Back to Glossary

Signal-Matched Experience

A signal-matched experience is a landing page or URL experience that has been generated to match the specific intent signal a visitor arrives with, whether that is an ad keyword, a traffic source, a geographic location, an LLM referral platform, or a behavioral history from prior sessions. The term contrasts with a static or generic experience, which serves every visitor the same content regardless of what brought them there. Signal-matched experiences are generated in real time based on detected visitor context, not pre-built in advance for fixed audience segments.

See signal-matched experiences in action →

Explore more Glossary terms

Signal-Matched Experience

A signal-matched experience is a landing page or URL experience that has been generated to match the specific intent signal a visitor arrives with, whether that is an ad keyword, a traffic source, a geographic location, an LLM referral platform, or a behavioral history from prior sessions.

Read More

Statistical Significance

Statistical significance means that the results of a test are unlikely to have occurred by random chance.

In marketing and A/B testing, it shows whether the difference between two versions is real or just luck.

A result is called statistically significant when the probability of error is very low, usually less than 5% (p-value < 0.05). It helps businesses make confident decisions based on data rather than intuition.

Read More

Standard Error

Standard error, in very simple terms, it tells us how accurate a sample average is likely to be.

A small standard error means the sample is close to the real value, while a large one means more uncertainty. For marketers, it helps judge how reliable test results are before making decisions based on them.

Read More

Squeeze Page

A squeeze page is a simple landing page designed to capture visitor information, usually an email address, in exchange for something valuable like a free guide, webinar, or discount. Unlike long sales pages, squeeze pages are short, focused, and avoid distractions.

Their only goal is to get a visitor to sign up or subscribe. Marketers use squeeze pages to grow email lists, build leads, and nurture relationships that later convert into paying customers.

Read More

Split-Url Testing

Split-URL testing is a testing method where users are sent to completely different web page URLs to compare performance. Unlike standard A/B testing, which changes small elements like buttons, split-URL testing compares entirely different designs or layouts.

It’s often used for major redesigns, landing page strategies, or testing large content changes.

Because the differences are bigger, results can show clear insights. However, it requires more development resources and careful tracking of user behavior.

Read More

Split Testing for Pricing

Split testing for pricing is when businesses show different groups of customers different prices for the same product to see which price drives more sales or profit.

This helps companies understand the balance between customer willingness to pay and business revenue.

The method must be handled carefully to avoid upsetting customers who notice different prices. When done ethically, it gives strong insights into customer psychology and price sensitivity.

Read More