All Latest 615 A/B Tests
Become a member to unlock the abiltiy to see the highest impact a/b tests. Being able to see the actual test results and sort by impact allows growth and experimentation teams to take action on the biggest gains first
MOST RECENT TESTS
Test #311 on
Backstage.com
by
Stanley Zuo
Aug 11, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Home & Landing
Stanley Tested Pattern #118: Category Images On Backstage.com
In this experiment, category links (linking to casting call search results) were replaced with tile images. In addition, 2 levels of categories were also replaced with a single text link for each tile. Finally, the font size of the link titles was also increased.
Test #310 on
Backstage.com
by
Stanley Zuo
Jul 25, 2020
Mobile
Listing
Stanley Tested Pattern #77: Filled Or Ghost Buttons On Backstage.com
In this experiment, the style of a button leading to view detailed casting calls on a listing page was changed. In the A version the style was a filled high contrast blue background, and the B variation had a feint "ghost button" style.
Test #307 on
Volders.de
by Michal Fiech
Jul 17, 2020
Desktop
Thank You
Michal Tested Pattern #77: Filled Or Ghost Buttons On Volders.de
This experiment measured a shallow click goal on a button that would encourage to repeated the action that was just completed (in this case a contract cancellation). In the control version (A) a thank-you screen shows a filled button style, and the variant (B) there was a ghost button. As a note, I also flipped the A-B in this experiment for the purpose of matching it to our ghost button pattern, which means that Volders in fact was starting out with a ghost button to begin with.
Test #306 on
Backstage.com
by
Stanley Zuo
Jul 09, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Pricing
Stanley Tested Pattern #69: Autodiscounting On Backstage.com
In this experiment, the only change was an added message at the top of the pricing screen, clarifying that there is an active discount on a yearly plan. The discount was already communicated with a strike-through price on the control version as well. The variation simply emphasized this aggressively.
Test #304 on
Backstage.com
by
Stanley Zuo
Jun 29, 2020
Mobile
Product
Stanley Tested Pattern #97: Bigger Form Fields On Backstage.com
In this experiment, larger "Apply" buttons were shown on a casting detail page. The application funnel would take users through a series of steps leading to a paid membership subscription. The experiment measured initial progression and account signups (email signups).
Test #303 on
Thomasnet.com
by
Julian Gaviria
Jun 26, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Global
Julian Tested Pattern #14: Exposed Menu Options On Thomasnet.com
In this experiment variation, the saved suppliers feature was surfaced in the global navigation.It was already possible to save supplier companies from listing and specific company pages. This experiment aimed to increase the saving functions visibility and possibly increase more leads.
Test #302 on
Volders.de
by Michal Fiech
Jun 09, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Signup
Michal Tested Pattern #83: Progressive Fields On Volders.de
In this experiment a long form (A) was replaced with a progressive form interaction (B). Most of the form fields would appear in a grey-disabled style, until the prerequioste fields were first filled out.
Test #301 on
Zapimoveis.com.br
by
Vinicius Barros Peixoto
May 31, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Product
Vinicius Tested Pattern #21: What It's Worth On Zapimoveis.com.br
In this experiment, the B variation property prices were framed using higher and crossed out price points from 12 months ago - achieving a relative discount. A tooltip was also shown which explained the higher price point on hover. The example in the screenshot translates to "2% less compared to 12 months ago". This high-power experiment measured the number of leads that were generated on property (product) screens.
Test #300 on
Volders.de
by Michal Fiech
May 25, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Signup
Michal Tested Pattern #3: Fewer Form Fields On Volders.de
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 #298 on
Zapimoveis.com.br
by
Vinicius Barros Peixoto
May 14, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Listing
Vinicius Tested Pattern #36: Fewer Or More Results On Zapimoveis.com.br
In this experiment on a listing page, the search was expanded to show more listings (variation B). Conditionally, if there were fewer than 36 results, set basic filters such as number bedrooms and bathrooms were expanded and appended to the results. Hence if someone chose 2 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms in variation A, they would only see listing with that filter. In variation B however they would first see the filtered results, and later they would also see results with 3 or more of each.
Test #295 on
Thomasnet.com
by
Julian Gaviria
Apr 29, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Content
Julian Tested Pattern #25: Nagging Results On Thomasnet.com
In this experiment, blog article pages were hidden behind a registration wall - requing a signup to access. The registration wall would appear after the first paragraph using gradual opacity to cover the rest of the article. We have published the effects of this change on registrations (signups) and on engagement (users viewing other more important company detail pages).
Test #292 on
Backstage.com
by
Stanley Zuo
Apr 13, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Listing
Stanley Tested Pattern #24: Visible Availability On Backstage.com
The core hypothesis of this experiment was that by showing clear availability (in green text) beside each casting call, more users would apply and become premium members. The experiment reports on two metrics: application starts (the first progression metric), and premium membership sales (measured a few steps further in the funnel).
Test #291 on
Elevate App
by
Jesse Germinario
Mar 30, 2020
Mobile
Signup
Jesse Tested Pattern #91: Forced Action
This experiment was ran on the initial onboarding screens of the Elevate App - right after installing and launching the app for the first time. The change was the removal of subtle "skip" links that fast tracked users to the signup/login screen (Get Started). Hence in the variation, all users had to scroll through the 4 introductory messages before being asked to create an account.
Test #288 on
Kenhub.com
by
Niels Hapke
Mar 05, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Home & Landing
Niels Tested Pattern #117: Company Logos On Kenhub.com
In this experiment, customer logos (of universities attended by students using Kenhub) were placed on a homepage. The experiment tested for the effect on registration visits, and premium subscription starts.
Test #286 on
Volders.de
by
Alexander Krieger
Feb 28, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Home & Landing
Alexander Tested Pattern #9: Multiple Steps On Volders.de
In this experiment, a long contract cancellation landing page (control) was broken down into 4 steps with 1 final summary step (variation).
Test #285 on
Ibood.com
by
Lukas Jorissen
Feb 27, 2020
Desktop
Product
Lukas Tested Pattern #7: Social Counts On Ibood.com
In this experiment, realtime social proof information has been added below an add-to-cart button. The variation shows how many users that have viewed, or placed a product into their basket. Translated to "4 visitors have this product in their shopping cart."
Test #283 on
Kenhub.com
by
Niels Hapke
Feb 08, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Global
Niels Tested Pattern #42: Countdown Timer On Kenhub.com
In this experiment, registered trial users were shown a 65 minute counter on multiple pages (dashboard, listing, quiz, articles) encouraging them to get a full subscription and study all content. Both A and B experiences offered the same limited content for trial users. After the 65 minutes came to an end, the B variation showed an additional "Go Premium" button on all pages, but continued to offer the same limited content.
Test #281 on
Backstage.com
by
Stanley Zuo
Jan 31, 2020
Desktop
Listing
Stanley Tested Pattern #116: Links Or Buttons On Backstage.com
In this experiment, multiple view detail links for a listing tile were turned into higher contrast buttons.
Test #280 on
Volders.de
by
Alexander Krieger
Jan 24, 2020
Desktop
Mobile
Signup
Alexander Tested Pattern #3: Fewer Form Fields On Volders.de
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.
Test #273 on
Elevate App
by
Jesse Germinario
Dec 19, 2019
Mobile
Signup
Jesse Tested Pattern #9: Multiple Steps
This experiment tests the impact of a different paywall screen on iOS. The current control paywall screen for 100% of iOS users was the animated pro screen. In this screen, users see an animation that gives shows glimpses of several Elevate games in action, as well as a bulleted list of key selling points for Pro. The proposed change (variant B) features a swipeable carousel of pages where each page has an image and some accompanying text explaining a different benefit of subscribing to Pro. The hypothesis is that we can lift conversion by showing users the alternate swiping paywall screen.