Font Readability matters for Conversion Rates -- and other Results

With enough time, you can literally test everything and see if it makes a difference. I recently concluded a massive multivariate test at media.io that tested:

  • Three different fonts.
  • Five different background colours.
  • Three different logos.
  • Three different line styles.
  • Two different button styles.

Overall, over 140 different variations were tested on half the traffic of media.io.

Some of the test results include:

  • Chosing Arial over Verdana and Tahoma increased conversion rates noticeably. Personally, I would rate the font readability of Arial lower than Verdana (especially at 12 px) but it seems that users prefer Arial.
  • Background colours and logos affected conversion rates a lot, too, whereas…
  • …link styles didn’t.
  • The impact of button styles in this design didn't make a lot of difference either.

In response to the multivariate test, I have redesigned the media.io website slightly – and made it even faster. Below this post, you’ll find the usual “before” and “after” screenshots. I can’t comment yet on what the net gain in conversion rate of this redesign was but we’re looking at a number of around 5–10 %.

Reliability Updates

On 2010-08-17, I implemented a subtle change with massive implications for media.io. I did some deep analysis on crash dumps and configured the application so that the seemingly random crashes should be a thing of the past.

Server Migration

I’m also working on moving media.io to a new server that features more up-to-date software. Many people are trying to convert audio that the old software I’m using now can’t convert (this includes floating-point WAV or Windows Media v9).

A new server with more up-to-date software is now 90 % set up. In the next couple of days, I will redirect half the traffic of media.io to the new server. When you convert audio online at media.io, you will soon be randomly routed to one of the servers.

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New Features at media.io

I have published an updated version of media.io.

What’s new?

  • Support for download links. Sometimes, people have tried to use download accelerators – which media.io doesn’t support. Now, if the “Download” button doesn’t work for you, download the file by using “Save link target as…”
  • Improved “File-not-found” page. I still need to put in a lot of work on making media.io more robust though.
  • Increased upload limit to 250 MB. That’s right, you can now upload and convert audio online with files up to 250 MB large.
  • Some layout work. I did run ClickTale on media.io for a while and the things I’ve learned have now been changed. As always, there are “before” and “after” screenshots below.
  • Warning screen for WebKit users. WebKit-based browsers (Chrome, Safari, Midori…) aren’t supported yet due to a bug in WebKit. If you use a WebKit-based browser, there is a warning now.

As always, let me know if you have questions or would like to request an audio format.

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AAC support in media.io + new look

AAC Decoding and Transcoding

I built media.io from the ground up to be easily extensible with new audio formats. The first new audio format after the launch is AAC, short for Advanced Audio Coding. You might know AAC as the audio format used in Apple’s iTunes store. AAC is nice and all but now you can convert AAC to MP3 or Ogg Vorbis. This includes all MPEG-4 profiles – MPEG-4, MPEG-2 MAIN, LOW, LTP, LD, LC, SBR, PS and ER object type AAC files.

New Look

I’ve also refined the look of media.io, making it easier on the eyes. The new layout should give you a little bit more information about media.io before you convert your music. I’m attaching two screenshots below – before and after.

Feature Requests

Also, the user suggestions board is slowly filling up with ideas. If you like media.io but wish it would do something you need, go there and vote, it’s that easy.

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