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inconclusive

Product: Single Focus Photos

Hypothesis

If we A/B test Single Focus Photos on product pages, then we can measure its impact and determine if it suits our context

Test Results

Key Learning

Context: Visual elements on the product aren't doing enough to communicate value, build trust, or guide users toward the next step.

What was tested: has been validated across multiple real A/B tests. Use this as a high-priority test hypothesis backed by industry meta-analysis.

Result: No statistically significant difference was detected. Visual tests with no clear winner suggest the images aren't the bottleneck. Focus on the copy and value proposition instead.

How to Apply This to Your Site

This experiment tested product: single focus photos but produced no statistically significant change. The test was run on a product page page in the cross-industry industry. Inconclusive results suggest this particular change may not be a priority — focus testing effort on higher-impact areas.

Before you test: Consider that imagery tests typically require adequate traffic to reach statistical significance. Run your test for at least 2 full business cycles to account for weekly traffic patterns.

What Was Tested

Testing whether Single Focus Photos improves conversion performance. This is a meta-pattern derived from multiple A/B tests across different companies. Applicable to product page types.

Methodology

Confidence Level
70%

Build On These Learnings

Save your own experiments, spot winning patterns across your test history, and stop repeating what's already been tried.

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