAlexander Krieger Jan 24, 2020 Desktop Mobile Signup

Alexander Tested Pattern #3: Fewer Form Fields On Volders.de

 - Variant A
 - Variant B

In this experiment on a contract cancellation funnel, one field was removed - a secondary contract ID. The control and variation both had a primary "customer ID" with which to identify and cancel someone's contract with.