landing pages h2o creative examples

Landing page vs website page: how to maximise conversions and ROI

Every click should lead somewhere with intent. Yet too often, brands treat every web page the same. It’s about knowing how to use a landing page and a website page to get better results from your campaigns. It’s about using each type of page strategically to create landing pages that convert and improve your overall campaign performance.

When you use the right kind of page for the right purpose, you attract targeted marketing campaigns, improve conversion rates, and reduce wasted ad spend. A high converting landing page helps capture leads and guide potential customers to one clear next step, while a website page builds brand identity, strengthens SEO efforts, and attracts steady organic traffic over time. Mix them up, and you risk confusing your audience and wasting paid traffic.

Unipart website page
The website we created for our client Unipart.

What is a website page?

A website page is part of your brand’s main digital storefront. It’s designed for exploration, information, and trust-building. Think of your homepage, about page, service pages, or blog posts.

Each website page has a role in helping people learn who you are and what you do. These pages are accessible from your main navigation and optimised for search engines to bring in organic traffic.

When a page on your website is built with care, it does more than fill space. It helps people find you, understand your brand identity, and build confidence in your offer.

A good example of this is our work with Unipart. The brand needed a platform that could serve multiple business divisions, each with its own content and audience, without losing consistency.

We built a WordPress Multisite system that allowed every division to manage its own website pages while sharing the same structure, design system, and security framework. The result was a scalable digital ecosystem that cut development costs by over £100,000 and brought six new child sites to market in just 90 days.

Unipart is a model of how website pages can balance individuality and cohesion, helping a large organisation stay efficient, flexible, and visible online. Get the whole story in our case study

Harley-Davidson landing page
A custom landing page we made for the Harley-Davidson Eco Race campaign.

What is a landing page? 

A landing page is a standalone web page created for a specific marketing campaign. It’s where someone ‘lands’ after clicking an ad, email, or social media post. Unlike your main website, a dedicated landing page removes distractions to keep a singular focus on one clear goal.

Whether that’s signing up for a webinar, downloading a guide, or starting a free trial, landing pages focus on turning interest into action and generating leads.

We worked with Harley-Davidson® on the Africa Eco Race to build a dedicated landing page with a clear goal. Our custom Salesforce CloudPage for 17 European markets included localised content, dynamic video integration, and targeted paid ads to capture leads and encourage test ride bookings for the Pan America™ 1250.

The results spoke for themselves: more than 13,900 visitors, strong engagement across multiple languages, and 45 test rides booked directly through the campaign. It shows how the right mix of design, personalisation, and automation can move people smoothly from awareness to conversion. Find out more about this case study

Key differences at a glance

Feature Website Page Landing Page
Purpose To inform, educate, or guide a broad audience vs targeted audience about your brand and services. To drive one clear action for a targeted audience, usually linked to a specific marketing campaign.
Navigation Linked within your main online store or site with menus and navigation paths. A standalone page with minimal navigation so the visitor stays focused.
Audience Appeals to a broad audience vs targeted audience mix, including repeat visitors. Designed for targeted marketing campaigns from paid ads or emails.
Content Broader, more informative, often written for SEO efforts and organic traffic. Short, direct, persuasive, and centred on a single offer or call-to-action button.
SEO role Supports long-term organic traffic and search-engine visibility. Built for short-term marketing campaigns.
CTA May have several actions or entry points. One clear call-to-action button driving a singular focus.

When marketers use a landing page where a website page belongs (or vice versa), it can confuse users and lower conversion rates. Visitors from paid ads expect a focused experience. Send them to a homepage, and they’ll leave before converting.

Showing Cadonix Landing page
Landing page example for our client Cadonix.

When to use a landing page

Landing pages are built to convert. They’re the pages you use when you want visitors to take one clear, measurable action.

They work best for targeted marketing campaigns, such as:

  • Paid ads on Google, Meta, or LinkedIn
  • Webinars or events
  • Gated content or lead magnets
  • Free trials or demos
  • Special offers or discounts

A high-converting landing page aligns perfectly with your specific marketing campaign. It delivers exactly what your ad or email promised, no distractions, no mixed messages.

You can see this approach in our work with Cadonix. As part of a targeted marketing campaign, we built a dedicated landing page through HubSpot designed purely to capture leads from paid ads and organic search.

That single page, backed by improved SEO efforts and focused content, helped deliver more than 350 qualified leads and a 583% increase in organic traffic. It’s a clear example of how a high-converting landing page can connect paid and organic activity and turn visibility into measurable growth. To find out more, see our case study

Showing Magna GP's website
Website example for our client Magna GP.

When to use a website page

Website pages play a broader role. They’re for people who are still exploring, comparing, or researching before they make a decision.

Use them when you want to:

  • Build brand identity and trust
  • Improve visibility in search engines
  • Share detailed information through blog posts or service content
  • Support multiple entry points and user journeys

A website page is less about instant action and more about long-term growth.

Take Magna GP, a private healthcare startup in Oxfordshire. They needed a digital presence that reflected their premium brand and made it easy for patients to book and engage.

We built a new website around clear navigation, an integrated booking system, and content designed to perform in search engines. Alongside that, we developed a SEO-focused blog and supporting email and social media strategy to drive organic traffic and build credibility.

The result was a strong online launch and a site that continues to attract patients, showcase their brand identity, and support long-term growth. Learn more in our case study now. 

How to create high-converting landing pages

A good landing page feels clear and deliberate. The design, copy and layout all work together to guide someone towards a single choice.

Test and improve

Keep an eye on what works. Change a headline, swap an image, or move a call-to-action button. Small tweaks can lift conversion rates more than you’d expect.

Make it relevant

Write like you know who’s visiting. Keep the message consistent with the ad or email they clicked. If the page gives them what they expected, they’re more likely to stay and act.

Reduce friction in forms

Only ask for what you need. If the form feels long, people stop. Keep it short, keep it simple, and make it clear what happens next.

Add trust signals

People think twice before filling in a form. Give them reasons to feel comfortable. A short quote from a client, a name they recognise, or a quick visual cue of credibility can make all the difference. These small details signal that you’re genuine and that their information is safe.

Align visuals and messaging

Your landing page should follow through on what brought someone there. The words, the look, the offer - they all need to match. When it feels consistent, people trust it and move forward. When it doesn’t, they close the page.

The future of landing-page optimisation

Modern landing pages aren’t static. They’re smart. New tools use automation and data to create landing pages that adapt in real time. From AI-assisted design to targeted marketing campaigns integrated with CRM systems, today’s standalone pages can respond to audience behaviour and feed insights back into broader advertising campaigns.

As part of a wider strategy, landing pages focus your message while your website pages build reach through SEO efforts and organic traffic. Together, they form a complete digital system that connects paid traffic and long-term growth.

Final thoughts

Both landing pages and website pages have a job to do. Your website builds authority and trust. Your landing pages turn that trust into action. When you use both well, you get a balance of visibility and measurable performance.

At h2o creative, we design and write both: high-converting landing pages that turn potential customers into leads, and website pages that strengthen your brand identity and help you grow online. Discover our other services.

If you’re ready to improve how your marketing campaigns perform, let’s talk about how we can help you create landing pages and websites that work together for real results. Get in touch now.