Listicle pages work because people love consuming information in a simple, structured format.
Instead of pushing a product immediately, a good listicle educates, builds trust, and naturally guides readers toward a buying decision.
For a listicle page to perform well, it should have:
✅ A strong headline that sparks curiosity
✅ Valuable and easy-to-scan content
✅ Clear product benefits, not just features
✅ Social proof and credibility elements
✅ Strategic CTAs placed throughout the page
When done right, a listicle doesn't feel like a sales page.
It feels like helpful content that leads to a sale.
Here is one I built in Replo recently for Revive Gummies
Just the right structure doing the right Job.
It's Monday.
Somewhere right now, a brand owner is preparing to spend another $500, $1,000, or even more on ads this week.
The ads might be great.
The product might be great.
The offer might even be great.
But if the landing page isn't doing its job, that traffic is going to leave just as fast as it arrived.
That's the part many founders discover after spending thousands trying to fix everything except the page customers actually see.
As a landing page designer and developer, I've seen how small improvements in messaging, structure, user experience, and trust-building elements can completely change how a page performs.
Not because the product changed.
Not because the ad changed.
But because the buying experience changed.
So if improving your conversion rate is on your priority list this week, it might be worth taking a fresh look at the page you're sending traffic to.
A lot of businesses don't need more traffic.
They need a page that converts the traffic they're already getting.
My Monday is already in motion, helping brands build landing pages that don't just look good but are built to perform.
If you're an eCommerce brand or founder looking to improve your landing page this week, my inbox is open.