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Landing pages are the workhorses of digital marketing – they’re where hard-won visitors decide whether to convert or click away. As marketers and business owners, we often agonise over visual design, branding, and slick UX features. But does eye-catching design alone win conversions? The evidence suggests otherwise.
In fact, data shows that the written content – its depth, relevance, and value – plays an even greater role in engaging users and driving results than visual design does.
This comprehensive guide will explore why in-depth, relevant content is crucial on landing pages and how to balance it with an attractive user experience (UX) design.
We’ll draw on research findings, expert quotes, and real-world case studies across industries to make a conversational (yet analytical) case for beefing up your landing page content.
The Content–Design Balance: Why Both Matter (But Content Matters More)
Analysis of 36,000+ landing pages found that copy (written content) has roughly twice the impact of design on conversion rates. Across 16 industries studied, content consistently accounted for 65–70% of a page’s conversion performance.
It’s easy to fall in love with gorgeous landing page designs – sleek layouts, modern graphics, and snappy animations. And yes, good UX design is important for making a positive first impression.
“There is no content strategy without measurement strategy. Before embarking on a content initiative, irrespective of medium or platform, it’s important to know what you want to achieve.” Rebecca Lieb, Content Marketing Analyst
Studies show that visitors form an opinion within seconds: eye-tracking research by CXL found that people scan the top of a page in an “F-pattern” and decide within 3–5 seconds whether to stay or leave.
Indeed, 59% of users never scroll beyond the first screen if the initial view isn’t convincingly designed and relevant. An attractive, user-friendly design can grab attention and convey credibility in those critical first moments.
However, design alone can’t seal the deal. Once you’ve caught the visitor’s eye, it’s your content that must carry the conversation.
“The success of your landing page is 98% about the offer. Make it as good as possible. Make it about the user. Forget 10% off. Real value. Work on your offer more than anything. Then just put it on an undistracted landing page, and odds are it will work great.” Peep Laja, Founder of Wynter
Visitors spend only a few seconds assessing if your page has what they need. If they don’t quickly find answers to their key questions – “Does this page have what I’m looking for? Is there enough information? Can I trust this site?”– No amount of pretty design will stop them from bouncing.
The Unbounce team’s large-scale analysis supports this, revealing that page copy influences conversions about twice as much as visual design does. And this wasn’t just in content-heavy industries – the pattern held across e-commerce, SaaS, B2B, travel, and more.
In other words, compelling content is the heavyweight champ in landing page performance, while design is a (still important) supporting act.
As Floss Taylor of Unbounce summed up: “Design isn’t as impactful as you might think” on conversions compared to the written copy.
None of this means you should ignore UX or settle for ugly pages. It means the ideal landing page finds a balance: use design to enhance readability and trust, and use content to deliver substantive value.
Nielsen Norman Group famously found that on a typical web page, users read at most about 20–28% of the text on average. They scan, looking for salient points. That implies your page should be visually structured for scanning – with clear headlines, concise paragraphs, bullet lists, and imagery – so that key content stands out.
Good design facilitates the consumption of content (think ample white space, legible fonts, mobile-responsive layouts). Conversely, strong content makes the design functional by actually communicating your value proposition.
The two are interdependent, but if forced to choose, invest in content first. (As CXL advises: never wireframe with lorem ipsum dummy text – write the real copy first and design around it).
Bottom line: An aesthetically pleasing page might attract visitors, but only relevant, in-depth content will engage them beyond the first glance.
Next, let’s delve into how such content tangibly boosts SEO, user trust, and conversions.
Deep Content = Better SEO and Organic Traffic
Every marketer knows the mantra “content is king.” But in 2025, it’s not just any content – it’s high-quality, in-depth content that wears the crown. Search engines have evolved to prioritise relevance and user satisfaction.
Google’s own Search Advocate John Mueller has emphasised that there’s “no universally ideal content length. Focus on bringing unique value… which doesn’t mean just adding more words.”
In short, you don’t win by simply making a page longer; you win by answering the searcher’s query more effectively than anyone else.
That said, there is often a correlation between content depth and strong SEO performance. Comprehensive content tends to naturally include more relevant keywords, cover more subtopics, and earn more backlinks – all SEO positives.
A recent industry study of 11.8 million Google search results found that the average first-page result contains around 1,447 words of content. Numerous analyses by SEO experts have noted similar figures, generally 1,500+ words on average for pages that rank well.
Of course, correlation isn’t causation – Google doesn’t have a word-count quota. What this data really indicates is that top-ranking pages do a thorough job of addressing the topic, which often requires longer copy.
As one Search Engine Journal contributor puts it, “The length of the copy on that page should be as much as is needed to aid the user in completing their goals on the page,” whether that’s a quick answer or an in-depth explanation.
In August 2022, Google rolled out the “Helpful Content” update that specifically targets “thin” or unhelpful pages, reinforcing that depth and usefulness are rewarded.
Google’s guidance encourages publishers to cover topics in full and demonstrate expertise rather than churning out shallow posts. This aligns with the concept of E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) – detailed, well-researched content signals expertise and tends to rank higher.
“SEO takes a shining to websites offering rich content depth,” notes the MarketMuse content strategy team; when a page thoroughly satisfies a user’s query, it “strikes a positive chord with search algorithms — leading to higher SEO rankings.”
Research backs this up. In a 2025 update of its massive ranking factors study, Backlinko reported a “clear correlation” between content comprehensiveness and Google rankings.
Pages that earned high “content quality” scores (via a Clearscope content-grade analysis) tended to rank significantly higher, roughly one position higher for each incremental improvement in content grade.
The takeaway was straightforward: “Writing comprehensive, in-depth content can help pages rank higher in Google.”
An analysis of 11.8M Google results found that pages with higher content-quality scores (more comprehensive content) tended to rank significantly higher on average. In short, depth and relevance correlate with better SEO performance.
It’s also well documented that longer, information-rich pages attract more backlinks and social shares. For example, long-form landing pages (2000+ words) earn 4.5 times more backlinks on average than short product pages, according to SEMrush data.
This makes sense – authoritative content is more link-worthy. Backlinko’s earlier study with BuzzSumo found that 94% of all online content gets zero backlinks, and much of that unloved content is thin or low-value.
Meanwhile, HubSpot found that their highest-traffic blog posts tended to be 2,100–2,400 words and that longer articles earned 56% more social shares on average than shorter ones. To be clear, word count alone won’t guarantee rankings.
Google doesn’t just count words; as John Mueller said, simply “adding more words” isn’t the goal. The goal is to satisfy the user’s intent.
A concise 500-word page can outrank a 2,000-word page if it delivers a better answer to the query. However, in many cases a “better answer” is a more in-depth one – especially for complex topics or high-consideration products. That’s why content depth and SEO success often go hand in hand.
The key is to make every word count. Structure your content so that it’s easy to navigate and digest: use headings that mirror common questions, break up text with visuals or charts, and provide summary highlights for those who skim.
This not only helps users but also search engines, which now use things like passage indexing to surface relevant sections of your page.
As one SEO expert aptly put it, “User need should be first and foremost” in determining content length and detail. When you nail that, higher rankings and organic traffic are a natural byproduct.
Keeping Visitors Engaged: Trust, Depth and User Experience
SEO may bring someone to your landing page, but engagement and trust determine if they stay. Detailed content plays a pivotal role here. Especially in industries where purchases are high-stakes (e.g. B2B services, healthcare, financial products), users seek reassurance and depth. They want answers to all their questions before they feel confident to act.
“As long as your content provides value to your audience, sharing it shouldn’t feel self-promotional.” Melanie Deziel (Author of “The Content Fuel Framework).
Consider the B2B sector: a 2024 Forrester Research study showed 78% of B2B decision-makers view detailed information as a trust signal. When evaluating a potential vendor, these buyers equate thorough content with transparency and credibility.
It’s not just B2B; consumers, too, tend to trust brands that openly share more information. Think about an e-commerce product page – the ones that convert best often have rich descriptions, specs, comparison charts, customer reviews, FAQs, and videos.
That depth of info makes the buyer comfortable that they aren’t missing something. In fact, one case study found that simply addressing common buyer concerns on the landing page increased conversions by up to 80%.
By preemptively answering questions or objections through your content, you keep users from leaving to do more research elsewhere.
There’s even psychology behind this. Marketers talk about “content depth” reducing the information gap a user feels. The more complete and specific the info on your page, the less fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD) the visitor has.
A recent Stanford University study on B2B decision-making found that providing detailed, well-structured information directly boosted the perceived trustworthiness of the vendor.
“In content marketing, the quality of your content either makes or breaks you online”– Julia McCoy.
Participants in the study rated companies with more comprehensive landing page content as more competent and trustworthy – even when the actual product or service was identical.
In other words, content depth itself influenced trust, separate from the actual offering. That’s a powerful endorsement for investing in quality content.
Deep content also correlates with better user engagement metrics – which, aside from being good for conversions, can feed back into SEO via Google’s user satisfaction signals.
Longer, value-rich pages typically see longer dwell times (time on page) and lower bounce rates, because users are finding what they need and sticking around.
Backlinko’s 2025 analysis noted that pages with above-average “time on site” tend to rank higher, and estimated that adding just 3 seconds to average dwell time corresponded to moving up one position in Google rankings.
Whether or not time on page is a direct ranking factor, it’s certainly an indicator of engagement. People linger on content that interests them. High dwell time and multiple page scrolls usually mean the content is holding attention.
For long-form landing pages, reaching about 75% scroll depth is considered a strong engagement signal (whereas on very short pages, a user might only scroll 50% and have seen everything).
These metrics show that users who encounter in-depth content are more likely to consume a significant portion of it, as long as it’s relevant and well-organised.
Of course, we must acknowledge that not every visitor will read every word you write – far from it. As mentioned earlier, many users scan and will pick out just the sections they care about. That’s why how you present your in-depth content matters.
Here are a few tips to keep deep content engaging:
- Break it up visually: Use subheaders, bullet points, and short paragraphs. This allows scanners to jump to the parts they find pertinent. For example, if your landing page covers five major benefits of your service, list them in bullets or a clear numbered list.
- Use “progressive disclosure”: You can design content sections that expand or collapse, so interested users can read the full details while others can skip. FAQs dropdowns are a common example.
- Include multimedia: Charts, infographics, or short videos can appealingly convey information and reset the attention span of a skimming reader. (Just ensure media is actually adding value, not just decoration.)
- Front-load the value: Make sure the top of your page (above the fold) has a compelling headline and a concise value proposition or intro. This part should reassure the visitor they’re in the right place. If that’s done well, they’ll be willing to scroll for details. If not, they’ll bounce fast. As one best practice, your headline should mirror whatever promise or keyword brought the user to the page (message match), and a subheadline or brief intro can summarise the key offer or benefit.
In essence, content depth must be paired with content clarity. A 3,000-word wall of unstructured text is not user-friendly (and will likely fail). But 3,000 words segmented into logical, labelled sections with plenty of visual relief can be incredibly effective.
It’s about giving every visitor a path: the skimmer gets the gist and key points, the detail-oriented reader finds all the rich info they want, and nobody feels overwhelmed or underserved.
Impact on Conversions: How Deep Content Drives More Sales & Leads
All the SEO rankings and engagement time in the world won’t matter if your landing page doesn’t ultimately convert. Fortunately, in-depth content often boosts conversion rates as well by nurturing the visitor through their decision process. This is especially true for higher-consideration offers.
Let’s look at some numbers. Long-form landing pages can significantly outperform short ones in conversion metrics. In the B2B realm, where purchase decisions require substantial information, the advantages are striking. HubSpot found that landing pages with more than 2,000 words generated 520% more leads on average than those with under 500 words in their studies.
Similarly, a DemandGen report (2025) noted that B2B landing pages in the 2,000–3,000 word range see a 63% higher conversion rate than their shorter counterparts. That is a massive difference – long-form content isn’t just a little better; it can be game-changing for conversion performance in B2B marketing.
Why such big gains?
Longer pages allow you to address every stage of the buyer’s journey and every common objection, all in one place. A well-structured long landing page can effectively serve as a mini “content hub” – starting with a compelling headline and value proposition, then providing background info, social proof, feature/benefit details, and finally a persuasive call to action.
By the time a user reaches the CTA, ideally all their questions have been answered. There’s less friction to conversion because the prospect feels informed and assured.
Real-world case studies illustrate this principle across industries
1. Truckers Report (Community & Job Board)
This online community for truck drivers worked with conversion agency CXL to revamp a lacklustre landing page. The original page was sparse and did not address drivers’ key concerns (things like pay, benefits, and home time). It also lacked trust elements.
CXL’s redesign added more compelling copy focused on user needs, replaced generic images with relatable visuals, and injected testimonials and trust signals for credibility.
The result? A 79.3% increase in conversion rate versus the original. By speaking directly to users’ questions and pain points – essentially providing richer content – the page dramatically improved sign-ups. This case underscores that sometimes the content changes (messaging, addressing doubts) are the real conversion drivers, even more than layout tweaks.
“Find a way to turn your product into actionable content. Not only do these pieces have the opportunity to open up a wide range of long-tail keywords, but they’re also great conversion engines too.” Hiba Amin, Marketing Manager (Soapbox)
2. Campaign Monitor (SaaS Email Marketing)
In a documented A/B test, Campaign Monitor hypothesised that making their landing page copy more relevant to each visitor’s intent would boost conversions.
They used dynamic text replacement to match the headline verb to the user’s search query (e.g. if someone searched “design on-brand emails,” the page headline would say “Design on-brand emails” instead of a generic “create”).
This tailor-made relevance gave visitors instant confirmation that the page answered their need. The experiment yielded a 31.4% increase in conversions (trial signups) for the personalised version. “Tailoring content to meet the specific needs and language of potential customers” made the offer feel more enticing. It’s a great example of how relevant content = higher conversion.
3. Zola (Wedding Registry, B2C e-commerce)
Zola found success by creating more targeted landing pages rather than sending all ad traffic to generic pages. By crafting landing pages with content aligned to specific ad campaigns (thereby making them highly relevant and detailed for that audience), Zola achieved conversion rate lifts of 5% to 20% compared to their previous generic pages.
The insights from those top-performing pages were so effective that they even rolled them into Zola’s main homepage content. The takeaway here is that relevance and depth go hand-in-hand – each landing page that speaks directly to a segment’s needs, with the right amount of information, performs better than one-size-fits-all content.
4. Various e-commerce
Although we often see long-form content touted for B2B, consumer brands benefit from it too when appropriate. For example, online retailers frequently use rich product pages with extensive details. Amazon is a classic case: an Amazon product page contains not just a description but specs, compatibility info, dozens of reviews, customer Q&A, comparisons, etc.
This is in-depth content in disguise, anticipating everything a shopper might want to know. Many direct-to-consumer brands also include sections like “how it works,” “materials and quality,” and detailed size guides on their product landing pages. These elements can push some pages to considerable length, but they reduce uncertainty and often improve conversion.
While hard stats vary, a common finding is that giving more info (especially if presented in a digestible way) tends to lift sales for higher-priced or complex products.
As one stat noted, adding signals of trust and thorough info can boost online sales significantly – e.g. including reviews can increase conversions by up to 270% for higher-priced items (as found in a Reevoo study). The principle is that confidence converts: if rich content builds confidence, it will boost your bottom line.
It’s worth mentioning that not every landing page needs to be long-form. The depth of content should match the context:
- For a simple, low-cost consumer product (say a $5 mobile app), a short and sweet page might do the job – users don’t need to scroll through 2,000 words to be convinced.
- For a high-end B2B software or an expensive coaching program, visitors will likely appreciate (and even require) lots of information – whitepapers, technical specs, ROI calculators, case studies – before they commit.
The key is to know your audience and the complexity of the decision. As a general rule, the higher the stakes or the uncertainty, the more content support is needed. And even on shorter landing pages, you can still apply the principle of being highly relevant and value-rich with the content that is there.
Best Practices for Marrying Rich Content with Great UX
So, how can you ensure your landing pages provide all this juicy content without becoming overwhelming or cluttered?
Here are some best practices to strike the right balance, distilled from expert advice and studies:
1. Start with a strong, user-focused headline and intro
Your header section should immediately assure visitors that they’ve arrived in the right place. Address the user’s problem or goal in the headline (e.g. “Reduce Hiring Costs by 50% with Automated Screening” is better than “Welcome to XYZ Software”).
A supporting subheadline can highlight your unique value proposition. Keep this top summary concise and benefit-oriented. This draws users in to explore further down the page. Remember, you have seconds to convince them to stay – make those seconds count by hitting their main intent upfront.
2. Structure content in a logical flow
Especially for longer pages, map your sections to the user’s journey. A proven approach (common in B2B) is to follow a narrative like: Problem 🡒 Solution 🡒 Features/Details 🡒 Proof, then 🡒 CTA. Essentially, acknowledge the pain point, present your solution, provide details and evidence, and finally ask for the conversion.
This mirrors how people think: “I have X problem. Oh, this offers a solution. How does it work? Who else trusts it? Okay, I’m convinced – what next?”
Guiding the reader through this flow keeps them engaged. In fact, Gartner’s research into B2B buyer behaviour finds that customers move through distinct stages of exploration and validation, so aligning content to those stages (as Brixon Group’s long-form page framework does) can significantly improve effectiveness.
3. Use visual hierarchy and “chunking”
Break your content into sections with clear headings and subheadings. Users often scan by headings first. If your headings tell a coherent story, a reader could grasp your entire message just from those. Use font sizes, colours, or background blocks to delineate sections.
Also, consider interactive content blocks – for instance, tabs or accordion sections for different features, so that the page isn’t one endless scroll of text. This maintains a clean look while still offering depth on demand.
4. Incorporate trust signals and social proof
Rich content isn’t just about text and data; it’s also about leveraging evidence that reassures users. Sprinkle testimonials, client logos, case study links, star ratings, or certification badges at relevant points on the page.
For example, after you describe your solution, include a short testimonial quote from a happy customer about how that solution helped them. Such elements build credibility and complement your informative content.
TrustRadius found 87% of B2B buyers seek out trust signals during their journey. Even in B2C, a quote like “#1 Rated on Yelp!” or a photo of a magazine award can reinforce the detailed copy the user just read.
5. Mind the length, but don’t fear it
There’s no hard rule for ideal word count, but avoid unnecessary fluff. As one Google rep quipped, “word-count itself makes so little sense” as a quality metric – what matters is substance. So, rather than aiming for a specific length, aim to answer all likely questions a visitor might have. Once you’ve done that, you can stop.
If that means 500 words, great; if it means 2000 words, so be it. You can always use design to manage perceived length – for instance, a long page can be made less intimidating with a floating table of contents, or a “scroll progress” indicator, or simply by ensuring the most important info appears first.
6. Optimise for speed and mobile
All this content won’t help if your page is slow or unusable on a phone. Large blocks of text and media can bog down load times, especially on mobile. And mobile users may be scrolling faster, so use even more subheads and maybe shorter paragraphs for mobile breakpoints.
Keep images optimised and consider using AMP or other tech if appropriate. Given that 53% of mobile visitors leave if a page takes over 3 seconds to load, performance is non-negotiable. The good news is, fast load times and rich content are not mutually exclusive – just be efficient with your assets.
7. Test, iterate, and personalise
Finally, leverage A/B testing and personalisation where possible. Perhaps you’ll find that certain sections of your long-form page aren’t actually being used by most visitors – maybe an FAQ is rarely expanded, indicating those questions might not be as pressing.
You could trim or adjust based on data. Or you might discover through testing that moving a certain chunk of content higher on the page increases conversions. Continuous optimisation is key.
As one conversion specialist said, landing page testing is a marathon, not a sprint – you learn and refine over time. Also consider personalisation: like the Campaign Monitor example, if you can dynamically tailor content (even just the wording) to better match visitor intent, do it.
Tools from simple script swaps to AI-driven personalisation can help present the most relevant version of your content to each segment, combining depth with specificity.
By following these practices, you ensure that adding more content adds more value, not more friction. The goal is a landing page that feels informative, not overwhelming – one that a visitor in your target audience might actually enjoy reading because it resonates and informs.
Conclusion: Depth with Purpose – The Winning Formula for Any Industry
No matter your industry – be it tech, retail, finance, healthcare, or beyond – the fundamental principle is the same: customers convert when they find real value and trust in what you’re offering. In-depth, relevant content is often the best vehicle to deliver that value and build that trust. A beautifully designed page might catch a user’s eye, but it’s the substance of your content that captures their heart, mind, and ultimately, their business.
The old saying from the early days of the web, “Content is king,” still rings true today – perhaps even more so, now that consumers are inundated with options and information. They actively seek out brands that educate and guide them.
By balancing attractive UX design with content that goes deep (while still being clear and organised), you cater to both the emotional and rational sides of your audience’s decision process. The attractive design creates a great first impression and easy usability; the rich content delivers the lasting impression of expertise, helpfulness, and trustworthiness.
In practical terms, investing in robust landing page content pays off across the board: your SEO performance improves as search engines recognize the relevance and users spend more time engaged; your conversion rates climb as hesitant prospects find the answers and confidence they need to take the next step; your brand reputation grows as you come across as an authority rather than a lightweight.
And these benefits feed each other in a virtuous cycle – better content brings more traffic and engagement, which brings more conversions, which gives you more customer stories and insights to create even better content.
As you plan your next landing page or optimise an existing one, remember the insights and examples shared here. Audit your page from a user’s perspective:
- Does it quickly signal that it has what they want?
- Does it thoroughly address their questions and concerns?
- Is it structured in a way that’s easy to navigate?
If you can confidently answer yes, you likely have the right mix of attractive design and in-depth content. If not, there’s an opportunity to improve – and even small changes can yield significant lifts (as we saw in the case studies).
In an era where attention is scarce but information is plentiful, the winners will be those who provide the most relevant, value-packed content in the most user-friendly way. Make your landing pages a place where visitors can truly learn and evaluate your offering, not just see a sales pitch.
That’s how you’ll earn their trust and their business. After all, a well-informed customer is often a happy converting customer – and your landing page is the perfect place to start that relationship on the right foot.
References:
- Gates, B. (1996). Content is King. Microsoft. (Historical perspective on content’s value in digital media).
- Taylor, F. (2021). Copy or Design: What’s More Important to Your Landing Page Success? Unbounce – Data showing copy vs design impact on conversionunbounce.comunbounce.com.
- Nielsen Norman Group. How Little Do Users Read? – Research finding users read ~20% of content on a page on averagelibguides.coloradomesa.edu.
- MarketMuse Blog (2023). Content Optimisation: Understanding Topical Depth – Noting content depth boosts SEO performanceblog.marketmuse.com.
- Backlinko (Dean, B.). We analysed 11.8 million Google Search Results (2025) – Study finding 1,447-word average on first page and correlation between comprehensive content and rankingsbacklinko.combacklinko.com.
- Search Engine Journal (Pollitt, H., 2020). What Is the Best Word Count for SEO? – Advising content length should be determined by user needs, not arbitrary numberssearchenginejournal.com.
- Search Engine Journal (Montti, R., 2024). Google’s Answer on Ideal Content Length – Quote from John Mueller re: “no ideal length, focus on unique value”searchenginejournal.com.
- Brixon Group (Sauerborn, C., 2025). The Perfect Landing Page Structure for Long-Form Content – Data-driven guide (B2B focus) showing 520% more conversions from >2000-word pages, 63% higher conv rate, etc.brixongroup.combrixongroup.combrixongroup.com.
- Stanford University Study (2024) via Brixon – Detailed info increases perceived trustworthinessbrixongroup.com.
- KeywordsEverywhere (2024). 69+ Landing Page Stats – Stat: addressing buyer concerns on page can raise conversions ~80%keywordseverywhere.com; average time on page ~52s; scroll depth benchmarkskeywordseverywhere.comkeywordseverywhere.com.
- Unbounce (2023). Landing Page Optimization Case Studies – Truckers Report case (CXL): +79.3% conversions by improving content relevance & trustunbounce.comunbounce.com; Campaign Monitor case: +31.4% conversions via content personalizationunbounce.comunbounce.com; Zola case: +5–20% via dedicated landing pagesunbounce.com.
- CXL (Laja, P., 2022/2025). How to Build a High-Converting Landing Page – Emphasizes clarity, relevance, and proven structure; tips on focusing messaging and writing copy firstcxl.comcxl.comcxl.com.
- Forrester Research (2025) via DemandGen/Brixon – 78% of decision-makers see detailed info as trust signalbrixongroup.com.
- Content Marketing Institute (2025) via Brixon – Detailed landing pages improve lead qualification by 41%brixongroup.com.
- Gartner (2024). B2B Buyer’s Journey Model – B2B buyers consult ~27 info sources before vendor contact (highlighting need for content)brixongroup.com.
- TrustRadius (2025). B2B Buying Disconnect – 87% of B2B buyers seek trust signals (testimonials, reviews, etc.) as part of contentbrixongroup.com.
Last Updated on by Sathi