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Knowledge · Conversion Engineering

Case Study Page Conversion: How to Show Proof Without Boring

14 days kickoff → live $3K–$15K+ scope-tiered WCAG 2.1 AA baseline

Most case study pages are unread. Buyers know they exist, click in expecting evidence, and leave 15 seconds later because the page opens with a 400-word client backstory before mentioning a single number. Case studies should open with the metric and close with the metric. Everything between is supporting cast.

№ 01The metric goes first

The case study page’s first 100px should be: client name, primary metric, secondary metric, timeframe. Not the client’s “backstory.” Not the “challenge they were facing.” The metric. Buyers are scanning for proof; give it to them in the first second.

Format: “[Company Name]: 247% organic traffic lift, 91% increase in qualified MQLs, 14-day delivery.” That’s the headline. The narrative starts in row 2.

№ 02Three numbers, oversized

Pick three outcome metrics that matter to the ICP reading the case study. For a SaaS company: trial signups, MQLs, customer acquisition cost. For a service business: leads, qualified inquiries, deal size. For an e-commerce site: revenue, AOV, conversion rate.

Display them at 80-120px font size with a single-word label below each. The visual weight of the number does the proof work — buyers absorb “247%” before they read the surrounding context. Small numbers in body copy don’t carry the same persuasive load.

№ 03The story is supporting cast

After the metrics, you can tell the story — but compress it. Problem (1 paragraph), approach (1-2 paragraphs), specific changes shipped (bullet list with timeframes), result (recap of the metrics with context). Total: 600-1000 words, not 2500.

The pattern that fails: the “hero’s journey” case study with 5 sections, each 400 words. Nobody reads it. Buyers skim case studies; structure the page to reward skimmers and let interested readers dig deeper.

№ 04Pull-quotes with full attribution

Anonymous quotes (“Increased our leads 200%” — Tech CEO) are worth 0% of attributed quotes. Full attribution means: name, title, company, photo, ideally LinkedIn link. The signal isn’t the quote — it’s the verifiability.

One pulled quote per case study, displayed at large size (24-32px) with the attribution stacked below. Place it after the “approach” section, before the “result” recap. It carries more weight there than as a sidebar.

№ 05Closing CTA: tier-matched

The case study’s closing CTA should match the deal size demonstrated. If the case study showed a $50K Authority-tier build, the CTA should be “Talk about a similar Authority build” — not “Start a 14-day trial.” Buyers reading a $50K case study aren’t trial buyers.

Tier-match the CTA copy and the next-step expectation. Mid-market buyers reading mid-market case studies want a real conversation, not a calendar link. Set up the next step accordingly.

What to avoid

  • Opening with 400 words of client backstory. Buyers leave before the metric appears. Lead with the number, not the narrative.
  • Anonymous testimonials. Without attribution, the quote is worth nothing. Either get attribution or cut the quote.
  • 10+ case studies on the page with no organization. Beyond 8-10 case studies, organize by industry or service. Otherwise it’s noise.