The goal was never to hit an industry average. It's to convert more of the qualified traffic you already paid to get. An "average" page leaves money on the table; a well-matched page beats its own benchmark and keeps climbing. Average is a description, not an objective.
Most underperformance traces back to one lever: a value proposition that doesn't match what the visitor expected when they clicked. They came for a specific promise and the page made them work to find it—or quietly changed the subject. Fix message match before you obsess over a target percentage. Our /methodology page breaks down the 12-dimension rubric and shows exactly which dimensions catch this, with value prop and clarity at the top of the list.
Beware the optimization trap, too: copying a competitor's "high" rate ignores their traffic mix and their offer. You can't borrow a benchmark without borrowing the whole context behind it—their list, their brand search, their pricing, their ask. Their 12% on a free waitlist tells you nothing about your $49 checkout.
This is the honest stance that separates real CRO from listicle filler: benchmarks are ranges with context, and anyone selling you a precise universal "average" is selling you a number, not insight. The fastest way to know whether your page underperforms isn't to keep hunting for a magic figure—it's to see exactly where it leaks against the fundamentals.
When you're ready to find those leaks systematically, our complete landing page audit guide walks through every dimension and how to score your own page.