High-converting landing pages in New Zealand

One page. One goal. Convert.

Landing pages are the ideal destination for your campaigns: no menus to distract, with a clear message, social proof, and a direct form. Designed to squeeze every click you pay for in New Zealand.

  • Conversion-focused
  • Ultra-fast loading
  • +500 clients
What it is and what we do

Landing pages: where paid traffic turns into customers.

Sending paid traffic to your homepage is throwing money away: the visitor arrives, sees ten options, gets distracted, and leaves. A landing page eliminates that problem — it's a page with a single goal (capture the lead or close the sale) and every element is designed to push toward it.

Our landing pages follow a proven persuasive structure: a clear promise in the first view, benefits over features, social proof (testimonials, clients, numbers), objection handling, and a call to action that's impossible to ignore. All with ultra-fast loading — every second of delay costs conversions — and short forms connected to your CRM and WhatsApp.

On top of that, we deliver them ready to optimize: conversion tracking installed and versions for A/B testing, because the best landing page isn't guessed — it's discovered by testing. It's the piece that improves the return on your paid ads in New Zealand the fastest.

Shall we talk it over?

Tell us about your case and we'll tell you exactly how Landing Page Design would apply to your business — no commitment and no fluff.

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+18 years+500 clients4.9★ · 58 reviews
What's included

The modules of Landing Page Design.

Persuasive structure

Promise, benefits, social proof, objections, and CTA in the order that converts.

Extreme speed

Optimized to load instantly, even on a regular mobile connection.

Sales copywriting

Copy that speaks to the customer's problem, not about you.

Smart forms

Minimal fields, validation, and a direct connection to your CRM and WhatsApp.

Conversion tracking

Pixel and events properly installed to optimize your paid ads.

A/B versions

Headline and offer variants to discover the one that converts best.

How we do it

From click to lead, optimized.

01 · Research

Offer and audience

What you sell, to whom, and against what objections.

02 · Structure

Persuasive wireframe

The order of arguments that converts.

03 · Design

UI + copywriting

Visuals and copy working together to sell.

04 · Launch

Tracking connected

Conversions, CRM, and WhatsApp up and running.

05 · Optimization

A/B testing

We iterate on data to raise the conversion rate.

Ready to get started with Landing Page Design?We'll reply today with a clear proposal.
When and where

The signs that you need a landing page.

When you need it
You send paid ads to your homepage and it converts poorly
You're launching a campaign, promotion, or new product
Your cost per lead is higher than it should be
You need to validate an offer quickly
Every important campaign deserves its own page
Where it applies
Google Ads campaignsSocial AdsLaunchesEvents and webinarsReal estateEducation and courses

One landing page per offer/campaign is the right practice: ad message = page message = more conversion and a better Quality Score.

Why it's necessary

Every click you pay for deserves to convert.

Paid ads bring the traffic; the landing page decides whether that traffic becomes business. It's the multiplier (or the bottleneck) of all your marketing.

01

More leads with the same traffic

Raise conversion without raising your ad budget.

02

Lower cost per lead

Message aligned with the ad = better quality and lower cost.

03

Fast to launch

From brief to published page in days, not months.

04

Continuous improvement

A/B testing turns every campaign into learning.

+15
Years of experience
+500
Clients served
4.9★
58 reviews
A/B
Continuous optimization
Frequently asked questions

Everything about High-converting landing pages

What is a high-converting landing page and how is it different from a website in New Zealand?

A landing page is a standalone page designed with a single goal: to convert the visitor into a lead or a sale. It has no navigation menu, no twenty distracting links, and it doesn't try to tell your entire company's story. It has a promise, an ordered argument, and a form or WhatsApp button. That's exactly the difference from a website: your website exists to inform, position, and provide context (who you are, what you do, where you are, what guarantees you offer), while the landing page exists to close a concrete action tied to a specific campaign. They're complementary pieces, not rivals.

The mistake we see every single day in New Zealand is sending paid traffic from Google Ads or Meta straight to the homepage. Why is it a mistake? Because the homepage is designed so that any visitor can find anything: the one looking for a job, the one wanting support, the one comparing vendors, and the one ready to buy. When someone clicks an ad for "pre-sale apartments" and lands on a generic homepage with ten sections, their brain has to start searching all over again for what they were interested in. Every second of friction and every distraction translates into visitors who leave without converting, and since you paid for that click, you're burning budget.

Why a landing page converts better than your homepage

A high-converting landing page works because it respects the principle of message continuity: what the ad promised is exactly what the person sees upon arrival. If the ad said "schedule your free test drive," the landing page opens with that same promise, not with a brand carousel. That coherence does two things: it raises conversion (the person recognizes they're in the right place) and it improves your Quality Score in Google Ads, which lowers your cost per click. In other words, a good landing page makes you pay less for more results.

The elements that distinguish a landing page that converts from one that doesn't:

  • A single action. One goal, one main form or button repeated throughout the page. No options that split attention.
  • A clear promise above the fold. In the first view, the person understands what you offer, who it's for, and what they gain by acting.
  • Real social proof. Testimonials, client logos, the number of people served, reviews. In New Zealand, trust weighs heavily in the buying decision.
  • Objection handling. The typical doubts ("how much does it cost?", "is there a guarantee?", "is it trustworthy?") answered before the person uses them as an excuse to leave.
  • Ultra-fast loading. Most of the traffic in New Zealand comes from mobile and often over mobile data. A slow page loses conversions before the first line of text even appears.

There's another key difference: a landing page is built to be measured and improved. Because it has a single goal, you can know precisely what percentage of visitors converts, and from there test headline, offer, or form variants to raise that number. A full website is much harder to optimize because it serves many functions at once. That's why we say the landing page is the piece that improves the return on your paid ads the fastest in New Zealand: it's where a small change produces a big, verifiable result.

In short: the website is your house, the landing page is your on-duty salesperson focused on a single sale. If you're investing in advertising and sending that traffic to your homepage, you're most likely losing between half and two-thirds of the conversions that the same budget could give you. A well-built landing page recovers a good part of that money without you having to raise a single peso of your ad spend.

How much does a high-converting landing page cost in New Zealand and what does it include?

The honest answer is that there's no single price, and anyone who gives you a fixed figure without knowing your case is selling you fluff. That said, we can give you the real framework so you can make an informed decision. A landing page is one of the most affordable web projects out there —it costs a fraction of what a full site or an e-commerce store costs— precisely because it's a single, focused page. What moves the price isn't the "number of pages," but the level of work it takes to convert.

What factors define the investment

  • The copywriting. A landing page with good design and bad copy doesn't sell. Writing a promise that converts, ordering the arguments, and writing for the customer's problem (not to show off your company) is specialized work. It's what moves the needle most on the conversion rate.
  • The design and animation. From a clean, direct landing page to one with interactions, mockups, and visual elements that reinforce the offer. The more visual production, the more investment, but also more impact when the product warrants it.
  • The integrations. Connecting the form to your CRM (for example Kommo), to WhatsApp, to an appointment calendar, to a payment gateway, or to your Google and Meta pixels. Each integration adds real value because it closes the loop between the click and the sale.
  • The tracking and A/B testing. Leaving conversion tracking installed and preparing variants to test headline or offer. This isn't a luxury: it's what makes the landing page improve over time instead of getting stuck.

How to think about cost intelligently in New Zealand

The classic mistake of SMBs in New Zealand is hunting for the cheapest possible landing page. The problem is that a poorly built landing page burns budget twice: first because you paid to make it and, second and more serious, because every paid-ad click that lands there and doesn't convert is money lost every day the campaign runs. A landing page that converts at 8% instead of 3% doesn't cost twice as much to make, but it gives you almost triple the leads with the same advertising investment. That's where the real return is.

That's why we recommend thinking of the landing page not as an isolated expense, but within the equation of your paid ads. If you're going to invest in Google Ads or Meta for a campaign, a good landing page is what makes that investment pay off. Without it, you're filling a bucket with a hole in the bottom. You can estimate the impact with our ROI and ROAS calculator to see how the return changes when the conversion rate rises.

How we quote it at Orbis

At Orbis we've spent more than 18 years building pages that convert, with +500 clients served and 4.9★ in reviews. We're a Google Partner, which gives us direct access to the best practices of the platform where a good part of your paid ads runs. When we quote a landing page, we do it clearly and itemized: what the design includes, which integrations, what tracking, and what deliverables, with no fine print. And we deliver it fast —from brief to published page in days, not months— because a landing page that takes half a year to ship has already missed the season you needed it for.

An important point about the total investment of your campaign in New Zealand: always separate two concepts. One is what it costs to create the landing page (a one-time job, done once). The other is the paid ads, the money that goes straight to Google or Meta to bring in the traffic. The landing page is the investment that multiplies the performance of those ads. We quote the page transparently and, if you need it, we help you size the media budget so both numbers make sense against your average ticket and your lead goal. Tell us about your case and we'll put together a concrete proposal, with no fluff and no inflated figures.

What makes a landing page convert more? The key elements of a high-converting page

A high-converting landing page isn't a matter of luck or "looking pretty." It's the result of applying a proven persuasive structure where each block has a function and appears in the right order. After more than 18 years building pages that sell for clients in New Zealand and other markets, these are the elements that truly move the conversion rate.

1. The promise above the fold

You have a few seconds for the person to understand what you offer, who it's for, and what they gain. The first view (what's visible without scrolling) must answer that with a clear headline, not with a clever slogan no one understands. The rule is simple: if a visitor can't explain what your landing page is about in five seconds, the headline is failing. The promise must match the ad that brought the person in, to maintain message continuity and not break the expectation.

2. Benefits over features

The most common mistake is talking about what you do ("we have technology X, we've been around 30 years, we're the leader") instead of what the customer gains. People don't buy drills, they buy holes in the wall. A landing page that converts translates each feature into a concrete benefit: not "response within 24 hours" but "you won't be left waiting a week without knowing whether your project is moving forward." Sales copywriting is, probably, the factor with the biggest impact on conversion, above design.

3. Real social proof

In New Zealand, trust is decisive: the consumer compares, reads reviews, and asks before buying. That's why a landing page needs evidence: real testimonials, client logos, the number of people served, ratings, concrete cases. Social proof works because it transfers the risk: "if so many have already trusted them and it went well, I can too." Without it, your promise is just your word against the natural skepticism of someone who doesn't know you.

4. Objection handling

Everyone about to convert has doubts: how much does it cost?, is there a guarantee?, is it trustworthy?, what if it doesn't work?. A high-converting landing page anticipates and answers them before they turn into a reason to leave. An FAQ section, a visible guarantee, or copy that defuses the fear of commitment can be the difference between the person hesitating and leaving, or taking the next step with peace of mind.

5. A CTA impossible to ignore

The call to action must be clear, repeated, and specific. None of that plain "submit": better "schedule your free appointment" or "I want my quote." The button must stand out visually and appear several times throughout the page, because different people decide at different moments of the scroll. In New Zealand, adding a WhatsApp button often boosts conversion, because many people prefer to close the sale by chat rather than fill out a form.

6. Short, smart forms

Every extra field you ask for reduces conversion. Ask only for the bare minimum needed to take the next step (usually name, phone or WhatsApp, and little else). Clear validation, no frustrating errors, and a direct connection to your CRM and WhatsApp so that no lead goes cold. A long form is one of the most common ways to throw away conversions you'd already won.

7. Loading speed

Most of the traffic in New Zealand comes from mobile, often over a regular mobile connection. A page that's slow to load loses visitors before they see your offer. Speed isn't a boring technical topic: it's directly conversion and money. We optimize every landing page to load instantly, even under imperfect network conditions.

8. Tracking and A/B testing

Here's the secret that separates good landing pages from extraordinary ones: the best version isn't guessed, it's discovered by testing. With conversion tracking properly installed and headline or offer variants running in parallel, you discover with data which version converts more. That continuous improvement turns every campaign into learning and makes your cost per lead drop month after month. A landing page that isn't measured is doomed to stay on its first version forever.

When these eight elements work together, the result is a page that squeezes every click you pay for. It's not magic: it's method. And it's exactly what we deliver in every landing page we build for our clients in New Zealand.

What kind of campaigns and businesses is a landing page good for in New Zealand?

The practical rule is simple: every time you send paid traffic to a single goal, you need a landing page. If you're investing in advertising and that traffic lands on your homepage, you're almost certainly leaving conversions (and money) on the table. Below are the scenarios where a high-converting landing page makes the biggest difference for businesses in New Zealand.

Google Ads and Social Ads campaigns

This is the clearest case. When you pay for each click on Google, Meta, TikTok, or Pinterest, sending the person to a page focused on what the ad promised raises conversion and improves your Quality Score, which in turn lowers your cost per click. One landing page per campaign means the ad's message and the page's message match, and that coherence is one of the most profitable levers in all your paid ads. Sending that same traffic to the homepage is, almost always, giving away part of your budget.

Product, promotion, or service launches

When you launch something new —a product, a seasonal promotion, a service— you need a page that tells that story without the noise of the rest of your offering. In New Zealand, big seasons like the Hot Sale mid-year and El Buen Fin in November concentrate an enormous share of sales, and every important promotion deserves its own landing page prepared weeks in advance. Improvising on the eve, sending everything to the homepage, is letting go of the demand you worked so hard to generate.

Events, webinars, and registrations

If your goal is to get people to register (for a webinar, an event, a demo, a waitlist), a landing page focused on that single registration converts far better than any section of your site. The short form, the clear date, the benefit of attending, and the social proof of previous editions do the work.

Lead capture by industry

  • Real estate. One landing page per development or per property type, with a gallery, location, "schedule your visit" messages, and a direct WhatsApp connection. The real estate sector in New Zealand lives on how quickly you respond to the prospect, and the landing page feeds that flow.
  • Education and courses. Pages per program or enrollment period, with a syllabus, benefits, alumni testimonials, and a "request information" form. Ideal for enrollment campaigns with a deadline.
  • Health and professional services. Clinics, firms, practices: one landing page per service or specialty that answers the typical questions and makes it easy to book an appointment.
  • Automotive and high-ticket retail. Test drives, quotes, pre-sales. Where the decision is important, the landing page reduces friction and captures interest at the exact moment.

Quick validation of an offer

Do you have a product or service idea and want to know whether people want it before investing heavily? A landing page is the cheapest and fastest way to validate it. You launch the page, send it a bit of paid traffic, and measure how many people convert. The data tells you whether the offer has traction or whether it's worth adjusting the message, the price, or the audience. It's a low-cost experiment that saves you months and a lot of money.

When do you NOT need a landing page?

Let's be honest: not everything requires a landing page. If you're not investing in traffic toward a concrete goal, or if your need is to inform in a general way about your company, what you need is a good website, not a landing page. The landing page shines when there's a goal, a campaign, and directed traffic. That's the honesty we work with: we tell you which piece you really need, not the one that's convenient for us to sell you.

The right practice, almost always, is one landing page per offer or per audience. If you run three different campaigns, the ideal is three landing pages (or variants), each aligned with its ad. That, combined with A/B testing, is what makes your advertising investment in New Zealand pay off to the fullest. If you want to see how it would apply to your business in particular, check out all of our web design services or tell us about your case and we'll tell you where to start.

Can I use the same landing page for all my campaigns and how does it get optimized over time in New Zealand?

Technically you can, but almost always you shouldn't. Conversion rises notably when the landing page's message matches that of the ad that brought the person in. If you run a "pre-sale apartments" campaign and another for "homes with Infonavit financing," sending both to the same generic landing page dilutes the message for both. The ideal is one landing page (or one variant) per offer or per audience. It doesn't mean starting from scratch every time: from a good base structure, you adjust the headline, images, and offer for each campaign. That adjustment pays off far more than the effort it takes.

Why one landing page per campaign converts more

There are three concrete reasons, and they all have a direct impact on your wallet:

  • Message continuity. The person who clicked a specific ad expects to see that upon arrival. When they find it, they trust and move forward; when they land on something generic, they get confused and leave.
  • Better Quality Score. In Google Ads, the relevance between ad and destination page influences your Quality Score. An aligned landing page lowers your cost per click, so you pay less for better results.
  • Clean measurement. With one landing page per campaign you know exactly which offer converts best, without the data getting mixed up. That lets you invest more where it works and less where it doesn't.

The real superpower: continuous optimization

Here's what almost no one explains clearly. A landing page isn't delivered and forgotten. The best version isn't guessed on the first try; it's discovered by testing. That's why we deliver every landing page with conversion tracking installed and ready for A/B testing. What does that mean in practice? That you pit two versions of the same element against each other —one headline against another, one offer against another, one button color against another— and let the data decide which converts more. It's not opinion or taste: it's evidence.

This process is iterative and compounding. You improve the headline and raise conversion a bit. Then you test the form and raise it a bit more. Then the social proof, the offer, the order of the sections. Each improvement adds to the previous one, and in a few cycles a landing page that was converting at 3% can be converting at 6% or more. With the same advertising investment, that means double the leads. That's why we say the landing page is the piece that improves the return on your paid ads the fastest: it's where a small change produces a big and, above all, measurable result.

What gets optimized, specifically

  • The headline and the promise. It's usually what moves the needle most. Small shifts in focus change conversion a lot.
  • The offer and the CTA. Testing different ways of presenting the incentive or the call to action.
  • The form. Removing or adding fields, changing the button text, moving its position.
  • The social proof. Which testimonials, in what order, in what format generate the most trust.
  • The speed. Keeping the page loading instantly, especially on mobile, which is the majority of traffic in New Zealand.

The New Zealand context matters in optimization

Optimizing in New Zealand has its particularities. A big one: closing via WhatsApp. It's often worth testing whether conversion rises when the main button leads to WhatsApp instead of a form, because a large part of the audience prefers to ask questions and close by chat. Another: seasonality. A landing page that converts well in normal times may need offer and urgency adjustments for the Hot Sale or El Buen Fin. And one more: local Spanish in the copy, without forced colloquialisms, connects better than neutral, stiff text.

At Orbis we've spent more than 18 years doing exactly this, with +500 clients, 4.9★ in reviews, and the status of Google Partner. We don't deliver you a static landing page: we deliver a living piece, connected to your CRM and WhatsApp, measured and ready to improve. If you want your advertising investment in New Zealand to stop being wasted on clicks that don't convert, tell us about your campaign and we'll propose the landing page —and the optimization plan— that makes it profitable.

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4.9★ · 58 reviews
+500clients grown
+15years of experience