The Nielsen Norman Group found that users spend 57% of their page-viewing time above the fold, with attention dropping sharply after the first screenful. For landing pages, this number is even more extreme — visitors decide whether to stay or bounce within 2-3 seconds.
This means your above-the-fold design is quite literally your one shot at keeping a visitor.
What Eye-Tracking Studies Reveal
Eye-tracking studies by Djamasbi et al. (2010) identified the elements that capture attention above the fold:
| Element | Avg. Fixation Time | First Fixation |
|---|---|---|
| Hero image / visual | 1.2s | 67% look here first |
| Main headline | 0.8s | 22% look here first |
| CTA button | 0.4s | 3% look here first |
| Navigation | 0.3s | 8% look here first |
The hero visual captures the most attention, but the conversion happens at the CTA. The challenge is designing a visual path from hero → headline → CTA.
The 5 Elements of a High-Converting Fold
1. Hero Visual That Creates Desire
The hero image should show the outcome, not the product. Adaval & Wyer (1998) demonstrated that imagery depicting end-states (happy customer using the product) generates 2x more purchase intent than product-only shots.
2. Headline as the Singular Value Promise
According to Copyhackers' conversion copywriting research, headlines that match the visitor's internal dialogue outperform generic value propositions by 3-5x. The headline should complete the sentence: "I need something that will..."
3. Visual Hierarchy That Guides the Eye
Research by Faraday (2000) on visual hierarchy in web design shows that size, contrast, and position create a "reading order" that can be measured and optimized. The flow should be: Visual anchor → Problem/solution → CTA.
4. CTA With Maximum Contrast
Ling & van Schaik (2006) found that CTA buttons with the highest color contrast against their background received 21% more clicks, regardless of the specific colors used. It's about contrast, not color.
5. Social Proof Above the Fold
Placing a trust signal (customer count, rating, logo bar) above the fold reduces the prefrontal cortex's risk evaluation, as shown in Klucharev et al. (2009). A single line like "Trusted by 10,000+ marketers" can increase conversion by 15-20%.
Test Your Landing Page
Paste your landing page URL into FlowDx to see exactly where visitors' eyes go. The attention heatmap reveals whether your CTA is in the "hot zone" or getting lost in the noise.
References
- Nielsen Norman Group. Scrolling and Attention.
- Djamasbi, S. et al. (2010). Generation Y, web design, and eye tracking. Int. Journal of Human-Computer Studies.
- Klucharev, V. et al. (2009). Reinforcement learning signal predicts social conformity. Neuron.