ConversionWax Playbook
Mobile Image Format Showdown
Test mobile-optimized images vs. non-optimized images and prove what actually lifts conversions.
Tactic Overview
Most teams ship a single desktop-first hero image that gets resized for mobile, creating slow loads, awkward cropping, and hidden CTAs. This tactic uses device-specific A/B testing to serve mobile-optimized images that increase CTR, reduce bounce rates, and improve attribution for paid traffic.
Primary goal
Increase mobile CTR by 10-20%
Mechanism
Device-targeted image variants
Where it shows
Hero sections, landing pages
Why This Works
The friction
Desktop-first images with 16:9 ratios become heavy, slow files on mobile that cut off messaging and hide CTAs below the fold. Visitors from paid campaigns hit these sluggish pages, bounce before converting, and your attribution data can't connect creative performance to revenue.
The unlock
Mobile-optimized images use 4:5 or 3:4 aspect ratios that keep CTAs visible, leverage WebP/AVIF formats for 30-50% smaller file sizes, and pair with UTM-based targeting to measure exactly which creative drives conversions. You can test a control (desktop image resized) against a variant (mobile-first crop) and prove ROI in 1-2 weeks.
Implementation Steps
9 steps
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1Quick Win
Define the test hypothesis
Set your primary KPI to mobile CTR. Hypothesize that a mobile-optimized creative (lighter file, mobile-friendly ratio, visible CTA) will increase CTR versus the current desktop image. Establish guardrails: maintain or reduce bounce rate with no drop in conversion rate.
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2Quick Win
Prepare control and variant assets
Create your control (current desktop image resized, e.g. 16:9 at 1920Ă—1080) and variant (mobile-first ratio like 4:5, 3:4, or 1:1 with CTA visible in the first 600-800px viewport). Export the variant in modern formats (WebP/AVIF) with JPEG/PNG fallbacks and ensure the crop preserves subject focus.
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3Quick Win
Upload assets to ConversionWax
Upload both images to the Asset Library in ConversionWax. Name them clearly (e.g., hero_control_desktopish.jpg and hero_variant_mobile.webp) so you can easily identify each version during analysis.
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4Quick Win
Target mobile devices only
Use ConversionWax's device-specific targeting to restrict the test to mobile visitors while keeping the desktop experience unchanged. Enable automatic image optimization to ensure each device receives appropriately sized files without manual intervention.
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5Medium Effort
Configure the A/B test split
Set up a 50/50 split between your control (non-optimized image) and variation (mobile-optimized image). For testing three variants, use a 33/33/33 split. Plan to run the test for 1-2 weeks minimum or until you reach statistical significance at your chosen confidence level (typically 95%).
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6Medium Effort
Isolate traffic with UTM parameters
Add UTM tags to your paid campaigns (e.g., ?utm_source=meta&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=bfcm_hero_test&utm_content=variant). Use ConversionWax's URL variable targeting to scope the experiment to these UTM parameters, letting you compare paid cohorts versus organic traffic performance.
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7Medium Effort
Add optional context layers
Layer on location-based personalization to compare performance across top cities or countries, and time-based rules to test morning versus evening visitor behavior. These additional dimensions can reveal high-performing segments worth targeting separately.
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8Medium Effort
Wire up multi-linking for attribution
Use ConversionWax's multi-linking personalization to assign unique destination URLs per image and device (e.g., /offer?src=hero&v=control&m=mobile and /offer?src=hero&v=variant&m=mobile). This preserves attribution in your analytics, connecting downstream conversions directly to the exact creative and device combination.
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9Quick Win
QA across devices and links
Before launching, test on multiple mobile devices and screen sizes to confirm CTAs are visible, images load quickly, and tracking links fire correctly. Verify that each variant displays as intended and that analytics events are captured for views, clicks, and conversions.
Real-World Example
Scenario
An e-commerce brand running Black Friday campaigns sent mobile traffic to a desktop hero image (16:9 ratio, 1.2MB JPEG). Mobile visitors saw a 22% bounce rate and 3.8% CTR on the hero CTA because the button was cut off below the fold and the image took 4+ seconds to load on 4G connections.
Outcome
After implementing a mobile-optimized 4:5 ratio image in WebP format (380KB), mobile CTR rose to 5.2% (+37% lift), bounce rate dropped to 16% (-6 percentage points), and conversion rate improved by +12%. Attribution via unique UTM links showed the variant drove 28% more revenue per visitor.
Key Metrics to Track
Mobile CTR
Primary success metric. Target a 10-20% lift over your control to justify mobile-first creative investment.
Bounce Rate
Should decrease by 5-10 percentage points as faster loads and visible CTAs keep visitors engaged.
Page Load Time
Modern formats (WebP/AVIF) can reduce file size by 30-50%, improving load speed on mobile networks. Monitor Largest Contentful Paint (LCP).
Conversion Rate
Guard rail metric. Ensure conversions maintain or improve as CTR increases - you want quality clicks, not just volume.
Common Pitfalls
Stopping the test too early
Random spikes can mislead you in the first few days. Run until you hit 95% confidence and sufficient sample size (typically 1-2 weeks with steady traffic) to ensure results are statistically valid.
Testing too many variables at once
If you change the image, CTA copy, and layout simultaneously, you won't know which drove the lift. Isolate image optimization first, then layer additional tests.
Ignoring attribution setup
Without unique UTM parameters and multi-linking, you can't connect creative performance to revenue. Set up tracking links before launch so you can prove ROI to stakeholders.
Forgetting mobile safe zones
Even with a mobile ratio, CTAs can be obscured by browser UI or notches. Test on real devices (iPhone, Android) to verify your CTA appears within the first 600-800px of viewport height.
Quick Reference
Best for
E-commerce, SaaS, paid campaigns with mobile traffic
Effort level
Medium
Time to results
1-2 weeks
Difficulty
Easy